.■ip ^J^ Key ■.^^ W^:^ :§mi. '^i^.' ,^<^ ^'"^ 0^ ° % .|#^ ^A "NEAR BY )) Fresh and Salt Water Fishing, OR Angling Within a Radius of One Hundred Miles of Philadelphia. where to go; when to go; how to go. BY A. M.' SPANGLER, President of the Anglers' Association of Eastern Pennsylvania. WITH NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS, PHILADELPHIA, 1889. Copyrighted, 1889, by A. M. Spangler. PRESS OF SPANGLER & DAVIS, 529 COMMERCE ST., PHILADELPHIA. TO THE READER. The love of fishing is innate, and may be said to be almost universal. There are very few memories connected with our earlier experiences, that are recalled with more real jileasure than those referring to the days when, as boys, we went a-fishing. Such recollections afford the keenest enjoyment, when others, relating to incidents which, at tll^ time of their happening, seemed far more worthy of being treasured up in our mental storehouses, are forgotten or dimly remembered. Such pleasant reminiscences have been the inspiration of these pages, and they are given to the world with the sincere hope that any who may chance to peruse them will derive as much satisfaction from their perusal as the author has had in their preparation. That fishing is indulged to a much greater extent to-da}?^ than ever before, will not be questioned. There is a fascination about it that is almost irresisti- ble, which, when coupled with the facts that the facilities for reaching localities where lure-taking fishes are to be found have been much increased, and the de- vices by which they can be tempted and taken, multiplied and made so much more effective than formerly, readily explains the growing popularity of ang- ling. That there is need for this increasing indulgence in an innocent, alluring and healthful recreation is clearly obvious. We are a busy, go-ahead people, ever eager in the pursuit of wealth or fame, and, consequently, unmindful, in a large degree, of the many sources of enjoyment A^ouchsafed us by a kind pro\4dence. We are too apt, in the unremitting ardor with which we pursue our various callings, to overlook or forget such blessings, excusing our folly and forgetfulness, and placating our consciences with the self-promise, that, when fortune or fame, or both shall have been won, the drudgery of the past will be laid aside, and the remainder of our lives devoted to rational, health- giving and joy-promoting pursuits. The change from lifelong pursuits to those of inactivity, brings with it not simply ennui, but worse, pains and penalties that might have been avoided had an occasional day's fishing or some other outing that Avould have brought these toilers in direct contact with nature in the woods and by the streams, been indulged. Somebody once wisely said to somebody else, ' ' All work and no plaj- makes Jack a dull boy. ' ' Nature has her revenges as well as her rewards. Don't for- get that. She will not permit infringements of her laws without imposing pen- alties. She may prove lenient, and deal gently with you, but the chances are, she will demand and exact the full penalty of her bond from you. Believe that this world of ours is full of eujoymeut, if you vnll but avail yourself of it, and that it will revolve, whether your shoulder is under it or not. Do not wait until age, with its infirmities has come upon you, to lay aside your labors. What shall it profit you, if you gain the wealth of the world after having toiled like a galley-slave for it, and then find yourself a physical wreck, without either capacity or inclination for the enjoyment you had Ijeen looking for through all those long wearying years. There are thousands of persons, who, having only an occasional holiday, would gladly indulge in a day's outing with rod and reel accompaniment, if they but knew where to go, when to go and how to go where there would be a reasonable probability of finding fish. A Directory for " Near-by" Fishing, by which is meant, angling within a radius of an hundred miles of Philadel- phia, has been a long acknowledged want, and it was T^^thJl view to meeting that want, this little volume was written, mtli the hope that the information it contains would benefit somebody. It is not claimed for its contents that they are in any sense technical or scientific, or that they describe only game fishes and their whereabouts, for such is not the fact ; though it does embrace all the fishes of that class in "near-by " territory. While the skilled, scientific angler, may possibly find in it something to inter- est him, the information sought to be imparted is intended for the benefit of the many, whose knowledge of the subjects treated is limited, and who are at a loss to know where to apply for such advice as they desire and need. What they want to know is, something about the habits and qualities of "near-by " fresh and salt water fishes, where they are usually" found, when they can lawfully be taken, how to reach their haunts and the kind of tackle and bait requisite to tempt and capture them. That is all there is of it, and that is all that has been attempted. While much that is given is the result of the author's oaati observation and experience, due acknowledgment is herewith made of indebtedness to