Fishing
Forums
Trade
fish tales, discuss favorite books, read fishing
reports, make new friends. |
|
The
Salmon Cookbook
More
than 100 recipes for cooking salmon, including special
techniques and secrets for poaching, grilling, baking,
sautéing and serving this delicious fish! |
|
|
|
|
home
-> free
fishing books -> The
Compleat Angler -> chapter ten
|
|
The fourth day - continued
On the Bream
Chapter X
Piscator
The Bream, being at a full growth, is a large
and stately fish. He will breed both in rivers
and ponds: but loves best to live in ponds,
and where, if he likes the water and air, he
will grow not only to be very large, but as
fat as a hog. He is by Gesner taken to be more
pleasant, or sweet, than wholesome. This fish
is long in growing; but breeds exceedingly in
a water that pleases him; yea, in many ponds
so fast, as to overstore them, and starve the
other fish.
He is very broad, with a forked tail, and his
scales set in excellent order; he hath large
eyes, and a narrow sucking mouth; he hath two
sets of teeth, and a lozenge-like bone, a bone
to help his grinding. The melter is observed
to have two large melts; and the female, two
large bags of eggs or spawn.
Gesner reports, that in Poland a certain and
a great number of large breams were put into
a pond, which in the next following winter were
frozen up into one entire ice, and not one drop
of water remaining, nor one of these fish to
be found, though they were diligently searched
for; and yet the next spring, when the ice was
thawed, and the weather warm, and fresh water
got into the pond, he affirms they all appeared
again. This Gesner affirms; and I quote my author,
because it seems almost as incredible as the
resurrection to an atheist: but it may win something,
in point of believing it, to him that considers
the breeding or renovation of the silk-worm,
and of many insects. And that is considerable,
which Sir Francis Bacon observes in his History
of Life and Death, fol. 20, that there be some
herbs that die and spring every year, and some
endure longer.
But though some do not, yet the French esteem
this fish highly; and to that end have this
proverb " He that hath Breams in his pond, is
able to bid his friend welcome "; and it is
noted, that the best part of a Bream is his
belly and head.
Some say, that Breams and Roaches will mix their
eggs and melt together; and so there is in many
places a bastard breed of Breams, that never
come to be either large or good, but very numerous.
The baits good to catch this Bream are many.
First, paste made of brown bread and honey;
gentles; or the brood of wasps that be young,
and then not unlike gentles, and should be hardened
in an oven, or dried on a tile before the fire
to make them tough. Or, there is, at the root
of docks or flags or rushes, in watery places,
a worm not unlike a maggot, at which Tench will
bite freely. Or he will bite at a grasshopper
with his legs nipt off, in June and July; or
at several flies, under water, which may be
found on flags that grow near to the water-side.
I doubt not but that there be many other baits
that are good; but I will turn them all into
this most excellent one, either for a Carp or
Bream, in any river or mere: it was given to
me by a most honest and excellent angler; and
hoping you will prove both, I will impart it
to you.
1. Let your bait be as big a red worm as you
can find, without a knot: get a pint or quart
of them in an evening, in garden-walks, or chalky
commons, after a shower of rain; and put them
with clean moss well washed and picked, and
the water squeezed out of the moss as dry as
you can, into an earthen pot or pipkin set dry;
and change the moss fresh every three or four
days, for three weeks or a month together; then
your bait will be at the best, for it will be
clear and lively.
2, Having thus prepared your baits, get your
tackling ready and fitted for this sport. Take
three long angling-rods; and as many and more
silk, or silk and hair, lines; and as many large
swan or goose-quill floats. Then take a piece
of lead, and fasten them to the low ends of
your lines: then fasten your link-hook also
to the lead; and let there be about a foot or
ten inches between the lead and the hook: but
be sure the lead be heavy enough to sink the
float or quill, a little under the water; and
not the quill to bear up the lead, for the lead
must lie on the ground. Note, that your link
next the hook may be smaller than the rest of
your line, if you dare adventure, for fear of
taking the Pike or Perch, who will assuredly
visit your hooks, till they be taken out, as
I will show you afterwards, before either Carp
or Bream will come near to bite. Note also,
that when the worm is well baited, it will crawl
up and down as far as the lead will give leave,
which much enticeth the fish to bite without
suspicion.
3. Having thus prepared your baits, and fitted
your tackling, repair to the river, where you
have seen them swim in skulls or shoals. in
the summer-time, in a hot afternoon, about three
or four of the clock; and watch their going
forth of their deep holes, and returning, which
you may well discern, for they return about
four of the clock, most of them seeking food
at the bottom, yet one or two will lie on the
top of the water, rolling and tumbling themselves,
whilst the rest are under him at the bottom;
and so you shall perceive him to keep sentinel:
then mark where he plays most and stays longest,
which commonly is in the broadest and deepest
place of the river; and there, or near thereabouts,
at a clear bottom and a convenient landing-place,
take one of your angles ready fitted as aforesaid,
and sound the bottom, which should be about
eight or ten feet deep; two yards from the bank
is best. Then consider with yourself, whether
that water will rise or fall by the next morning,
by reason of any water-mills near; and, according
to your discretion, take the depth of the place,
where you mean after to cast your ground-bait,
and to fish, to half an inch; that the lead
lying on or near the ground-bait, the top of
the float may only appear upright half an inch
above the water.
