OUTDOOR SPORTS AND GAMES
BY CLAUDE H. MILLER, PH.B.
VII
FISHING
Proper tackle for all purposes—How to catch bait—The fly fisherman—General fishing rules
Fishing is one sport of boyhood that we never outgrow our love for. Some of
the most enthusiastic fishermen are gray-haired men. We often hear about the boy
with the bent pin and the piece of thread who catches more fish than the expert
fisherman with modern, up-to-date tackle, but I doubt if it is so. As a rule the
better our tackle the more fish we shall catch. If the country boy catches the
most fish, it is simply because he is better acquainted with the places where
the fish hide or feed. He knows their habits better and the best kind of bait to
use. A lover of fishing should take a personal interest in his equipment and
should desire to have the best he can afford.
The chief requirement of a successful fisherman is patience. Next to that is
a knowledge of the waters fished in and the habits of the fish and how to
attract them. A man or a boy who will sit all day in the hot sun waiting for a
bite is not always a good fisherman. He must use common sense as well as
patience.
A game fish may be defined as one that will make a good fight for its life
and that is caught by scientific methods of angling. Almost any fish will
struggle to escape the hook, but generally by game fish we understand that in
fresh water the salmon, bass, or trout family is referred to. Pickerel and pike
are also game fish, but in some sections they are considered undesirable because
they rarely rise to the fly, which is the most scientific method of fishing.
A fisherman who is a real sportsman always uses tackle as light as he can
with safety and still have a chance of landing the fish. If the angler will take
his time he can, with skill, tire out and land fish of almost any size. Tunas
and tarpon weighing over a hundred pounds are caught with a line that is but
little thicker than a grocer's twine, and even sharks and jewfish weighing over
five hundred pounds have been caught in the same way. Sometimes the fight will
last all day, and then it is a question whether the fisherman or the fish will be exhausted first.
Fishing is the One Sport of Our Childhood That Holds Our Interest Through Life
In selecting our tackle, we must always keep in mind the kind of fish we
expect to catch. For general, fresh-water use, except fly casting, an eight-foot
rod weighing seven or eight ounces will fill most purposes. A fly rod should be
a foot longer and at least two ounces lighter. The best rods are made of split
bamboo, but cheap rods of this material are not worth having. The best cheap
rods (i.e., costing five dollars or less) are either lancewood or steel. See
that your rod has "standing guides" and not movable rings. Most of the wear
comes on the tip, therefore it should if possible be agate lined. A soft metal
tip will have a groove worn in it in a very short time which will cut the line.
The poorest ferrules are nickel-plated. The best ones are either German silver
or brass. To care for a rod properly, we must keep the windings varnished to
prevent them from becoming unwound. Spar varnish is the best for this purpose
but shellac will answer. In taking a rod apart, never twist it. Give a sharp
pull, and if it refuses to budge, it can sometimes be loosened by slightly
heating the ferrule with a candle. If a ferrule is kept clean inside, and if the
rod is taken apart frequently, there is no reason why it should stick.
A multiplying reel holding sixty yards is large enough for most fishing. The
raised pillar reels are the best, one of good quality costing about four
dollars. A cheap reel soon goes to pieces.
Silk lines are better than linen because greater strength is obtained with
the same thickness. Always dry a line every time it is used, or it will soon rot
and be worthless. The back of a chair is excellent for this purpose. Never tie a
knot in a line that you expect to use with rod and reel. The knot will always
catch in one of the guides just at the time when you are landing your "biggest"
fish.
Actual sizes of hooks
Hooks come in a great variety of shapes and models but there are none better
than the standard "Sproat." It is the general favourite of fishermen everywhere,
although of course the other leading models, Carlisle, Limerick, Pennell,
Aberdeen, Sneck and a number of others all have their friends.
A great many fishermen make the mistake of using hooks that are too large.
The hook sizes that are commonly used are numbered from 6/0, which is the
largest, to No. 12, which is a tiny thing about right to catch minnows. Where we
expect to catch fish a pound or two in weight, the No. 1 size is about right.
Such a hook will catch much larger fish if they happen to come along. I have
caught a twelve-pound lake trout on a No. 4 Sproat hook and the hook did not
show that it had bent in the least.