Thad- deus Norris's "American Angler's Book;" Professor Spencer C. Baird ; Clark's " Fishes of the East Atlantic Coast ; " Scott's " Fishing in American Waters ; " Goode's "American Fishes," and Henshall's "Book of the Black Bass," for valuable information. Indulging the hope that this Imntling of some of the author's leisure hours will fulfil the intention of its preparation ; that it will somewhat aid amateurs in their endeavors to become skilful anglers, and that veterans will find in it something to interest and amuse, if not instruct, it is respectfully dedicated to them all. Philadelphia, May 20, 1889. A. M. S. ''NEAR-BY" FRESH AND SALT WATER FISHING. FRESH WATER FISHES. The Past and Present of Angeing. THE time was, and not very long since either, when there were comparatively few amateur anglers or rod- and- reel fishermen in Philadelphia. The men who indulged in that healthful and pleasant recreation in this city twenty-five years ago, could almost have been counted on your fingers. Fishing tackle was then of primitive order, rods generally being of whole-stick bamboo, reels almost unknown and coarse cotton or hempen lines, poorly made and very kinky, instead of the fine cable-laid and braided silk and flax ones of to-da3^ Near-by Fishing Twenty-five Years Ago. Fishing in those days was confined mainly to waters within a few miles of the city, and most of it done with the now almost abandoned and unsportsmanlike hand-line. Here and there could be found some ardent lover of piscatorial sport who had the means, the time and the pluck, to venture across the sands of New Jersey to the seashore, but the rank and file were forced to content them- selves with such sport as could be had in the Delaware and Schuyl- kill and their near tributaries, where the}^ found perch, striped bass, "catties," sunfish and a few other kinds. In those days, fish were more abundant in the waters named than now, so that those anglers, primitive as w^as their tackle, w^ould generally bring home good, big strings. A Step in Advance. With the advent of railroads and steamers, came, of course, in- creased facilities for reaching more distant fishing points. The in- choate anglers in the near-b}- streams, began to learn something about the superior attractions of those more distant waters, of the larger fish and the larger catches. Thaddeus Norris and a few others, took the ground that angling was an art, and wrote and spoke of it as something worthy of cultivation, and of the rod and reel as vital essentials to the proper prosecution of it. Converts to their advanced doctrines w^ere not immediateh' numerous, but that fact, instead of discouraging, only seemed to incite to greater effort. They were of course ridiculed by the old-timers — those who clung to the hand-line and the unjointed bamboo rod. The idea of taking fish with devices that would give them a chance for their lives and, at the same time, afford the angler the sport of "playing" before landing them, was regarded with a feeling akin to contempt, and the few who eschewed the old and adopted the new devices were known only as "fancy fishermen. " Rod and ReeIv Encroachments on the Hand Line. As skill in the use of the rod and reel and in casting, has generally to be acquired b}- experience, those who adopted what was then regarded as innovations, were at first, awkward in the use of them, usually unsuccessful, and, of course, laughed at by their less progressive brother fishermen. The w^riter remembers well, a da^^'s perch fishing at Betterton, some twenty years ago, with that veteran angler and author, Thaddeus Norris, who, on that occasion, fished in those deep waters with so much less labor and w4th so much more success than I with the hand line and half-pound dipsy, I was led to think that, notwithstanding my oft expressed prejudices, there was, after all, something in rod fishing worth cultivating. When my companion — who, by-the-by, was the best rod-maker in the country — kindl}^ offered to present me with a rod of his own manufacture, the offer was gladly accepted, and then and there, as far as I w^as personally concerned, the hand- line was discarded forever, though m}^ first experience with the rod and reel was anything else than encouraging. The line would overrun and become almost hopelessl}^ entangled, and just w^hen the fish were biting most vigorously, my beard, which was then of the flowing order, would get wound up with the line. I handled the new tackle pretty much as a lady would a marlinspike, but perseverance conquers all things, and perseverance was finally re- warded with success. Improvements in Tackle. Gradually, but certainly, the rod and reel continued to grow in popular favor. The long, heavy, unwieldy, unjointed bamboos were superseded by the shorter, more flexible jointed ones, the weight being reduced until the minimum of the standard is to-day less than six ounces, the prices ranging from fifty, cents to five hundred dollars. The ill-constructed brass reels of those days have given wa}' to others of the most ingenious construction and ela- borate finish, costing anywhere from one dollar to fifty or sixty. The coarse cotton or hempen lines then in use have been laid aside, except in