It is a truism worth repeating.
80% of fish are caught by 20% of fishermen.
What is more to the point, is that this saying is
true over the long run.
It is the same 20% of fishermen who
consistently catch 80% of the fish.
To put this down to the usual excuses
of the fishless 80%, such as luck, better gear, etc., etc., ad
nauseam, is to disguise the truth.
Some put down the success of the 20%
to the fact that the 20% tend to be the fishers who fish the most,
and by dint of sheer arithmetic are more likely to catch fish.
There has got to be an element of truth in this, but it is only
a small part of the answer, and perhaps only a small part of the
truth.
My contention is that the successful
fishers fish where the fish are most often. It is this ability
to more accurately forecast where fish are likely to be holding
at any one time, that separates the successful fisher from the
fishless.
It was not until I opened Just Fishin’ the tackle shop in
Auckland that a theory that had been bouncing unconvincingly about the
dark recesses of my mind began to take shape.
We had a motto in the shop, and that
was that, ‘we don’t sell fishing tackle, we sell dreams. The dream
of more or bigger fish.‘ This motto is perhaps not so much a motto
as a plea from many of our customers. For many customers catching
more or bigger fish is too lofty an aim. They merely want to catch
some fish.
Many of these ‘fishless’ customers
have all the right gear, so this is not their problem. Their problem
is not how to fish, or when, but where to fish.
Too often unsuccessful fishermen use
this nice piece of fractured logic:
Fish live in water, thus all water has fish in it. Therefore anywhere
you fish in water, there is a chance of catching fish.
This logic is about as fractured as
the logic that says that all humans live on land, therefore all
land has humans living on it. Many parts of the land on our planet
are not inhabited by man. Deserts are a place where there are
not too many humans, and those that do live in deserts concentrate
themselves around oasis, where life can be sustained.
Start thinking of the sea as a desert,
then start thinking about where the oasis might be, and then you
are starting to think about where the fish might be.
Here is some news, that should not
be news. Fish are as thick as two short planks. The average twenty
pound fish, any species, has a brain smaller that a pea. This
lack of intelligence, means that a fishes life is reduced to very
simple basics.
In general, a fish requires three factors
to survive, food, shelter and an environment that will sustain
their physiology.
Food must be in quantity, and proximity,
that ensures that less energy is used finding food, than the energy
the food provides.
Shelter must be close enough, to the
food source to provide safety from predators, and for close in-shore
species, the elements.
The environment, water temperature,
oxygenation, water flow, etc., are specific to specie.
Most of the fish we seek, are pelagic
fish. That is fish that follow a specific set of environmental
conditions that will sustain their life, and lifestyle. Find the
optimum environment, for the target species, and you will find
the largest numbers of fish, and the biggest fish.
Reduce these needs to clean uncluttered
simplicity, and the prime fish holding ‘spots’ are relatively
easy to find. For inshore species look for reefs, foul ground,
weed beds, with good tidal or current flows. The reef, foul ground,
weed etc. provides cover from predators, and some relief from
the incessant flow of current and tide.
Areas such as these that lie in the
path of currents that fish use to move from environment to environment,
are prime spots. These currents, these main motorways, carry predator
and prey from holding spot to holding spot.
Within these prime spots are the ‘prime
lies.’ The areas that provide the best cover, the best source
of food, the best environment. In these prime lies are found the
prime fish, the big dominant fish.
Find the little fish and there or thereabouts,
will be the bigger fish.
All this is stuff that has filled magazine
stories and books for many years, and at face value seems very
simple. It is simple, but fishermen conspire to make the simple
complicated. ‘Find the motorways, find the fish’, seems a simple
premise, but looking at the sea in this way can be difficult.
I have found it useful to think of
the sea, in terms of my earliest fishing experiences, which was
in rivers.
A river could be described as a body
of water flowing in a channel between banks. The width of the
river is determined by the height of the banks, and the distance
between them. The overall direction of the river is determined
by the shape of the banks.
The rate of flow of the water within
the river, leaving aside the ‘fall’, is determined by the obstacles
in the waters way, such as channels, boulders, sand bars, and
tree trunks and the like.
Trout use these river structures to
find the optimum place to live. They lie behind, under, and sometimes
in the cushion of water in front, of logs, snags, boulders, etc.
Another lie is behind the lips of steep drop-offs, where the trout
can dart upward to dine.
Like all fish, trout must find a home
that provides shelter from predators, and the remorseless push
of the current. This home must be close to a good food source,
a food source that requires the minimum of effort to gather. These
homes are called ‘lies’. Lies as in where the trout lie. Not lies
as in what the trout fisher tells when he can not catch the trout
in their lies.
For most trout in a river, food comes
near the trout lie courtesy of the currents in the river. The
larval form of insects, nymphs, are dislodged from the bottom,
or seeking to move to the surface, are carried by the river to
the trout. The trout feeds on these by darted out into the current,
grabbing the morsel as it passes, and then darting back to its
lie.
Lies can be broken down even further.
‘Prime Lies’ are the lies that provide
the very best combination of food, and shelter. Prime lies are
inhabited by the biggest, strongest fish. They take over the prime
lies by sheer brute force.
The other lies are used by smaller
weaker fish, and lies can be tiny pockets of water holding tiny
fish, all the way up to the prime lies.
Many trout at dawn or dusk may leave
their lies to feast in water near the banks, or shallow areas
to feed on snails, nymphs, emerging insects, and smaller trout.
Like most predators they use the low light levels, and low light
angles, to disguise their presence from their prey, and their
own predators.
The trick to increasing your catch
of inshore salt water fish is to look at the sea as a series of
rivers. Find these ‘rivers in the sea’, and then find the lies
and prime lies, within those rivers in the sea.
Every Hour Spent In Reconnaissance
Is Worth Ten In The Battle
The only major raffle I have ever won
was the lottery that determined who would do National Military
Service, way back in 1965.
After the initial three weeks basic
training I was selected to enter the Officer Cadet Training Unit.
OCTU spent a lot of time teaching us military strategy. The one
thing that was constantly drummed into us was the value of good,
thorough reconnaissance.
Gathering good information upon which
to base your action plans, was of critical importance. The best,
most successful generals, it seemed, were those who knew most
about the particular field of battle, and how best to use the
men and equipment at hand to achieve success.
The more time spent in studying the
likely area and conditions you are likely to meet on any fishing
trip, then making decisions on how and where you will fish in
that area, the greater the chances of you achieving your fishing
objectives.
Homework is essential.
The kitchen or dining room table is
a key piece of fishing equipment. It is the device that is used
to spread charts of the area you are going to fish. Close examination
of the bottom contours, reefs, channels, and drop-offs should
identify prime fish holding spots. Also study the tidal directions
to identify the best anchoring positions, on both tide directions.
There is a little experiment that you
can try in any harbour, anywhere on a nice afternoon, to prove
the fractured logic about the location of fish.
Find a nice cove or bay, and anchor
right in the middle of it. If you want to be pedantic, drive around
the spot before you anchor just to make doubly sure there are
no fish there. Put a couple of rods out in the rod holders and
sit back and relax.
Very soon a passing boat will swing
off its course and meander up to park in reasonable proximity
to your boat. The attraction of two boats parked up in the middle
of a bay will be irresistible, soon more boats will appear and
park up. Remember, there are no fish in this spot.
In a short time the activity of boats
arriving and departing will attract more boats. The belief in
‘the spot’ is overwhelming, and all logic will depart. "The
fact that logic cannot satisfy us awakens an almost insatiable
hunger for the irrational."