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The fourth day - continued
The Salmon
Chapter VII
Piscator
The Salmon is accounted the King of freshwater
fish; and is ever bred in rivers relating to
the sea, yet so high. or far from it, as admits
of no tincture of salt, or brackishness. He
is said to breed or cast his spawn, in most
rivers, in the month of August: some say, that
then they dig a hole or grave in a safe place
in the gravel, and there place their eggs or
spawn, after the melter has done his natural
office, and then hide it most cunningly, and
cover it over with gravel and stones; and then
leave it to their Creator's protection, who,
by a gentle heat which he infuses into that
cold element, makes it brood, and beget life
in the spawn, and to become Samlets early in
the spring next following.
The Salmons having spent their appointed time,
and done this natural duty in the fresh waters,
they then haste to the sea before winter, both
the melter and spawner; but if they be stops
by flood-gates or weirs, or lost in the fresh
waters, then those so left behind by degrees
grow sick and lean, and unseasonable, and kipper,
that is to say, have bony gristles grow out
of their lower chaps, not unlike a hawk's beak,
which hinders their feeding; and, in time, such
fish so left behind pine away and die. 'Tis
observed, that he may live thus one year from
the sea; but he then grows insipid and tasteless,
and loses both his blood and strength, and pines
and dies the second year. And 'tis noted, that
those little Salmons called Skeggers, which
abound in many rivers relating to the sea, are
bred by such sick Salmons that might not go
to the sea, and that though they abound, yet
they never thrive to any considerable bigness.
But if the old Salmon gets to the sea, then
that gristle which shews him to be kipper, wears
away, or is cast off, as the eagle is said to
cast his bill, and he recovers his strength,
and comes next summer to the same river, if
it be possible, to enjoy the former pleasures
that there possess him; for, as one has wittily
observed, he has, like some persons of honour
and riches which have both their winter and
summer houses, the fresh rivers for summer,
and the salt water for winter, to spend his
life in; which is not, as Sir Francis Bacon
hath observed in his History of Life and Death,
above ten years. And it is to be observed, that
though the Salmon does grow big in the sea,
yet he grows not fat but in fresh rivers; and
it is observed, that the farther they get from
the sea, they be both the fatter and better.
Next, I shall tell you, that though they make
very hard shift to get out of the fresh rivers
into the sea yet they will make harder shift
to get out of the salt into the fresh rivers,
to spawn, or possess the pleasures that they
have formerly found in them: to which end, they
will force themselves through floodgates, or
over weirs, or hedges, or stops in the water,
even to a height beyond common belief. Gesner
speaks of such places as are known to be above
eight feet high above water. And our Camden
mentions, in his Britannia, the like wonder
to be in Pembrokeshire, where the river Tivy
falls into the sea; and that the fall is so
downright, and so high, that the people stand
and wonder at the strength and sleight by which
they see the Salmon use to get out of the sea
into the said river; and the manner and height
of the place is so notable, that it is known,
far, by the name of the Salmon-leap. Concerning
which, take this also out of Michael Drayton,
my honest old friend; as he tells it you, in
his Polyolbion:
And when the Salmon seeks a fresher stream to
find;
(Which hither from the sea comes, yearly, by
his kind,)
As he towards season grows; and stems the watry
tract
Where Tivy, falling down, makes an high cataract,
Forc'd by the rising rocks that there her course
oppose,
As tho' within her bounds they meant her to
inclose;
Here when the labouring fish does at the foot
arrive,
And finds that by his strength he does but vainly
strive;
His tail takes in his mouth, and, bending like
a bow
That's to full compass drawn, aloft himself
doth throw,
Then springing at his height, as doth a little
wand
That bended end to end, and started from man's
hand,
Far off itself doth cast, so does that Salmon
vault;
And if, at first, he fail, his second summersault
He instantly essays, and, from his nimble ring
Still yerking, never leaves until himself he
fling
Above the opposing stream.
This Michael Drayton tells you, of this leap
or summersault of the Salmon.
And, next, I shall tell you, that it is observed
by Gesner and others, that there is no better
Salmon than in England; and that though some
of our northern counties have as fat, and as
large, as the river Thames, yet none are of
so excellent a taste.
And as I have told you that Sir Francis Bacon
observes, the age of a Salmon exceeds not ten
years; so let me next tell you, that his growth
is very sudden: it is said that after he is
got into the sea, he becomes, from a Samlet
not so big as a Gudgeon, to be a Salmon, in
as short a time as a gosling becomes to be a
goose. Much of this has been observed, by tying
a riband, or some known tape or thread, in the
tail of some young Salmons which have been taken
in weirs as they have swimmed towards the salt
water; and then by taking a part of them again,
with the known mark, at the same place, at their
return from the sea, which is usually about
six months after; and the like experiment hath
been tried upon young swallows, who have, after
six months' absence, been observed to return
to the same chimney, there to make their nests
and habitations for the summer following; which
has inclined many to think, that every Salmon
usually returns to the same river in which it
was bred, as young pigeons taken out of the
same dovecote have also been observed to do.
