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Showing posts with label catfish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label catfish. Show all posts

Thursday, 6 November 2014

Gone fishin again - Sepia Saturday

Back in November 2011 I went fishing on Sepia Saturday here.

Alan's prompt this week shows three miners on a fishing trip, but by the look of them they are relaxing, telling fisherman's tales.



I first when fishing when I was a young boy, a minor in fact. However it wasn't as long ago as this.

Children fishing for minnows with net
1882 - Van Ingen and Snyder
Our technique was to use a jam jar on a length of string; the bait was small pieces of bread inside the jar. The skill was to cast the jar into the river without losing the bread. It wasn't very long before fish would enter the jar after a feast but then you had to pull the jar out of the water quickly with the fish inside.

The most common fish we caught this way were small minnows and sticklebacks like these - 

Minnow
(3 March 2008 - Freddy Kreugar)
Stickleback
(Ellen Edmondson & Hugh Chrisp)
If we were lucky we would lift a stone and find a Miller's Thumb.
Bullhead of Miller's Thumb
(June 2009 - Hans Hillewaert - CC BY-SA 4.0)
These were good at camouflaging themselves in their surroundings. One would fit easily it the palm of your hand.

The river did not have to be very deep for these activities, although we rarely waded like this.

Children search for minnows
(Ronald Laubertson - US Fish and Wildlife Service)
We never used a net and girls were not allowed.

In previous posts I have mentioned that I was born in the village of Ketton, in Rutland - England's smallest county. 

River Chater at Ketton, where I used to fish
(June 1959 - By Humphrey Bolton - CC BY-SA 2.0)
River Chater Bridge, Ketton
(April 2007 - By Graham Horn - CC BY-SA 2.0)
The stone bridge was built in the 17th century and restored in 1849. The footbridge did not exist when I live there back in the 1940s. The Chater here was too fast flowing for fishing with jam jars to be successful.

Later I took to fishing with rod and line in the River Welland which was on the outskirts of the village. The Chater joins the Welland at Stamford c. four miles down stream. However my interest in fishing faded as I became too involved with sport - and discovered girls!

The last two weeks we have been staying with our daughter in Michigan and it was in lake in her property that, as I'm sure I have told you before that I caught my largest fish.

Bob's catfish in 2006
No, I'm not pulling its tail to make it longer.

I have not been able to get away from fish this week. This one was the most colourful I've seen.

Aquarium in a Chrysler service centre, Lake Orion
And just to prevent me bragging about the size of my catfish I was taken to Oxford Township's Library to see this monster.

I think he was looking for the exit!
His companions in the tank were more like the roach I used to catch in the River Welland.


My fisherman's tale is almost done so I'll leave you to search out others at Sepia-Saturday-253.

Me? I'm hooked by Louis and Bing.



Thursday, 24 November 2011

Gone Fishing! - Sepia Saturday

Alan's picture this week opens up all sorts of possibilities but it was the young man on the right that got me started.
Launceston Elliott
Launceston Elliott, a Scotsman, was Britain's first Olympic Gold Medallist - he won his medal for the one-handed lift in the games at Athens in 1896.

It was the fish on sale that caught my eye so I went to find a few.
Bull Red Fish measuring 36"
Caught in Galveston Bay from Texas City Dike on May 2, 2011
(By Hvn - Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 licence)

Before you tell me this fish is not on the shop's list, let's have a roll on the drums.
Red Drum aka red fish, channel bass or spot-tail bass
Caught off the Gulf Coast of Louisiana. Mature red drum not a red bull, the name given to red drum larger than 26" (By Geeklikepi - Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 licence)

If you've never thought of a buffalo as a fish, you would be wrong.
Bigmouth Buffalo (Ictiobus cyprinellus)
(ex USFWS National Image Library)

Not all fishermen tell tales about the big ones they've caught,
A 'Tiddler'
But just to prove I didn't waste my time completely.
My 'Prize' Catfish
The earth moved when I hooked that fellow. However it wasn't F M Pointer who moved this.
The House that Moved, Exeter
A c14 house restored and removed to its present position on West Limk
ex geograph.org.uk  - By Derek Harper - 
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 generic licence

If you want to see how it was done then check here

Of course don't forget to look at other contributors at Sepia Saturday 102