out-of-the-wa}^ localities, and in their stead are the lighter, more costly and splendidly made silk and flax braided and cable-laid ones. In a word, there has been an almost entire revo- lution in anglers' outfits. They can be had of every qualit}^ and, of course, at almost every price, the quality and cost depending upon the taste and purse of the purchaser. Largk Varikty of Modern Tacrine. Twenty-five years ago, the stock of fishing tackle kept on hand in the most extensive estabUshments in that Hne, was comprised mainly of a small assortment of roughly-made and poorh'- tempered hooks, lines of indifferent quality, gailj^-colored floats and a bundle or two of bamboo rods of various sizes, just as they came from the jungles in which they were grown. Now, fishing tackle stores are attractive, not only to anglers, but to all who are interested in neat and tasteful devices for taking the finn}' tribes. Large show cases fairly glow with polished reels of all sizevS — of German silver, nickel, brass, rubber and other suitable material, and some of them with wdieels and pinions .so accurately adjusted and .so finely finished as to be almost noiseless while running. American inventive inge- nuity seems to have almost exhausted itself in endeaA'ors to pro- duce this now necessar}' adjunct to modern angling, as near perfec- tion as is attainable. As to hooks, they are almost endless in variet}-, quality and price. There are the Kirby, the Linierick, the Aberdeen, the O'Shaughness}', the Sneck Bend, the Kin.sey, the Carli.sle, New York Trout, American Bass, Sproat, Centripetal, Central Draft, Virginia Hollow Points, Sheepshead, Chestertown, Black Fish, Cod, Harrison, Barbless and a host of others, from the minutest and most delicate trout size to the formidable affair used for taking the biggest sharks. Then there are cases of artificial flies of all conceivable colors, sizes and styles, gaud}^ and plain, suited to all seasons and waters, and to all fly-taking fi.shes, for bass, salmon, trout, etc. A cata- logue of one of our principal tackle houses contains a list of more than 300 varieties, all of them elegantly and artistically made. Artistic Rods. Then come the rods, fashioned for all kinds of fishing, from the short, .stout, heavily-mounted Tarpum or Silver King, to the most delicate trout rod of six or eight ounces, with tips so slender that only an expert can conceive the possibilit}^ of their being used suc- cessfull}^ in the capture of four, five and six pound bass and trout. Fink Lines. The displays of fine fishing lines are mangels of superior work- manship, illustrating in a marked degree, the decided progress Americans have made in that special department of manufactur- ing. They are of cotton, hemp, flax, silk and sea grass, most of them notable for their remarkable strength and beauty of fini.sh. A Cuttyhunk cable-laid line of the smallest size — not larger than a common sewing thread — defies attempts to break it without the risk of cutting the fingers to the bone. Some are cable-laid, hundreds of yards in length and without a single perceptible inequality ; others are braided, and others still enamelled, to protect them from the rotting influences of the water. In Europe, American lines are given the decided preference. Floats in great variety, spoon bait, spinners of an hundred forms and of the gaudiest colors, dipsies of all shapes and weights, ranging from a pound to the fourth of an ounce ; nets for shad or minnow, for hauling, drifting or setting ; squids for blue-fivSh troll- ing, gut snoods and leaders for casting, bait-pails, tackle-books and cases, fly-books, gaffs, artificial minnows, helgramites, frogs, crawfish, shrimp, etc., — so closely imitating nature as almost to deceive a human being, much less a fish ; wading pants and boots and hundreds of other things, novel, useful and otherwise, are to be found in the varied collections. What This Fine Tackle Means. These large aggregations of ingenious inventions of skill and taste in the manufacture of useful and non-useful things, all serve to indicate the strong hold which angling has upon the popular heart. The}^ are the responses to the constantly increasing demand lO for the best-made and most effective devices for killing fish without infringing statute laws. There is no recreation so almost univer- sally indulged wherever and whenever opportunity offers; no stories so thoroughly relished as fish stories, and none in which exagge- ration isi said to so largely predominate. Fortunately or unfortunately, numerous as are those who desire to be ranked with the disciples of Isaak Walton, onl}- a few^ of them, comparatively, are able to practically- gratify their inclin- ations in that direction. Hundreds — we were about to say thous- ands — are compelled to limit their fishing proclivities to the few holidays that occur during the warm months — Decoration Day and Fourth of July. There are many others who can occasionally take a day off and go fishing, and who would do so if they knew where to go with reasonable prospects of success, and what kind of tackle and bait to provide for such brief outings. So I have thought it may prove useful to consider the subject of ' ' near by ' ' fishing