Fishing, Tackle and Kits - Practical Information on Game Fish: How to Land Them; the Correct Tackle and How to Use It
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Fishing, Tackle and Kits - Practical Information on Game Fish - Dixie Carroll
FISHING, TACKLE AND KITS
THROW BACK THE LITTLE FELLERS
OUR CREED.
To encourage the re-stocking of lakes and streams; to advocate the observing of all fishing laws; to throw back uninjured the undersized fish; to catch game fish in a sportsmanlike manner with rod, line and reel, in order to make the sport of fishing better in the years that follow.
It’s a great little game, this fishin,’ old-timer, and while much has been written for the beginner on the how
of landing the game fins, little has been written on keeping up the supply. When we lope out to the fishing waters we have the deep-seated desire to come back and dangle a few big fellows before our admiring friends and shoot a line of bull on the wonderful fight the game fin put up in his efforts to outmatch our tackle skill with his wily craftiness and antihook knowledge.
Every keen fellow who answers to the call of the water trails knows that there is more in fishing than the mere landing of the underwater veterans. In the spring the wonderful greening up of the trees and underbrush strikes a responsive chord in the angler and the budding outdoors shoots a rapid-fire tingling into the jaded nerves, suffering from a long winter’s session with the steam radiators, movies, and dodging the high cost of living. Right through until old lady Nature brilliantly mints the leaves in countless tints of gold the pulsebeat of the fisherman throbs in unison with the great spirit of the outdoors. The whispering of the wind in the pines, the laughter of the rushing stream waters, the flash of the dying sun on the quiet lake, the plaintive call of the loon as the moon shoots down its beams amid the silence far greater than you have ever experienced in the walled-up cities builded by man. These are all the heritage of the fisherman and are a few of the wonders that make the sport more than a mere matter of getting the fish.
GREAT CHEST DEVELOPER
Of course, old man, regardless of the pleasures of the outdoors, very few if any of the knights of the arching rod and humming reel like to come home without a fair-sized creel or stringer. It is part of the game for the victor to come swaggering in with the spoils of battle, it makes everyone feel better, the pals think you are some
fisherman, the wife proudly flaunts the string before the neighbors and you yourself throw another outward and upward angle to the chest when you look ’em over for the last time before they hit the frying pan.
Every true sportsman who angles for the game fins wishes to make the sport better each year so that he can enjoy it and lead his friends into the walks of the outdoors that they may become fellow craftsmen of the cleanest of recreations. And to keep fishing on the up-move there is one little old rule that every fisherman should follow to the last card, and that is to throw the little fellers
back. These small, inquisitive youngsters have never had the expert training to enable them to evade the barbed hook, and they generally take a wallop at the lure, because they don’t know any better. It isn’t sport to land ’em, and if you toss the little rascals back into the wet, maybe they will grow up into a sure-enough old he-whop
with a kick in his tail like a sick mule, and great guns, man, you may be the lucky dog to hook ’im later when he puts up the grand old fight of the foxy underwater warrior, that sets the thrills to racing through the veins and the short jumps climbing up the backbone.
NIX ON THE TAPE MEASURE
There sure is no place in the gang for the fisherman who stretches the tail and pulls the mouth of the fish in order to get just enough length to work ’em into the legal limit—the tape-line fisherman is in a class by himself, and don’t ride with the big crowd. There are generally plenty of big ones in waters where the little fellers live, only sometimes it takes a bit keener work to coax them into the air—but when they do strike, old scout, the battle is worth the wait, and perhaps to this plunging, rushing fight you can thank some other fisherman for throwing back the little feller.
Above is the creed of the American Anglers’ league, an organization with members all over the country, and this creed is the entire object of this body of followers of the water trails. Any fisherman, anywhere, may become a member by agreeing to hold up the creed and call it to the attention of other anglers he may meet in whipping stream or lake. It carries the fellowship of the outdoors and each member is an advocate of the laws to protect the finny tribe so that their number may increase and their size make ’em fit for the heavy-weight class.
MAKE FISHING BETTER
Every fisherman in this neck of the waters should join in this movement to make his favorite sport better in every way. The restocking of lakes and streams, with regularity would make of any civilized
waters mighty good fishing, and then to follow the American Anglers’ league creed would keep those waters in good shape from year to year. The large number of fellows who would get acquainted with the sport of fishing through this work, would enjoy a close-up of old Dame Nature that would make for better citizens and give them a dash of pep
that would make them face the daily battle with a flash to the eye and a spring to the step.