Our tackle box should contain an assortment of sizes however. Snelled hooks
are better than ringed hooks and those of blued steel better than black enamel.
No matter how inexpensive the rest of the equipment is, be sure that your hooks
are of good quality. Keep the points sharp. A tiny bit of oil stone, a file, or
a piece of emery cloth are all good for this purpose. It takes a sharp point to
penetrate the bony jaw of a fish. Always inspect your hook after you have caught
it on a rock or snag.
Fishing is generally divided into four classes: fly casting, bait casting,
trolling, and still fishing. The average boy is a still fisherman, which means
not only that he must keep still, but that his bait remains in one place instead
of being trolled or cast about. The usual strings of fish that boys catch, such
as perch, sunfish, bullheads, catfish, and whitefish, are called pan fish. This
is not entirely a correct name as I have seen some catfish that it would take a
pretty big pan to hold. One caught in the Mississippi River weighed over a
hundred pounds.
Fly casting is the most scientific method of fishing and gives the greatest
pleasure to the fisherman after he has once become an expert. No matter what
method we follow in fishing, we must never try to catch fish by any method which
the laws may prohibit, such as spearing, set lines, or nets. Each state has its
own laws which the fisherman must learn and obey.
Worms are the best all around bait for fishing. They are as a rule easily
obtained and may be kept for a long time. The boy's method of placing them in a
tin can with a mixture of mud will soon kill them, however, especially if the
worms are exposed to the sun for a time. A half-buried soap box makes a very
good place to keep a supply of worms which will be ready for use at any time
without the necessity of digging them. Worms may be fed on the white of a
hard-boiled egg, but if given plenty of room they will usually find enough food
in the soil. By placing worms in sand they will soon scour and turn pink when
they are far more attractive as bait. The large worms, or "night walkers," can
be caught at night with a lantern. These large worms are best obtained after a
rain or on lawns that are sprinkled frequently, when they will be found moving
about on top of the ground but always with one end in the hole from which they
have emerged and into which they can dart if they are disturbed.
For big fish, the best bait is minnows. In trolling with them it will make
but little difference whether dead or alive, but for still fishing the minnows
must not only be alive, but, to attract the fish, lively as well. The regulation
minnow bucket consists of one pail fitted inside of another, the inner one being
made of wire mesh to permit the free circulation of the water. This enables us
to change the water frequently without handling the fish. When we reach a place
where fresh water is obtainable, we simply remove the inner pail, pour out the
stale water from the other pail, and fill it as quickly as possible. To keep
bait alive in warm weather we must change the water frequently. Another method
where fresh water is not available, as on a long drive, is to aerate it by
pouring from one pail to another. It is an excellent plan to place a piece of
ice on top of the minnow pail. With this arrangement, it will not be necessary
to give them fresh water for a long time.
An excellent device for catching minnows
The simplest way to catch minnows is with a drop net. Take an iron ring or
hoop such as children use and sew to it a bag of cotton mosquito netting, half
as deep as the diameter of the ring. Sew a weight in the bottom of the net to
make it sink readily and fasten it to a pole. When we reach the place which the
minnows frequent, such as the cove of a lake, we must proceed very cautiously,
lowering the net into the water and then baiting it with bits of bread or meat,
a very little at a time, until we see a school of bait darting here and there
over the net. We must then give a quick lift without any hesitation and try to
catch as many as possible from escaping over the sides. The minnow bucket should
be close at hand to transfer them to and care must be used not to injure them or
allow them to scale themselves in their efforts to escape. The common method of
capturing minnows is to use a sweep net, but it takes several people to handle
one properly and for our own use the drop net method will probably supply us
with all the bait that we need.
Fish are very fickle in their tastes. What will be good bait one day will
absolutely fail the next and sometimes even in an hour this same thing will take
place. Why this is so no one has been able to explain satisfactorily, but that
it is a fact no fisherman will deny. We should therefore have as great a variety
of bait in our equipment as possible. Worms, crawfish, minnows, frogs,
grasshoppers, grubs and helgramites are all good at times in fresh water, as
well as various kinds of artificial baits, spoons, spinners, and rubber
lures.
A trolling spoon
Sometimes fish will take very unusual baits. Black bass have been caught on
young bats. The famous old trout in the Beaverkill River in New York State,
which had refused all the ordinary baits and flies that were offered him for
years and that on bright days could be seen in a pool lying deep down in the
water, finally fell a victim to a young mouse that was tied to the hook with
pink silk.
Fly fishing is the most expert and scientific method of angling. It is the
poetry of fishing. The fly fisherman usually wades in the brook or stream where
he is fishing, although it is sometimes possible to cast a fly from the bank or
a boat. It is useless to go fly fishing while there is snow water in the brooks
but just as soon as the first warm days of spring come, then fishing is at its
best.
The whole idea of casting a fly is to drop it in the most likely-looking
places and to strike the fish just as soon as he seizes the hook. To do this we
must always have the line under perfect control, therefore do not attempt to
cast a line too great a distance. If we do not fix the hook into the fish's
mouth at the instant that he seizes the fly, he will very soon find that what he
thought was a nice fat bug or juicy caterpillar is nothing but a bit of wool and
some feathers with a sting in its tail, and he will spit it out before we can
recover our slack line.
It is a common mistake to use flies that are too large. Ordinary trout flies
are the proper size for bass and the smallest size trout flies are plenty large
enough for trout. There are hundreds of kinds of flies of various combinations
of colours and no one can say which is the best. This question has been argued
by fishermen ever since the days of Izaak Walton.
The universal rule of trout and bass fishermen who use a fly is to select
small dark flies for bright days or when the water is very clear or low and the
more brightly coloured ones when the day is dark or the water dark or turbid.
The fly book should contain a varied assortment to meet these conditions.
The best lines for fly fishing are made of braided enamelled silk. Some fly
lines are tapered but this is not necessary and is a needless expense. Twisted
lines are much cheaper but very unsatisfactory.
Fly fishing is not only the most scientific and sportsmanlike method of
fishing but it is also the most difficult to acquire skill in. It is of course
possible to catch trout and salmon on other bait than flies. In fact, there is
really no better bait for brook trout than common fish worms that have been
scoured in sand. The use of a fly, however, is more satisfactory where the
pleasure derived in fishing is more important than the size of the string.
An artificial fly; used for salmon
In learning to cast a fly, you can practise at home, either in an open space
or wherever there is room to work the line. It is not necessary to practise with
the actual hooks or flies on the line. Simply tie a knot in it. Hold the rod
lightly but firmly in the right hand. Point your thumb along the line of the rod
and start by pulling out a little line from the reel with the left hand. With a
steady sweep, cast the end of the line toward some near-by object and with each
cast pull out a little more line until you reach a point when you are handling
all the line you can take care of without effort or without too much of a sweep
on the back cast. You must not allow the line to become entangled in trees or
other obstacles. The wrist does most of the work in casting. The elbow should be
close to the side. If you find that the line snaps like a whip on the back cast,
it is because you start the forward cast before the line straightens out
behind.
When you can handle twenty-five or thirty feet accurately, you can safely get
ready to go fishing. The most successful fly fishermen use a short line, but
they use it with the utmost accuracy and can make the flies land within a foot
of the place they are aiming at almost every time. When a trout strikes your
fly, you must snub him quickly or he will surely get away. If the flies you are
using do not cause the fish to rise, and if you are certain that it is not due
to your lack of skill, it will be well to change to some other combination of
colours; but give your first selection a fair trial.
Bait casting is much easier than fly casting as the weight of the bait will
help to carry out the line. It is the common method of fishing with minnows,
frogs, small spoons and spinners, and other artificial lures. Some fishermen
practise the method of allowing the line to run from the reel. The principal
point in this way of fishing is to stop the reel by using the thumb as a brake
at the instant that the bait strikes the water. This prevents the reel from
spinning and causing the line to overrun. Neglect of this precaution will cause
a very annoying tangle that is sometimes call a "backlash" but more often
characterized by much harsher names by the impatient fisherman who has the
misfortune to experience it.
