Pike and Perch: With Notes on Record Pike and a Chapter on the Black Bass, Murray Cod and Other Sporting Members of the Perch FamilyLawrence & Bullen, 1898 - 200 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 36
... is very much better eating when crimped , and especially so if for boiling . The best way to cut up a pike is to take off the head , cut down the back from shoulder to cook pike tail along one side of the backbone , 36 THE PIKE .
... is very much better eating when crimped , and especially so if for boiling . The best way to cut up a pike is to take off the head , cut down the back from shoulder to cook pike tail along one side of the backbone , 36 THE PIKE .
Page 37
... tail along one side of the backbone , when it and the ribs can be easily removed , and the flesh left intact : if the vertebra is not removed , rub How to salt into it and hang the fish in the air for some hours , i.e. , to " wind - dry ...
... tail along one side of the backbone , when it and the ribs can be easily removed , and the flesh left intact : if the vertebra is not removed , rub How to salt into it and hang the fish in the air for some hours , i.e. , to " wind - dry ...
Page 62
... tail - hook , and adopted a straight reverse - hook instead , which is an improvement , as it is easier to put the bait on the flights , and when on it holds more firmly , lasts longer , and spins brilliantly . Rejecting the con ...
... tail - hook , and adopted a straight reverse - hook instead , which is an improvement , as it is easier to put the bait on the flights , and when on it holds more firmly , lasts longer , and spins brilliantly . Rejecting the con ...
Page 63
... tail assumes the curve it is to retain , stick the double barbed pin into the side and right through the bait . Then pass the wire loop through the upper lip or nose of the bait first and the under lip second , and again under itself at ...
... tail assumes the curve it is to retain , stick the double barbed pin into the side and right through the bait . Then pass the wire loop through the upper lip or nose of the bait first and the under lip second , and again under itself at ...
Page 64
... tail ( see the small sketch of bait on previous page ) ; if the lip - hook is drawn too closely the shoulder of the bait will be bent , and it will not spin correctly and brilliantly , but will " wobble , " which , as a rule , is not an ...
... tail ( see the small sketch of bait on previous page ) ; if the lip - hook is drawn too closely the shoulder of the bait will be bent , and it will not spin correctly and brilliantly , but will " wobble , " which , as a rule , is not an ...
Other editions - View all
Pike and Perch, with Notes on Record Pike and a Chapter on the Black Bass ... Alfred Jardine No preview available - 2015 |
Common terms and phrases
anal fin angler angling ARCHER bait BAIT-CAN black bass bottom capture carp cast catch caught with snap Chippenham coils colour copies printed cork Crown 8vo dace deep Demy 8vo dorsal fin draw Edited Esox excellent Farlow February feed feet Fishing Gazette flight float Francis Francis Frank Buckland gaff gill-covers gimp gorge gudgeon head Illustrated inches jack Jardine JARDINE'S lake large pike largest late LAWRENCE & BULLEN lead length lip hook livebait loop Lucius lure Messrs minnow mouth Murray Cod Norfolk Broads Nottingham numbers PATENT paternoster pectoral pectoral fins Pennell perch Percida pickerel PIKE ROD pike-fishing pike-perch placed played pond punt reel rings river river Frome roach round rushes salmon says sedges silk small gudgeon snap-tackle Sowley Pond specimen SPINNER SPINNING BAIT sport stream swimming swivel tail tench Thames trace trimmers trolling trout vols waterproof weeds weight wire worm yards
Popular passages
Page 23 - By a river, which its soften'd way did take In currents through the calmer water spread Around : the wild fowl nestled in the brake And sedges, brooding in their liquid bed ; The woods sloped downwards to its brink, and stood With their green faces fix'd upon the flood.
Page 133 - ... part of a dead frog, he suffered him to proceed upon his voyage of discovery. As had been anticipated, this bait soon caught the eye of a greedy pike...
Page 11 - ... —Spectator. LI NTON, WJ-THE FLOWER AND THE STAR, and other Stories for Children. Written and Illustrated by WJ LINTON. Fcp. 8vo. 35. 6d. " Delightfully fresh and unaffected. . . . The beautiful little woodcuts by the author form the most appropriate and expressive illustrations of such simple and pleasing stories that could be desired.
Page 109 - A capital description of the taking of the gorge-bait is given by Mr. Stoddart in his ' Angler's Companion':— No one that ever felt the first attack of a pike at the gorge-bait can easily forget it. It is not, as might be supposed from the character of the fish, a bold, eager, voracious grasp ; quite the contrary, it is a slow calculating grip. There is usually nothing about it dashing or at all violent; no stirring of the fins, no lashing of the tail, no expressed fury or revenge. The whole is...
Page 4 - Distinguished by a vein of pleasant reflection as well as by felicity of language "—Times. BORDER BALLADS.-TWELVE BORDER BALLADS, with Twelve Etchings by CO MURRAY, and an Introduction by ANDREW LANG. 410. £i is. net. BOTTICELLI. -DRAWINGS BY SANDRO BOTTICELLI, for DANTE'S DIVINA COMMEDIA. Reduced Facsimiles after the Originals in the Royal Museum, Berlin, and in the Vatican Library.
Page 1 - THOMAS STANLEY'S Translation. Edited by AH BULLEN, Illustrated by JR WEGUELIN. Fcap.
Page 134 - ... to swim, from the invisible enemy; the gander the one moment losing and the next regaining his centre of gravity, and casting between whiles many a rueful look at his snow-white fleet of geese and goslings, who cackled out their sympathy for their afflicted commodore. At length victory declared in favour of the feathered combatant, who bearing away for the nearest shore, landed on the green grass one of the finest Pikes ever caught in the castle-loch. This adventure is said to have cured the...
Page 31 - The doctor thought this most extraordinary, but he examined the fish's skull, and found it going on all right. He then walked backwards and forwards along the edge of the pond for some time, and the fish continued to swim up and down, turning whenever he turned ; but, being blind on the wounded side of its skull, it always appeared agitated when it had that side towards the bank, as it could not then see its benefactor. On the next day he took some young friends down to see the fish, which came...
Page 133 - Dumfriesshire, kept a gander, who had not only a great trick of wandering himself, but also delighted in piloting forth his cackling harem, to weary themselves in circumnavigating their native lake, or in straying amidst forbidden fields on the opposite shore.
Page 133 - ... pikes are ; there is no doubt of sport, with great pleasure, betwixt the goose and the pike; it is the greatest sport and pleasure that a noble gentleman in Shropshire doth give his friends entertainment with.