As the seasons open, old-timer, the boys will begin their pilgrimages to the waters in quest of the shining golden fleece, and here’s hoping they wear as a brassard this clean-cut creed of the true sportsman, and that they have luck on lake and stream and uphold this creed as their creed so that the days of angling may be better now and in the years that follow.
BASS FISHING O’NIGHTS
Old-timer, have you ever lounged back on the close-packed sod, with your favorite jimmy pipe doing its bit to soothe your nerves, old Dame Nature turning out the lights and closing up things for the day? The camp-fire just hittin’ it up on low, with a star shootin’ down here and there in the blue-bowled sky and the jeer of an idiot loon breaking the silences of the wonderland; then off to starboard you hear a splash and a flop in the water, then another and many of them. Doesn’t it make your sporting blood tingle as the old he-whops
do their sonata of the evening waters? It’s music to your ears, this overture of the flopping bass as they do an Annette Kellermann
after a fleeing minnow, and it sure is a winning bet that you are overlooking some real sport in the fishing game if you do not slip into your canoe and meet the advancing enemy half way and take a flier at night-casting. For a line of sport that has more thrills tacked onto it than any other angle of the game, night-casting has the rest of the herd eating grass at the starting post.
Many of the clan of the arching rod and the singing reel have overlooked this five-reel thriller and thereby missed a session with a set of nerves they never knew was a part of their system. If, on your first night-casting expedition, you don’t experience a series of jumps and kicks to your vertebra that shoots the tingles and joythrobs racing through your veins, you are of a different make-up than the ordinary old scout who follows the gladsome call of lake and stream.
Pick out a nice little bay where the waters run into shallows shorewards, the kind of a bay where the minnows are at home, and give this little old bay a close once-over, locating a point at which to anchor your craft for your night foray on the playful bass as they gorge on the little fellers.
As the day-shadows begin to lengthen into dusk, quietly work your boat to the anchorage, which should be selected for casting on all sides, drop your anchor and take your time, old scout, slip into an easy position and dream a few dreams of other days. Soon enough you’ll hear a splash off to the left near the weed patch, make your cast and zing! he strikes. In the excitement you give him the butt and he breaks water just off there in the distance, and you play him up to the net with a thrill that gives you new life. Take a bit of time now, don’t rush the game. As things darken up and you cannot distinguish the shore line nor the windfalls and weed-beds, the mystery of the game begins to work into your system, and at the next splash of the leaping bass your cast goes out, perhaps a bit short or a little overshot, because of the excitement of the game, but he strikes, and now, with the real simon-pure black night encircling you, you have a real piece of work cut out for your skill in the fishing game. You niggardly give him a bit of line and clamp on the thumb as he steals for the underwater snags, and you reel him in as the cold sweat beads on your forehead at the mystery of the game. As you net this old veteran of the watery recesses, you just about lose all control, as the next flop comes right beside the canoe; then there are flops all around you and the work starts in earnest, as you hope to remember the lay-out of the bay and trust to luck and the nine gods as you swing a cast off into the blackness around you, which is punctured here and there by the splashes of the game fins in their playful feeding.
My first shot at the real dark night-casting was an accident, and the sport was so fine that it made a regular nighter out of me. But I hit the game without any preparation, and the excitement of that night remains as the most thrilling experience of my fishing life. A good old pal and myself were making camp after a fairly fine piece of late-evening fishing. Things had darkened up a bit and we were slowly slipping along the water, trying to pick out our course without hitting more than the usual number of snags and windfalls. Fact is, we had lost our bearings and were trusting to luck and instinct to make camp without an accidental wetting, when off to the right the big flop of a man-sized fish sent a thrill through our nerve centers. The pal made a cast off in the direction of the splash; the immediate strike came like a battering ram, and as he played him up to the canoe, with a couple of breaks to the air, my own nerves took a few jumps when I slipped the net down under him. And say, old-timer, when we lamped this large-mouth, that tipped the scales at seven and a quarter pounds, and heard his pals doing their jig on the top o’ the water, we were both as crazy as loons. Right away we shot two casts that developed as nice a pair of back-lashes as ever fell to the spool of a reel. Plump in the middle of a bass family and the reel tied up with a twisted bunch of line, we both had strikes and pulled them in hand over hand, and the rest of the casts were made by swinging the plug around in a circle and letting it fly out among the floppers. Of course this style of casting was not ethical, as it were, but whoinell can be ethical with the pulse doing about 106 and a bunch of the bass trying to jump into the canoe to bite your fingers off? The canoe was a jumbled-up mess of lines, plugs, nets and fish, but the climax came when a big pike took the pal’s plug, and started in on a bunch of fancy tricks right close up to the canoe. For twenty minutes we had a great old time trying to land this regular
guy without taking a Brodie into the drink. For a bunch of thrills, this was sure a great producer, and when we finally made camp we were dyed-in-the-wool night-casters, but we were strong for preparedness for that kind of stuff in the future. We decided that the right kind of tackle was the safety-first
of this night stuff, and that night-casting had more punch to it than all the rest of the game put together.