In live bait casting, start with the line reeled to within fifteen inches of
the end of the rod, holding the thumb on the reel spool. With a rather strong
overhead sweep, bring the rod forward. At the proper instant, which is just as
the point of the rod goes over your head, release the pressure of your thumb and
the bait will go forward as the line runs out rapidly. When the bait lands, reel
in slowly and with various motions try to give to the bait as life-like an
appearance as possible. If you have a strike, allow the fish sufficient time to
obtain a secure hold of the bait and by a sudden jerk fix the hook in his
mouth.
Bait casting is as a rule a very effective method of catching fish,
especially in shallow lakes and where fly fishing is not practised. In deep
water, trolling or still fishing are usually the best methods of catching fish
and often the only methods that will be successful. Trolling consists simply in
rowing or paddling slowly with the bait or spoon trailing behind. It is not a
scientific way of fishing and requires but little skill. When the fish strikes,
it usually hooks itself and all that remains is to reel it into the boat and
land it. The conditions on large lakes often make it necessary to follow one of
these methods of trolling or still fishing, especially during the warm weather
when the big fish have left the spawning grounds and are in deep water. There
are trolling devices called spinners that have several gangs of hooks, sometimes
as many as fifteen. No real fisherman would use such a murderous arrangement
which gives the fish practically no chance at all and in many states their use
is properly prohibited by law. A single hook, or at most a single gang of three
hooks, is all that any one should ever use.
A raised pillar multiplying reel
Every boy knows what still fishing is. It is the common method of baiting our
hook, casting it from the shore or from a boat and waiting for a bite. In still
fishing it is customary to use a light sinker to keep the bait near the bottom
and a float or "cork" which serves the double purpose of keeping the bait away
from snags, stones, or weeds on the bottom and also of showing us when we have a
bite. The more expert still fishermen never use a float, as they prefer to tell
by the pull on the line when a fish has taken the bait.
A fishing boat should be thoroughly seaworthy and also have plenty of room.
Flat-bottom boats make the best type for fishing, provided that we do not have
to row them far or if the place where we use them is not subject to sudden
squalls or rough water. The middle seat should contain both a fish well and a
minnow box with a dividing partition and with two hinged lids fitted into the
seat. Such a boat can be built by an ordinary carpenter and should not cost over
ten or twelve dollars. It should be painted every year to keep it in good
condition. Use clear white pine or cedar for the sides. The bottom boards should
not be fitted tightly together but left with cracks fully a half-inch wide to
allow for the swelling of the wood when the boat is launched. The best oarlocks
are fastened to the oars and fit in the sockets with a long pin. This
arrangement permits one to fish alone, and if trolling to drop the oars quickly
and take up the rod without danger of losing them.
A landing net should be a part of every fisherman's
outfit
A landing net should be a part of every fishing outfit. More fish are lost
just as they are about to be lifted from the water than at any other time. A
gaff is used for this same purpose with fish too large to go into a landing net.
A gaff is a large hook without a barb fastened into a short pole. If you have no
net or gaff and have succeeded in bringing a large fish up alongside the boat,
try to reach under him and get a firm grip in his gills before you lift him on
board. If it is a pickerel, look out for his needle-like teeth.
The best time to fish is either in the early morning or just before sundown.
During the heated part of the day most game fish stop feeding and seek the cool,
deep places in the lake or river.
In many states, fishing is prohibited by law until after the fish are through
the spawning season.
In all kinds of fishing, the rule is to keep as quiet as possible. Talking
does not make so much difference, but any sudden noises in the water or on the
bottom of the boat are especially likely to frighten the fish.
Never fish in your own shadow or that of your boat. Try to have the sun in
front of you or at your side.
Never be in a hurry to land a big fish. Remember that some of the so-called
"big game fish" of the ocean will take all day to land. You must use skill to
tire your fish out or by keeping his gills open to drown him. The rod and line
are not intended as a lever to force the fish to the landing net but merely as a
guide to lead him about and by his struggles to force him to become exhausted. A
very interesting experiment has demonstrated that a skilful fisherman can with a
fly rod and light line in a very short time tire out a strong swimmer to which
the line has been attached and force him to give up the struggle and come to the
side of a boat.
Methods of fishing differ so much in different localities that aside from the
ordinary equipment of rods, reels, lines, leaders, and hooks, the fisherman
going to a new locality had better first ascertain what the general methods of
fishing are, or else, if possible, secure his equipment after he reaches his fishing grounds.
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