localities — places that can be readily reached by early trains or steamers — with the kind of fish found there, the proper tackle for taking them, the bait suitable, the lawful season, etc. This will embrace both fresh and salt water fishing, and will possibly prove interesting to the general reader and valuable to those wdio would like to go a-fishing occasionalh', and would pro- bably do so, if they but knew what provision should be made for the excursion. Near-by Fresh Water Fishing fifty years ago and NOW. Fifty years ago, apprenticeship indentures in certain sections of Pennsylvania, but especially along the Susquehanna, contained the proviso, that fish should not be ser\-ed to apprentices more fre- quently than a specified number of times each week. That curious provision owed its origin to the fact that edible fish were so plenti- ful in that river and so easily taken, as to have been an almost ever}' da}' article of diet, and were fed to apprentices, until they were completely surfeited with that kind of animal food. The legal proviso referred to, then became indispensable, and the boys there- after enjoyed its protective influence. It needs not the saying that no such protection is required now, and that if apprentices were indentured as formerly, there would be no occasion for the inser- tion of such a restrictive clause in their indentures. Wanton Depletion of Streams. The inference to bexlrawn from the fact stated is, that within the memory of men now living, the waters of Pennsylvania so teemed with wholesome fishes, that they constituted a principal part of the food daily ser\^ed at the tables of those who lived in the vicinity of any of the principal streams ; but, for reasons that are obvious, no such old-time fish-plentifulness now exists. The streams referred to, and the fishes contained in them, were re- garded as public property, everj^ man claiming the right to kill as many of the fish as he wished, whenever he pleased and by whatever means he might see proper to use. The result can readil}^ be con- ceived. Year after year the fish products of the streams diminished, until, from many of the waters, fishes indigenous to them, almost entirely disappeared, and in face of the fact that stringent laws for the protection of the comparativeh^ few remaining, were enacted, and liberal appropriations for the artificial propagation of valuable kinds and the restocking of the depleted streams made, by the lyCgislature. But for that wise foresight, there would scarcely be left a remnant of the former abundance of native fishes. A more vig- orous enforcement of the State fishery laws within the past five years and the stocking of the principal rivers and creeks with new and valuable varieties, have serv^ed to repair, in some degree, the damage done by the illegal crusades of former periods so merci- lessly waged against fishes of all kinds ; but the evil is not yet w^holly remedied. Much remains to be done before the once noted prolificness of our rivers, creeks and lakes is restored. 12 How TO Repl:enish thkm. As this book is intended for the use of anglers of all grades — the novice as well as the professional, the awkward as well as the skilled in the use of the hook and line — a word with them. If 5^ou are an angler or desire to become one, bear constanth^ in mind the fact, that one of the first essentials of a true angler is, to respect the claims of the fish, for they certainl}- have claims upon 3^our consid- eration. While at times you play the part of an eneni}^ to them, there are other times when 3^ou are in duty bound to act as their protector, and your duty cannot be more conciseh' and 3^et more comprehensiveh' summed up, than you will learn from a careful perusal of the fisher}- laws of the State. Obedience to their man- dates is the single, simple requirement. Respect the close seasons, frown down everything that is illegal whether the illegality takes the form of killing fish out of season, or of killing them at anytime, by the use of devices of the kind forbidden by the statutes. To catch or kill fish for mere sport, is barbarism coupled with a wan- ton disregard of the rights of others and of the laws of the Creator. If you chance to capture a " fingerling " of which you can make no profitable use, release it from the hook and return it to the water, handling it as tenderly as possible. If you must count your catch, the little fellow you have released wall count all the same, and 3^ou will feel better satisfied for having done so, than if you had him in 3-our creel, but ashamed to show him for fear of being laughed at. Follow out these easily observ^ed rules, induce as many others as 3-0U can to imitate your example, and 3'ou will hot onl}^ have performed a plain duty, but will have aided to some extent, in re- plenishing the nearly empty streams. If our waters are nearly barren, the fault is not with them nor with nature's provisions for the restoration of their former fertilitj^ Wherever such barrenness — whether partial or general — prevails, it will be found, upon even casual investigation, to have resulted from gross violations of the laws of nature, and of the fishing laws of the State. 