Gerald Hickman's Blog - Posts Tagged "angling"
fly fishing
When a Game Biologist goes fishin’
Angling is a very old activity for humans. There are even rock art specimens and paintings showing Egyptians fly fishing. The earliest anglers probably caught more fish in nets and traps than by rod and line fishing. Yes, that is rod and line fishing not rod and reel. It took years of fishing to appreciate the line holding qualities of a fishing reel.
So our earliest ancestor anglers used a long tree branch and fish line about the same length as the rod.
Hooks were made from wood, bone and sometimes knapped out of flint. Some hooks looked like the standard hooks used today and others were pointed wedge shaped to lodge in the throat of the fish.
Other types of fishing gear from Archaeological investigations are the weights used with nets and to sink the line and bait down to the level of the fish and rocks used to trap fish in lake or stream.
In the United States since the Revolutionary War, anglers used rod, reel and fly line for catching many fish both native and imported. The lines, rods and reels have improved dramatically over the last couple hundred years for fly fishing anglers but some types of angling required a simple bait fishing reel. And of course, especially where catfish were plentiful, the trot line was a favorite way to fish.
When I was an aspiring young angler, I used to fish using a simple winding reel on a steel telescoping rod. We fished with bait, mostly worms and caught sunfish, perch and such prey. But living on a dry land ranch it was seldom that we could go out in a boat on a lake to fish, thus I did the next best thing and spent my fishing time reading the literature of angling. Trout fishing caught my attention and never let go. The stories in Outdoor Life and Sports Afield taught me the basics about fishing for trout, bass and panfish that lived in our part of the country- North Idaho. I asked for fishing books and magazines for presents on special occasions. And saved my cash to buy angling books through the mail.
I purchased a copy of Ray Bergman’s tome, TROUT and then got a used copy of Just Fishing. Later I found a copy of How to Fish from Top to Bottom by Sid Gordon and these became my library and university in my goal to become an Angler.
My Uncle, Don Manderfeld, took me fishing and gave me my first level-wind reel a left handed Pflueger and then I bought a steel bait casting rod from the Sears Roebuck mail order catalog for $1.52. I fished with that rod until it got wound in the spokes of my bicycle tire.
Dad took brother and I to Millers Star Hardware Store and he out-fitted each of us with a fiberglass spinning rod, Waltco spinning reel and six pound monofilament lines. We fished Asotin Creek near Clarkston, WA and struck out more than we succeeded. We did catch some small rainbow trout and eventually learned to fish with bait in Charlie Lakes. There were two lakes on Charlie Creek , upper and lower, we fished with wedding rings and bait, until we learned to tie and use trout flies. The Flies worked better than the natural bait.
But fly fishing was a real challenge for me. I took my fiberglass spinning rod, fitted it with a cheap fly reel and a level size C flyline and tried to teach myself to fly cast. After some time of practicing, I managed to catch a beautiful rainbow trout on a size 10 Royal Coachman dry fly. People who know about such things say that 90 percent of a trout’s food is eaten under water. But it was some time before I learned to fish with wet flies. As we explored the forest streams in the Blue Mountains, we caught Bull Trout on dry flies (Yellow Sally was a good one), Royal Coachman and the “bug” which was a peacock herl body fly with a mule deer hair over body which made it float and was nearly unsinkable like Molly Brown of the Colorado Gold Rush.
Many other flies ended up in my vest over the years. Here are a few of the keepers that I used time and time again: Black Wooly Worm, a standby wet pattern. Muddler Minnow, this one imitates a minnow, grasshopper, salmon fly and probably it just looks tasty to the fish, I use it for many species of trout and bass. White Bucktail, this one is easy to tie and seems to look edible to the fish, bass or brown trout really like this one. The Bug, a 2x long shank hook with a peacock feather body and deer hair tied on top of the hook for tail, wings and upper body. I mostly use this fly in size 8 through 14.
Streamers: Black Wooly Bugger, a good one for lake or stillwater fishing. Many colors work as a Wooly bugger, light green chenille bodies represent damselfly larvae. The various Wooly Bugger flies work well year round and especially in lakes.