And you are yet to observe further, that the
He-salmon is usually bigger than the Spawner;
and that he is more kipper, and less able to
endure a winter in the fresh water than the
She is: yet she is, at that time of looking
less kipper and better, as watry, and as bad
meat.
And yet you are to observe, that as there is
no general rule without an exception, so there
are some few rivers in this nation that have
Trouts and Salmon in season in winter, as 'tis
certain there be in the river Wye in Monmouthshire,
where they be in season, as Camden observes,
from September till April. But, my scholar,
the observation of this and many other things
I must in manners omit, because they will prove
too large for our narrow compass of time, and,
therefore, T shall next fall upon my directions
how to fish for this Salmon.
And, for that: First you shall observe, that
usually he stays not long in a place, as Trouts
will, but, as I said, covets still to go nearer
the spring- head: and that he does not, as the
Trout and many other fish, lie near the water-side
or bank, or roots of trees, but swims in the
deep and broad parts of the water, and usually
in the middle, and near the ground, and that
there you are to fish for him, and that he is
to be caught, as the Trout is, with a worm,
a minnow which some call a peek, or with a fly.
And you are to observe, that he is very seldom
observed to bite at a minnow, yet sometimes
he will, and not usually at a fly, but more
usually at a worm, and then most usually at
a lob or garden-worm, which should be well scoured,
that is to say, kept seven or eight days in
moss before you fish with them: and if you double
your time of eight into sixteen, twenty, or
more days, it is still the better; for the worms
will still be clearer, tougher, and more lively,
and continue so longer upon your hook. And they
may be kept longer by keeping them cool, and
in fresh moss; and some advise to put camphire
into it.
Note also, that many used to fish for a Salmon
with a ring of wire on the top of their rod,
through which the line may run to as great a
length as is needful, when he is hooked. And
to that end, some use a wheel about the middle
of their rod, or near their hand, which is to
be observed better by seeing one of them than
by a large demonstration of words.
And now I shall tell you that which may be called
a secret. I have been a-fishing with old Oliver
Henly, now with God, a noted fisher both for
Trout and Salmon; and have observed, that he
would usually take three or four worms out of
his bag, and put them into a little box in his
pocket, where he would usually let them continue
half an hour or more. before he would bait his
hook with them. I have asked him his reason,
and he has replied, " He did but pick the best
out to be in readiness against he baited his
hook the next time ": but he has been observed,
both by others and myself, to catch more fish
than I, or any other body that has ever gone
a-fishing with him, could do, and especially
Salmons. And I have been told lately, by one
of his most intimate and secret friends, that
the box in which he put those worms was anointed
with a drop, or two or three, of the oil of
ivy-berries, made by expression or infusion;
and told, that by the worms remaining in that
box an hour, or a like time, they had incorporated
a kind of smell that was irresistibly attractive,
enough to force any fish within the smell of
them to bite. This I heard not long since from
a friend, but have not tried it; yet I grant
it probable, and refer my reader to Sir Francis
Bacon's Natural history, where he proves fishes
may hear, and, doubtless, can more probably
smell: and I am certain Gesner says, the Otter
can smell in the water; and I know not but that
fish may do so too. 'Tis left for a lover of
angling, or any that desires to improve that
art, to try this conclusion.
I shall also impart two other experiments, but
not tried by myself, which I will deliver in
the same words that they were given me by an
excellent angler and a very friend, in writing:
he told me the latter was too good to be told,
but in a learned language, lest it should be
made common.
"Take the stinking oil drawn out of polypody
of the oak by a retort, mixed with turpentine
and hive-honey, and anoint your bait therewith,
and it will doubtless draw the fish to it."
The other is this: " Vulnera hederae grandissimae
inflicta sudant balsamum oleo gelato, albicantique
persimile, odoris vero longe suavissimi". "'Tis
supremely sweet to any fish, and yet assa foetida
may do the like."
But in these I have no great faith; yet grant
it probable; and have had from some chymical
men, namely, from Sir George Hastings and others,
an affirmation of them to be very advantageous.
But no more of these; especially not in this
place.
I might here, before I take my leave of the
Salmon, tell you, that there is more than one
sort of them, as namely, a Tecon, and another
called in some places a Samlet, or by some a
Skegger; but these, and others which I forbear
to name, may be fish of another kind, and differ
as we know a Herring and a Pilchard do, which,
I think, are as different as the rivers in which
they breed, and must, by me, be left to the
disquisitions of men of more leisure, and of
greater abilities than I profess myself to have.
And lastly, I am to borrow so much of your promised
patience, as to tell you, that the trout, or
Salmon, being in season, have, at their first
taking out of the water, which continues during
life, their bodies adorned, the one with such
red spots, and the other with such black or
blackish spots, as give them such an addition
of natural beauty as, I think, was never given
to any woman by the artificial paint or patches
in which they so much pride themselves in this
age. And so I shall leave them both; and proceed
to some observations of the Pike.
Chapter
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