Thus you having found and fitted for the place
and depth thereof, then go home and prepare
your ground-bait, which is, next to the fruit
of your labours, to be regarded.
The GROUND-BAIT.
You shall take a peck, or a peck and a half,
according to the greatness of the stream and
deepness of the water, where you mean to angle,
of sweet gross-ground barley-malt; and boil
it in a kettle, one or two warms is enough:
then strain it through a bag into a tub, the
liquor whereof hath often done my horse much
good; and when the bag and malt is near cold,
take it down to the water-side, about eight
or nine of the clock in the evening, and not
before: cast in two parts of your ground-bait,
squeezed hard between both your hands; it will
sink presently to the bottom; and be sure it
may rest in the very place where you mean to
angle: if the stream run hard, or move a little,
cast your malt in handfuls a little the higher,
upwards the stream. You may, between your hands,
close the malt so fast in handfuls, that the
water will hardly part it with the fall.
Your ground thus baited, and tackling fitted,
leave your bag, with the rest of your tackling
and ground-bait, near the sporting-place all
night; and in the morning, about three or four
of the clock, visit the water- side, but not
too near, for they have a cunning watchman,
and are watchful themselves too.
Then, gently take one of your three rods, and
bait your hook; casting it over your ground-bait,
and gently and secretly draw it to you till
the lead rests about the middle of the ground-bait.
Then take a second rod, and cast in about a
yard above, and your third a yard below the
first rod; and stay the rods in the ground:
but go yourself so far from the water-side,
that you perceive nothing but the top of the
floats, which you must watch most diligently.
Then when you have a bite, you shall perceive
the top of your float to sink suddenly into
the water: yet, nevertheless, be not too hasty
to run to your rods, until you see that the
line goes clear away; then creep to the water-side,
and give as much line as possibly you can: if
it be a good Carp or Bream, they will go to
the farther side of the river: then strike gently,
and hold your rod at a bent, a little while;
but if you both pull together, you are sure
to lose your game, for either your line, or
hook, or hold, will break: and after you have
overcome them, they will make noble sport, and
are very shy to be landed. The Carp is far stronger
and more mettlesome than the Bream.
Much more is to be observed in this kind of
fish and fishing, but it is far fitter for experience
and discourse than paper. Only, thus much is
necessary for you to know, and to be mindful
and careful of, that if the Pike or Perch do
breed in that river, they will be sure to bite
first, and must first be taken. And for the
most part they are very large; and will repair
to your ground-bait, not that they will eat
of it, but will feed and sport themselves among
the young fry that gather about and hover over
the bait.
The way to discern the Pike and to take him,
it you mistrust your Bream hook, for I have
taken a Pike a yard long several times at my
Bream hooks, and sometimes he hath had the luck
to share my line, may be thus:
Take a small Bleak, or Roach, or Gudgeon, and
bait it; and set it, alive, among your rods,
two feet deep from the cork, with a little red
worm on the point of the hook: then take a few
crumbs of white bread, or some of the ground-bait,
and sprinkle it gently amongst your rods. If
Mr. Pike be there, then the little fish will
skip out of the water at his appearance, but
the live-set bait is sure to be taken.
Thus continue your sport from four in the morning
till eight, and if it be a gloomy windy day,
they will bite all day long: but this is too
long to stand to your rods, at one place; and
it will spoil your evening sport that day, which
is this.
About four of the clock in the afternoon repair
to your baited place; and as soon as you come
to the water-side, cast in one-half of the rest
of your ground-bait, and stand off; then whilst
the fish are gathering together, for there they
will most certainly come for their supper, you
may take a pipe of tobacco: and then, in with
your three rods, as in the morning. You will
find excellent sport that evening, till eight
of the clock: then cast in the residue of your
ground-bait, and next morning, by four of the
clock, visit them again for four hours, which
is the best sport of all; and after that, let
them rest till you and your friends have a mind
to more sport.
From St. James's-tide until Bartholomew-tide
is the best; when they have had all the summer's
food, they are the fattest.
Observe, lastly, that after three or four days'
fishing together, your game will be very shy
and wary, and you shall hardly get above a bite
or two at a baiting: then your only way is to
desist from your sport, about two or three days:
and in the meantime, on the place you late baited,
and again intend to bait, you shall take a turf
of green but short grass, as big or bigger than
a round trencher; to the top of this turf, on
the green side, you shall, with a needle and
green thread, fasten one by one, as many little
red worms as will near cover all the turf: then
take a round board or trencher, make a hole
in the middle thereof, and through the turf
placed on the board or trencher, with a string
or cord as long as is fitting, tied to a pole,
let it down to the bottom of the water, for
the fish to feed upon without disturbance about
two or three days; and after that you have drawn
it away, you may fall to, and enjoy your former
recreation.
B. A.
Chapter
11 >>
Table
of Contents
|
|
|
|