Month: November 2011

Five more fishing quotes and sayings Nov 11 2011

Here are five more fishing quotations: (numbers 149 – 1053)

“… the little white blink”

– G E  M Skues, the nymph master delightfully describing the opening and closing of a trout’s mouth when feeding on nymphs.

“Rainbow trout lie in fast water, brown trout in slow water, and fishermen lie almost anywhere, any time.”

– unknown; and probably just as well.

And three quotes that should stir the pot:

“Catch and release fishing may be cruelty masquerading as political correctness.”

– John Mcphee – The Founding Fish

“I fear that my old pastime (fishing) has become the blood-sport of urbanites and vegetarians, so refined that someone who actually eats fish is considered to be spooky and recidivist as a cannibal”

– Stephen J Bodio – Confessions of a Catfish Heretic

“Catch and release angling is becoming a religion. Although in some instances it is essential to the survival of the species sought, in others, its major effect is to cloak its more evangelical practitioners in a mantle of righteousness.”

– Kelso Bryant – New York times 

Posted by Tony Bishop in fishing quotes, fly fishing

Noise and Trout – is it a problem?

There are many who believe that metal studs on wading boots and metal wading staffs generate too much noise and make trout nervous, if not frightened away.

I have yet to become a believer. I have banged two hard rocks together underwater within 30 feet of trout and they have not moved.

Over on the MidCurrent site there is an interesting comparison video between a metal wading staff and a wooden staff with a rubber tip, and the sound generated by both. The video makes it pretty clear that the metal staff does make more noise as it hits boulders. But the wooden staff also generates a lot of noise as it moves rocks and boulders. It is that, that I think gets forgotten in the ‘no metal’ argument.

That majority of the noise generated by a wading angler is the displacement of rocks and boulders on the bottom, and this background noise reduces the impact of metal noise.

On rocky, boulder, river beds any time a wader moves across the bottom noise is  generated. Best advice, metal studs, metal wading staff, or not, stay out of the water if at all possible.

But even if you have to wade, keeping as way away from the trout, or likely lie, is good advice – my experience is that trout most often only react to ‘clear and present danger’, in the water or above it. I am often amazed at how close you can get to a fish without spooking it if you wade carefully, despite the noise I make treading on boulders and rocks.

Posted by Tony Bishop in fly fishing, fly fishing how-to, trout information