13 How THE State and Nature's I^aws ark Violated. It would be superfluous to point out in detail the varied forms those violations take. Among the many, ma3^be named the pollu- tion of the waters, the use of such devices as fish baskets, weirs, fyke nets, dynamite, and other methods resorted to by unscrupu- lous persons; the disregard of the spawning periods of the fish, etc. Glaring as these practices have been, and damaging as they are to the general^ public, the fact appears to make no impression on the minds of the transgressors. The laws are evaded when- ever it is possible to do so without detection. In many cases that have come to the notice of the writer, public ofiicers, sworn to en- force the laws relating to fish protection, have, instead, been found aiding and abetting their violation. Near-by Fishing improving, but not as good as it should be. In view of the facts briefly recited, it is hardl}^ necessary to state that ' ' near-by ' ' fishing in Pennsylvania — and for that matter, in New Jersey too — although better than several 3^ears ago and still improving, is not as good as it might and certainly should be. But there is happily, a better time coming. Ever}- day, the rights of the fishes are being more and more fully appreciated and re- spected. Public sentiment has reached the conclusion, that the time has come when a proper regard for the fishery laws must be exer- cised by all, and if that sentiment shall continue to spread and strengthen, the day is not far distant, when our waters will again teem with abundance. But despite their present comparative unproductiveness, those who are possessed of the proverbial patience of the angler, who are skilled in fly-casting, who relish a days outing with its wading and its climbing, or who prefer to try conclusions with the bigger fishes of the sea and the estuaries, can hardly fail to be rewarded with some "glorious nibbles," and, not improbably, return at night with well filled creels. Quite a number of our angling friends are favored in the latter respect, and with a view to the aiding of less experienced ones, who are not familiar with the "best places," it is proposed to furnish them with such information as will enable them to have a day's fishing that will be satisfactory, prefacing such information with brief descriptions of the principal lure- taking fishes to be found in the localities named. THE PERCH FAMILY. It is a fact not generally known, that the Perch Family Perci- dcc, includes more game fish than all the other fish families com- bined, as far as American waters are concerned. ' ' De Kay claimed sixty genera and a hundred species as belonging to it. ' ' An old and distinguished ichthyological friend of the writer, the late Yellow Barred Perch. {Pei'ca flu V ia ta lis. ) lamented Thaddeus Norris, author of the American Anglers' Book, the best practical book of its kind — says, ' ' if by any dispensation of providence, the percoids should become extinct, there w^ould scarcely be any sport left for the anglers who fish in the numerous creeks, rivers and lakes where they now abound : — Beginning with 15 the Yellow Barred Perch, we have the White Perch, Striped Bass, Black Bass, Oswego Bass, The Simfish, Bream, Buffalo Perch, Wall-Eye Pike and others of lesser note, all embraced in this big family and all of those named, found in greater or less abundance in " near by " waters, the t3'i3e of them all being the YELLOW BARRED PERCH, which are found in most of the Northern lakes, and in moderate numbers in some of the tributaries of Chesapeake and Delaware Bays. The Yellow Perch is taken readily with minnow or worm bait, though it is not noted for daintiness of taste. Comparatively few fishermen entertain special regard for this fish, being disposed to look upon it in the light of an interloper, with few claims to respect either for gameness or edible qualities; but there are others w^ho entertain different feelings for them. The Yellow Perch has very wide distribution, being found in all the waters of the Atlantic slope, in the lake region of the North- west, the upper part of the Mississippi valle^^ and in most of the w^aters of the Western States. It is not abundant in au}^ of the waters of Penns^dvania, though at times, it is captured in the Susquehanna. Of gregarious habits, it is said that when a school of them is met, the angler, if he is war}' and quiet, may capture the entire lot. It is the deadl}^ enemy of carp and trout, and hence should be carefully excluded from ponds containing those fish. The Yellow Perch, although a voracious feeder, is not b}' any means a swift mover. Its movements are deliberate, even when in pursuit of minnows. Nor is it noted for gameness, though when fished for with light tackle, a one or two pounder affords not a little sport. Its Many Good Qualities. As to its table qualities, opinions differ, some repudiating it entirely, while others laud it highly. Seth Green styled it a i6 "superior table fish." It is exceedingly graceful in its move- ments and in point of beauty, may be fairly regarded as one of the handsomest of American fishes. Frank Buckland says of it: — "Our friend, the Perch, is one of the most beautiful fish which it has pleased providence to place in our waters. Not only does