Shooting Times & Country Magazine

Serious matters

Why all shooting folk should also go fishing

-

In these days of thermal imaging and night sights, pigeon magnets and whirligigs, and when you can book a day’s shooting and confidentl­y expect a bag of several hundreds of pheasants or partridges, it is probably more important than ever that those who shoot also go fishing.

Not, I would venture, to a lake stocked to the brim with trout or a pond stuffed with carp, but to a proper river or stream, or the sea, and cast a line towards a wild fish.

The Atlantic salmon — the king of fish — used to be called the ‘fish of a thousand casts’. I haven’t counted how many times

I cast in a given day when standing in a noble river up to my nethers in pursuit of a salmon. But last time I was in the company of some experience­d anglers, we worked out it had taken us, on average, 20 days of fishing to connect with a fish.

And these were no rank amateurs but resolute fisherfolk who know what they are about. Three weeks of fishing — with all the travelling and accommodat­ion and tips and expenses that involves — before there was even the sniff of a fish.

And that’s why keen Shots should go fishing; because it might reintroduc­e them to the virtues of patience and a degree of fieldcraft too.

Not that there is a great deal of fieldcraft in salmon fishing, if I’m honest, though a shedload of patience is essential. The pursuit of wild brown trout, however, requires fieldcraft in abundance. First you have to consider the environmen­t — time of year, time of day, air temperatur­e, water temperatur­e. Then you must check what the fish are eating — species, colour, onthe-water or in-the-water — after which it is necessary to find a fish by sidling up the bank, peeking through the reeds several times to check the flow beyond. Only when all of this has been undertaken do you actually get the chance to start fishing.

Then you get one cast to bamboozle your quarry and if you deliver a lure akin to an anchor being dumped midstream, then all the fish will scatter. Your next chance will be either an hour later or half a mile up or down the bank. It is, in short, damned hard work.

And it is a far cry from being decanted from a commodious Gun bus a few steps from your peg, over which a steady stream of game will make stately progressio­n before you have settled yourself on a shooting stick.

Wild places

“We worked out it had taken us 20 days of fishing to connect with a fish”

Many shooters say visiting wild places is part of the attraction. Well, rivers are wild places all right and the view changes with every passing ounce of water. Was it Confucius or Buddha who said that “no man ever enters the same river twice”? Neither actually. it was Heraclitus and he was right. The river changes and we change too; but because we spend time on the river it is possible to observe and appreciate those changes. Angling is contemplat­ive.

Stalking comes close, of course. Watching the sunrise from a woodland high seat is a comparable experience, but it is a fleeting thing compared with a day spent beside a river.

It is also the case that women are notoriousl­y far better at connecting with salmon than are men. All the records are held by ladies. Which is also something to think about when putting in the hours of step, roll, cast, mend, repeat.

Some say it’s luck. Some say women exude a pheromone irresistib­le to salmon; particular­ly males. Others suggest that they are more diligent in their casting and more delicate in their fly presentati­on.

I have no idea, but it’s not the sort of question you have time to consider while you are shooting.

And that I do know.

Do you agree with Giles? Let us know via Stletters@futurenet.com

Giles Catchpole is a freelance journalist as well as a keen Shot and angler, and he has written several humorous sporting books

 ?? ?? The pursuit of wild brown trout requires fieldcraft and patience; a valuable lesson for shooters
The pursuit of wild brown trout requires fieldcraft and patience; a valuable lesson for shooters
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom