BAIT FISHING HISTORY
That's why early man, as far back as Neanderthal days, used fish hooks baited with who knows what, to take fish. Unfortunately, not too much primitive fishing tackle survives. The earliest tackle seems to be some stone age hooks from Czechoslovakia, or whatever they're calling it by the time this sees print. Clearly early man fished with bait. It's easy to see their hair lines and wood poles wouldn't survive. Language might solve the problem. In Latin, and in Hebrew, the same word means both "thorn" and "hook." So it's easy to see that the fur garment set used for hooks.
FISHING IN PRINT
Fishing hasn't always had good press. Plato called it "a lazy deceitful occupation, unworthy of a gentleman . . ." Romans felt fishing a suitable occupation as it "encourages contemplation." However, the first literary mention of fishing was by Aelian who used natural flies to catch fish. One wonders how, for he talks about converting pesky mosquitos into bait. Maybe, like some of today's fishermen, his imagination exceeded his dexterity, or perhaps he used crane flies or maybe he flat lied. Aeolian also started the glut of fishing literature on artificial like flies. Why do so many fishermen look down on bait even though most experts agree that baitfishing is, at it's most sophisticated, both the most productive and the most subtle form of the sport? Why do many claim some higher art exists with lures and flies? After all, Dame Juliana Berners published her BOK OF ST. ALBANS or TREATISE OF FISHING WITH AN ANGLE in 1496, and she meant angle worms, not ways to skirt fish and game regulations!
Go To Page: 1 2