NIGHT-CASTING TACKLE
There are two kinds of night-casting, either of which are sure-fire winners. Moonlight night, and the simon-pure black night, both good fishing-time with a winning kick to the inky-black affair as the real thrill producer. For moonlight-casting you can let your canoe glide along the outer edges of most any bay or cove and cast into the shore and cover considerable water, but for the black night, with just the stars burning out here and there, you must select your fishing waters during the day and study them well, because your casting is going to be a bit of judgment on your part without any helpers along the side lines to give you distance and locations.
For night-casting a great deal depends upon the tackle, and it would be simply playing tag with fate to use a nifty bamboo rod for this sport; at times you must give the butt and do a bit of pumping, and who wants to subject a pet split-bamboo to such rough usage? Make the rod a steel one, and one that has plenty of backbone and stiffness. Long casts are not at all necessary, and a good stiff steel rod will tickle a fighting bass behind the gills with more success than any other kind, and do the job without suffering any during the operation. Should you by any species of luck hook a pike, or, great guns!—a musky, there is quite a bit of satisfaction out there in the black darkness to have your paws wrapped around a good stiff old steel rod, and get the lay right, old-timer, you’ll need all the help a good strong rod can give you to bring a life-sized roughneck to gaff when you cannot tell whether he’s coming to you or making a drive for the far end of the lake.
In the matter of reels it is a choice between the Anti-back-lash or the level winders, unless, of course, you feel like doing a bit of knitting and cussing in the great old handicap of backlashes. Between the self-thumbing reel and the level-winder there is not much choice, as they both are the real stuff for the night game. The ideal reel, however, for night-casting is the tool that combines both of these features, and two reels in this class that stand out like four of a kind
are the Beetzsel and the Pflueger-Supreme. Either of these reels makes night-casting a pleasant occupation. The South Bend Anti-backlash and the Pflueger-Redifor Anti-back-lash are good workers in the self-thumbing line, and the Shakespear level-winder is an excellent tool for night use.
The fifteen-pound test line is plenty strong enough and the soft-braided No. 6 silk casting-line used for general casting is about right, although a line testing at twenty to twenty-five pounds is not amiss if you are fishing in waters inhabited by the big fellows. And just chalk this up on the score-board, the big fellows are great night feeders. This is especially so in the warm summer nights, at which time some of the larger fish are brought to gaff.
As to the plugs for this end of the game, your selection should be entirely of the surface or semi-surface variety, as the underwater lures are taboo, they have too much of an inclination to slip down to the bottom and lovingly cling to any old thing they can hook onto. And then, again, why use an underwater plug when the fish are all flopping around on the surface? For the real dark nights, the all-white lures are the best, and particularly those coated with the luminous enamel which glows like the dampened head of an old-style parlor match. Let a couple of these luminous plugs lie out in the sunlight for a short time, or expose them to the glow of your camp light before paddling out to your fishing waters, and the glow they shoot off in the darkness will make any flopping bass curious enough to give them a wallop. Not only do they help the bass to become interested, but you can see them yourself at considerable distance and keep in touch with your lure as it wobbles in through the black.
That these luminous plugs are the real stuff was shown to me quite vividly last season when on a little night-casting jaunt. I threw a walloping cast over towards a fairly loud splash and succeeded in twining my line around the limb of a windfall that stuck up out of the water, the plug dancing in the air about six inches from the surface of the water. This wiggling plug was too much for an over-zealous bass; it sort of got his scales all ruffled up, and he up and strikes that Pflueger-Surprise minnow, hooking himself. He sure cut up a bunch of tricks, half in the water and the rest up in the air. He kicked up such a rough-house that another bass joined him in the fight for the shining plug. I find, also, in the plug line, that the surface bait which kicks up a little riffle as it reels in makes an added attraction, although most of the strikes are made by the fish as the plug hits the water, or very soon after the splash, in fact, a good-sized splash when the lure strikes the water helps show ’em the way, and how easy it is to locate the bait. A mighty good plan is to either use all weedless hooks on your plugs or to substitute the trebled hooks with the twin hooks which ride points up. In this way you will avoid a lot of trouble, especially if the waters you fish are weedy or full of snags. Of course you may not hook all your fish, but you will not haul in a mess of weeds every shot, and who ever had a fish strike a lure when it was buried in a litter of straggling weeds?