he afford the angler excellent sport, but to the professed cook, his arrival in time for the vienii, is most welcome, as witness water douche served at ministerial dinners," and G. Browne Goode says: — "I venture the prediction, that before many years, the Perch will have as many followers as the Black Bass among those who fish for pleasure in the waters of the Eastern United States. A fish for the people, it is, and it is the anglers from among the people, who have neither time, money nor patience for long trips and compli- cated tackle, who will prove its steadfast friend. ' ' Habitats and Tackle. The Yellow Perch is found in nearly all the "near-by" streams, that are not too rapid. It is sometimes taken in consider- able number and of good size in Bohemian river, which empties into the Chesapeake a few miles north of Betterton ; but it is by no means certain that the angler will always be well rewarded for his efforts there. Lake Hopatkong in Upper New Jersey, abounds with Yellow Perch of large size. Light tackle should be used, and when the water will admit, a float can be advantageously employed, being so adjusted as to keep the hook suspended about a foot from the bottom. They are most active and feed most vigoriousl}^ when full of spawn, and are said to possess their finest flavour when taken in that condition. THE WHITE PERCH. No one of our native fishes is more familiar to fishermen gener- ally, whether amateur or professional — than the White Perch. It 17 is one of the most abundant as it is also one of the most vigorous of biters, and among the very best for the pan of all our fresh water fishes. True, it is not the equal in gameness or edible qualities of the Striped Bass, but is, notwithstanding, a general favorite, especially with fishermen of the embryonic order, though for that matter, many of those of more matured experience and tastes, generally have a soft side for this congener of the more voracious and pugnacious Striped Bass. Habitats of the White Perch. The White Perch is found in nearly all the fresh and brackish waters within easy reach of Philadelphia. It is not unfrequently taken considerably above the tide terminus, in the Delaware river, The White Perch. (^Labrax Pallidicrn.) though it may be properly called a fresh-tidal-river fish. Some- times, perch are much more abundant in fresh than in brackish waters, though as a rule, the largest ones are taken where their native element is somewhat briny and deep. i8 Bettkrton Twenty Years Ago. Twenty years ago and more, the first ' ' near-by ' ' catches of perch, were made below the Fairmount dam, but being a fish of clean tastes, it now rarel}- ventures through the polluted waters of the Schuylkill to that once notable fishing localit5^ Twenty years ago, had the question been asked, where White Perch of the largest size and in greatest abimdance could be foinid, the answer would have been, Bcttcrton, at the mouth of the Sassafras river, in Kent county on the Eastern shore of Maryland. But the glory of Betterton has largel}^ departed, as far as perch fishing is concerned. A catch of five, six or seven hundred in a da}^ by a pair of skilful handlers of rod and reel, was nothing uncommon, and the majority of such a catch, would range in weight from three-quarters of a pound to a pound and a quarter. But fyke nets, seines and other ruinous devices, have had their legitimate effect — that of having either depleted the original stock, or driven it away to other localities. When tide and weather favor, a good many perch can still be taken at Betterton, but nothing like the number that would haA^e rewarded the angler's skill a score of years ago. Betterton can be reached via. the Philadelphia, Wil- mington and Baltimore Railroad, to Cla3'ton, Delaware, thence to Still Pond, and from that point by carriage ; or, by the Kricson Steamboat line, which leaves ever}^ afternoon at four o'clock. Other Xear-by Perch GrounDvS. In the vicinity of Spesutia island at the head of Chesapeake Bay, a few miles below Havre de Grace, there is generall}^ good perch fishing, as also at Port Deposit and the other points on the Susquehanna river that will be referred to in connection with Striped Bass fishing. Nearer home, from Port Penn at the head of Delaware Ba}- , to considerably above Lambertville on the Delaware river, at the mouths and generally a good wa3'S up all the tributaries of that ^9 stream, White Perch are found. They come early in the spring, feeding greedily on the spawn of other fish, especially that of the shad ; do their own spawning in May, and then usually retire to the deeper water to recuperate, after which, they return to their former favorite haunts, which are generally deep-sunken wooden piers, decaying wrecks, the timbers of old bridges or where there is sandy or rocky bottom. They are most readily taken on the ebb tide in the deeper waters, resorting on the flood, to the long grasses that grow on the shallow margins of creeks, and among the water-lilies, beneath the pads of which small minnows seek protec- tion from their relentless pursuit. Among the streams on the Jersey side where the perch abound in their season, are the Rancocas, Coopers, Timber, Woodbury, Salem, Cohansey and