Black Leech fly, black or mohair colors are great for lakes. Sizes 2 through 10 have worked for me. Micky Finn buck tail is a good one especially in autumn fishing.
Dry flies: My go to dry fly from June through September is the Elk Hair Caddis in sizes 10 through 14. This fly floats very well because of the hollow elk hair and since so many trout streams have a large caddis population, it is a good standard for summer angling on most streams.
My first trout a rainbow taken on a dry fly was in Asotin Creek in Washington state, and the fly is one of the all time favorites the Royal Coachman good in sizes 10 through 18.
Now days I enjoy the foam flies that resemble salmon fly adults and grasshoppers. They really float well and dry easily with a backcast or two.
Any questions? contact me at : gjhickman@hotmail.com
And Thank You for reading my blog. Gerald
Angling is a very old activity for humans. There are even rock art specimens and paintings showing Egyptians fly fishing. The earliest anglers probably caught more fish in nets and traps than by rod and line fishing. Yes, that is rod and line fishing not rod and reel. It took years of fishing to appreciate the line holding qualities of a fishing reel.
So our earliest ancestor anglers used a long tree branch and fish line about the same length as the rod.
Hooks were made from wood, bone and sometimes knapped out of flint. Some hooks looked like the standard hooks used today and others were pointed wedge shaped to lodge in the throat of the fish.
Other types of fishing gear from Archaeological investigations are the weights used with nets and to sink the line and bait down to the level of the fish and rocks used to trap fish in lake or stream.
In the United States since the Revolutionary War, anglers used rod, reel and fly line for catching many fish both native and imported. The lines, rods and reels have improved dramatically over the last couple hundred years for fly fishing anglers but some types of angling required a simple bait fishing reel. And of course, especially where catfish were plentiful, the trot line was a favorite way to fish.
When I was an aspiring young angler, I used to fish using a simple winding reel on a steel telescoping rod. We fished with bait, mostly worms and caught sunfish, perch and such prey. But living on a dry land ranch it was seldom that we could go out in a boat on a lake to fish, thus I did the next best thing and spent my fishing time reading the literature of angling. Trout fishing caught my attention and never let go. The stories in Outdoor Life and Sports Afield taught me the basics about fishing for trout, bass and panfish that lived in our part of the country- North Idaho. I asked for fishing books and magazines for presents on special occasions. And saved my cash to buy angling books through the mail.
I purchased a copy of Ray Bergman’s tome, TROUT and then got a used copy of Just Fishing. Later I found a copy of How to Fish from Top to Bottom by Sid Gordon and these became my library and university in my goal to become an Angler.
My Uncle, Don Manderfeld, took me fishing and gave me my first level-wind reel a left handed Pflueger and then I bought a steel bait casting rod from the Sears Roebuck mail order catalog for $1.52. I fished with that rod until it got wound in the spokes of my bicycle tire.
Dad took brother and I to Millers Star Hardware Store and he out-fitted each of us with a fiberglass spinning rod, Waltco spinning reel and six pound monofilament lines. We fished Asotin Creek near Clarkston, WA and struck out more than we succeeded. We did catch some small rainbow trout and eventually learned to fish with bait in Charlie Lakes. There were two lakes on Charlie Creek , upper and lower, we fished with wedding rings and bait, until we learned to tie and use trout flies. The Flies worked better than the natural bait.
But fly fishing was a real challenge for me. I took my fiberglass spinning rod, fitted it with a cheap fly reel and a level size C flyline and tried to teach myself to fly cast. After some time of practicing, I managed to catch a beautiful rainbow trout on a size 10 Royal Coachman dry fly. People who know about such things say that 90 percent of a trout’s food is eaten under water. But it was some time before I learned to fish with wet flies. As we explored the forest streams in the Blue Mountains, we caught Bull Trout on dry flies (Yellow Sally was a good one), Royal Coachman and the “bug” which was a peacock herl body fly with a mule deer hair over body which made it float and was nearly unsinkable like Molly Brown of the Colorado Gold Rush.