Here are a bunch of spoons and spinners that are all good attractive lures for bait casting. Natural baits such as the minnow, frog, pork rind or chunk are assisted greatly as a lure when used with a spoon or spinner in bait casting.
No. 1 is a Skinner white enameled spoon with tail hook; No. 2 a South Bend Bucktail spinner with a sinker and weedless; No. 3 a Becker-Sheward Been There
weedless spinner with tying rig for frog and twin trail hooks; No. 4 a Joe Pepper spinner; No. 5 a Jamison Shannon Twin Spinner; No. 6 a Al Foss Pork Rind Minnow; No. 7 a Pflueger Lowe-Star spoon; No. 8 a Hildebrandt Slim Eli Spinner with fly; and No. 9 a Prescott Spinner.
A layout of twirls and spins that ought to attract most any game fish and effective in lake and stream casting. Right for any tackle box and well made stuff.
NIGHT WATER WORK
The white plug and the luminous affairs have it all over the other colors, but here is a little tip that is worth trying out on your first moonlight casting trip this season. If you have ever indulged in the pleasure of fly-casting in the evening when the stars were out and the sky clear and fine, you have evidently found that the darker flies were more attractive to the fish than the lighter feathery fancies. This has been the way the cards stack up with me, and I account for it by the fact that the darker fly stands out more clearly against the lighter sky, as it rests on the dark water; in fact, it silhouettes against the sky, while the lighter flies blend in with the reflected light of the sky background, and the fish, looking up from the bottom, see the dark fly more plainly than a lighter one. Having this dope from past performances at tossing the flies in the evening, when the Hildebrandt people brought out the black spinners I tried these out and found them quite effective lures for late afternoon and evening fishing. Mulling this dope around in my think-tank, at the tail end of last season, I darkened up a couple of plugs with black shoe polish and used them for casting in the evening and on one or two moonlight nights. Say, old top, these black lures made good with a kick, and this season I expect to give the darkies a thorough try-out for the clear evening and moonlight fishing. Therefore, the tip to the live-wires to blacken up a couple of old surface plugs and take a try with them this season. It’s a safe bet that some of the tackle people will be putting out dark or black lures when they wise up to the fact that they are good dope for evening fishing.
A part of the kit for night fishing that you should not fail to tote along is an electric flash lamp, one of the pocket variety. There is nothing that will come in more handy than one of these little lights for the moments when you are landing a fighting bass. I use the small, flat light, because it fits well in the hand and can be held along the landing-net staff without any trouble, and is, I think, easier handled than the round-shaped lights. I also slip a small-caliber revolver in my pocket for the shot of grace for one of the big pike or musky, if I am blessed with luck enough to connect up with one of these big fellows during the night. Trying to play a big fin until you can gaff him is somewhat of a risky game in the dark, and I have no desire to take a ducking through a miss-balanced effort to play and land an old he-whop of the watery recesses.
Another thing that will be found mighty valuable is a compass. This little invention of the heathen Chinee will make it easy to steer a clean course back to camp, and making camp in the dead o’ night when you have nothing at all to steer by is no kid’s trick. I use one of the luminous kind with the wrist strap, which is plainly visible at night and in a handy position for steering. For a landing net, make it with as large a mouth as possible, and don’t try to gaff the fish at night. Although we never have had an accident, there are so many chances to pull a boner at night-fishing during the excitement that a fellow should cut down the possibilities as much as possible and make the percentage lower.
Esepecially in July and August you will find the night-fishing game worthy of your efforts; in these months particularly are the grand old bass feeding at night, and, shucks, there is no better time to catch fish than when they are feeding. In many civilized lakes close in to the large cities, where it is often hard to land even a few bass during the daytime, you will find that a little try at the night-fishing stunt will bring you a fine string of bass. In these waters the bass are pestered to death during the day, and they generally wisely lie in the deep pools and wait until things quiet down a bit at night before they go on the feed.
For the night caster the thrills of fishing are multiplied many times over the usual daylight stuff, and it is sure a cool cuss who can remain calm and collected after the big fins begin their flopping sport. If you have a weak heart, old-timer, stay away from the great night sport, because you’re sure going to find it chock full of excitement from the first cast to the last back-lash.
To really have a successful night-fishing trip, you should go prepared for that kind of fishing. No fellow wishes to subject his fine light tackle to the strenuous work he will surely run into while flirting with the flopping fins of the dark waters.
HOT-WEATHER BAITS
There is one spot that should never be overlooked in hot-weather fishing, and that is the lone water-soaked log that is usually found more or less in the lake country. This old snag will be found with one end just about sticking out of