Alloways Creeks, and Maurice River. The perch ascend the streams named, early in the season, and are usu- ally of large size. All of them can be reached by the West Jersey Railroad and its several branches. The Neshaminy and the Brandywine, near their mouths, also abound with them. Bait. While the perch has — as all fish have — its diet preferences, it is largely omnivorous, as far as animal food is concerned. It will take with equal zest, shrimp, soft-crab or earth worms. The larger ones dote on minnows and sturgeon spawn, and when bait of the kinds named is scarce and the fish plentiful, the}^ can be readily tempted with little strips of cut fish, with a portion of the skin adhering. Tackle. Light tackle is of course the only kind that should be used. A short pliable rod, multiplying reel, the thinnest possible strong line, single gut snoods, small hooks, three on the line at snood-length distance apart, with just enough sinker to carry the line to the 20 bottom and keep it there. Some prefer the almost obsolete hand-line, others that most unsportsmanlike contrivance, the bow- line; but the fisherman who does not desire to be classed with the "pot-hunters," will never think of using either. CHINQUEPIN PERCH. This beautiful fish rarely finds its way into Atlantic slope waters. It is abundant in Western and Southern waters and in the Atlantic States South of Cape Hatteras, where it takes the minnow, or a small bit of cut fish, and where shrimp abound, is partial to that kind of bait. Its presence is so rare here, that there is no occasion for particulars as to the style of tackle and methods of fishing for it. THE SUNFISH, OR MOCASIN. This lively little member of the perch family is almost ubiqui- tous in the waters of the Atlantic slope, and is a general favorite Avith ' ' near-by ' ' anglers, as it is a vigorous biter, and is moreover, 21 when of good size, an excellent pan-fish. That the Sunfish, or '' Pumpkin seed " will readily take the fly, can be demonstrated by a visit to Spesutia Island at the head of Chesapeake Ba)^ where they are known as the Mocasin, and sometimes attain the weight of half a pound. They are found there in the greatest abundance in what is known as the ' ' Narrows, ' ' a strip of water between the western side of the island and the main land. They can also be taken in large numbers in the North East River, which, like. Spesutia Island, is reached by the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railwa}^ The Sunfish, or Mocasin. {Poniotis vulgaris.) The Editor of the American Angler says of the Sunfish:—" I confess to a fondness for catching the ' ' Pumpkin seed ' ' upon the lightest of light fly rods, and almost spider web consistency. I have caught them averaging half a pound in weight by the dozen, with black and brown hackles, and when they reach that size, they are so sprightly in their play, when hooked on trout tackle, that we caimot deny them a niche in the gallery of game fishes. ' ' It is hardly needful to state that the lightest kind of tackle 22 \ should be used, and as the '* sunnies " are almost invariably found in quiet waters, a float is necessary, and what the boys call a " fly- hook, " baited with an angle worm or a bit of dough bait. WALI.-EYH PIKE. The Pkrch Pike, Susquehanna Salmon. {Stizostcdion vitreu m . ) When this fish was introduced into the Susquehanna, or whether it is indigenous to that river, are matters of less moment than whether it is valuable as a food fish, and whether the angler will find in it a variet}' that will afford him sport. It is found in the Susquehanna river, that and the Juniata being the only streams east of the Alleghanies, in Peimsylvania, in which it is well known. There, it has become noted for its gameness as well as for its superior table qualities. Not of the Salmon Family. From the fact that with a great many persons, the Wall-Eye is known only as the " Susquehanna Salmon." a natural inference would be, that it is one of the Salmon family; but such is not the fact. It has none of the distinguishing characteristics of the sal- mon, its flesh being white instead of pink, though flaky and of fine flavor. 23 It is also found in great abundance in all the great lakes, rank- ing in commercial and table importance next to the White FivSh and the Lake Trout. Prkparations For its Artificial Propagation. The Pike Perch, or "Wall-Eye Pike," is one of the most voracious of feeders, preferring live food. It is readily susceptible of artificial propagation, and, it will, no doubt be agreeable news to anglers generally, to learn that the United States Fishery Com- mission is arranging to take and hatch about one hundred millions of the eggs of it at the Sandusky Hatchery, during the present spring, and that a large proportion of the fry — not less than 12,000,- 000 — have just been planted in suitable streams in Penns\dvania, prominent among which are the Susquehanna, Delaware, Schuyl- kill and Lehigh rivers. Gamey, and Meriting Protection. At present, the Wall-Eye Pike, so called becaUvSe of its dis- tinctively marked eyes, is found in man}^ localities in the Susque- hanna river in considerable abundance, and is mainly taken with minnow bait. It delights in clean, clear, rapid