Many other flies ended up in my vest over the years. Here are a few of the keepers that I used time and time again: Black Wooly Worm, a standby wet pattern. Muddler Minnow, this one imitates a minnow, grasshopper, salmon fly and probably it just looks tasty to the fish, I use it for many species of trout and bass. White Bucktail, this one is easy to tie and seems to look edible to the fish, bass or brown trout really like this one. The Bug, a 2x long shank hook with a peacock feather body and deer hair tied on top of the hook for tail, wings and upper body. I mostly use this fly in size 8 through 14.
Streamers: Black Wooly Bugger, a good one for lake or stillwater fishing. Many colors work as a Wooly bugger, light green chenille bodies represent damselfly larvae. The various Wooly Bugger flies work well year round and especially in lakes.
Black Leech fly, black or mohair colors are great for lakes. Sizes 2 through 10 have worked for me. Micky Finn buck tail is a good one especially in autumn fishing.
Dry flies: My go to dry fly from June through September is the Elk Hair Caddis in sizes 10 through 14. This fly floats very well because of the hollow elk hair and since so many trout streams have a large caddis population, it is a good standard for summer angling on most streams.
My first trout a rainbow taken on a dry fly was in Asotin Creek in Washington state, and the fly is one of the all time favorites the Royal Coachman good in sizes 10 through 18.
Now days I enjoy the foam flies that resemble salmon fly adults and grasshoppers. They really float well and dry easily with a backcast or two.
Any questions? contact me at : gjhickman@hotmail.com
And Thank You for reading my blog. Gerald
Published on October 05, 2016 13:18
•
Tags:
angling, trout, trout-flies
Folk Art, Crafts, or Nostalgia?
A distant relative in Maine got me started when I saw his collection. Eric had saved fishing lures from his work and friend's gifts. He often took walks along the stream near his home and found plugs and spinners lost to the streamside bushes by local anglers.
My offer to sell some of these lures online earned Eric and myself a few bucks. A couple of Eric's plugs were from very early in the last century. One was made by the Atlantic Lure Co. of New Jersey in about 1905 and another was red with a white belly and even had a belly weight imbedded in its ventral surface to be fished under water. If the lure was made of wood and had no belly weights it was a floating surface lure.
But the upshot was that while selling a few fishing items for Eric, I found another hobby in the collecting of specific types of plugs/baits/lures. I find that I tend to spend more than I make selling fishing lures.
My main challenge is to collect Heddon fishing products and currently have just under one hundred specimens from that company which has been making and selling angling gear since the late 1890's. There are a few large, long-lived companies that over the years have been successful and are referred to as the Big Three in fishing lures. These three, in my opinion, are Heddon, Creek Chub and Shakespeare.
The question is: do these companies and their products represent nostalgic items, folk art or early American Crafts. They have all been referred to as such. And the Upshot must be that whatever they represent is determined by the interest of the collector. Who knew that these work a day purchases would be so valuable as antiques in our times?
My offer to sell some of these lures online earned Eric and myself a few bucks. A couple of Eric's plugs were from very early in the last century. One was made by the Atlantic Lure Co. of New Jersey in about 1905 and another was red with a white belly and even had a belly weight imbedded in its ventral surface to be fished under water. If the lure was made of wood and had no belly weights it was a floating surface lure.
But the upshot was that while selling a few fishing items for Eric, I found another hobby in the collecting of specific types of plugs/baits/lures. I find that I tend to spend more than I make selling fishing lures.
My main challenge is to collect Heddon fishing products and currently have just under one hundred specimens from that company which has been making and selling angling gear since the late 1890's. There are a few large, long-lived companies that over the years have been successful and are referred to as the Big Three in fishing lures. These three, in my opinion, are Heddon, Creek Chub and Shakespeare.
The question is: do these companies and their products represent nostalgic items, folk art or early American Crafts. They have all been referred to as such. And the Upshot must be that whatever they represent is determined by the interest of the collector. Who knew that these work a day purchases would be so valuable as antiques in our times?
Published on November 02, 2016 07:25
•
Tags:
angling, angling-in-maine, baits, bass-plugs, collecting-fishing-lures, fishing, maine