streams, frequents the vicinity of sunken logs, etc. , and is one of the gamest of our fresh water fishes, taking the lure readily, and disputing supre- macy with the angler to the last gasp. It is an exceedingl}^ proli- fic fish, and if the laws for its protection had been observed as they should have been, the plant made in the Susquehanna at some former period, would have so multiplied, as to have caused the waters of that river to fairly teem with it. It spawns in May and June, and it is a matter of regret that the spawning beds are so frequently invaded with seines and other devices, which invasions have had the effect of seriously interfering with its increase. As there is every probability^ of a more rigid enforcement of the fishery laws in the future, there is room for the hope, that the proposed 24 re-stocking, by the United States Fishery Commission, will have the effect of making them plentiful in all the rivers mentioned. When found in swift rolling waters, under falls, it is said to be the master of the Black Bass, but in smoother water, the gen- eral supremacy of the latter is maintained. The Wall-Bye is charged with devouring its own young, as well as the young of other fishes, and though this is to be regarded as a most serious fault, it has so many other redeeming qualities, that it should be pardoned for such vicious tastes. G. Browne Goode quotes an ardent admirer of the Wall-Kye, who says of it : " Look at this beautiful fish, as symmetrical in form as the salmon. Not a fault in his make-up. Every fin perfect, tail clean-cut, and his great big wall-eyes stand out with that life-like glare, so characteristic of the fish. Prolific as well as Gamey. That the Wall-Eye is prolific there is undisputed evidence, and if the laws enacted for its protection had been decently observed, the proposed stocking of the Susquehanna would be superfluous. According to statute law, the Wall-Eye Pike, Bass and Pickerel may not be taken during the months of January, Febru- ary, March, April and May, "nor at any other time, than with hook and line, scroll or spear." The penalty for each violation is ten dollars. The "best places" for Wall-Eye Pike, in the Susquehanna, are so numerous as to render a list of such localities impossible, with the space at command. The angler will not be likely to go astray, however, who selects any of the well-known fishing points between Port Deposit and the upper w^aters of the stream, taking in both branches of the river, and including the lower portions of the Juniata. On the river betw^een Dauphin and Steelton, above Harrisburg, are several noted places, and below the dam at Sun- burv many are taken. 25 Tackle and Bait. Regular Striped Bass or Black Bass tackle, such as is needed at the mouth of the Susquehanna, will answer. Use a float, and if fishing from a boat, anchor it by the side of or above a rapid, and let your bait float down through the swift water to the foot of the rapid. As already stated, live bait is its weakness, though it feeds greedily upon larvae, crawfish, small frogs, tadpoles and worms. THE STRIPED BASS OR ROCK-FISH. {Labrax lineatiis.) Among the most esteemed — perhaps the foremost of our indi- genous fishes in ' ' near-by ' ' streams — is the Striped Bass or Rock- fish, which is found not only in tidal but in fresh waters also — the Susquehanna and the Delaware, together with their tributaries, abounding with them. Gamey Qualities of the Striped Bass. Of the Striped Bass it can truthfully be said, that it is hardly inferior to the salmon, either in gameness or table qualities, while it is greatl}^ its superior in point of beauty and abundance. Sym- metrical in shape, handsomely marked, and built for speed and endurance, there are few fishes whether of salt water or fresh, that possess as many attractions for the true angler. There is nothing mean or sneaking about it. A voracious feeder, seemingly always hungr}', it rarely hesitates about taking its prey, whether it be a live minnow swimming at large, a piece of salted eel-tail, a tooth- some bait, or gaudy lures in the form of spoons and spinners, which modern tackle manufacturers have made so attractive to it. The angler, fishing in fresh waters in which Striped Bass abound, readily comprehends when a good sized specimen of that kind, takes hold. It becomes clearly apparent from the word " go ! " 27 that business is meant, and that skill in handling him is required if his capture is to be made in anything of a sportsmanlike way. How IT Takes Hold. The movements of the Striped Bass are almost as quick as lightning, which, coupled with its great strength and remarkable powers of endurance, have given it a conspicuous place in the rank of game fishes, especiall}^ along the Atlantic coast, where there is constant eager competition among a certain class of rod-and-reel men, to win the enviable celebrit}' of having captured the largest. Of that competition, something will be said, when treating of salt water fishing. The first dash of the Striped Bass at the lure is tremendous, and his struggles to escape w^hen hooked, such as fairly entitle him to admiration and respect. TABI.K Qualities. The edible qualities of the Striped Bass are fully equal to those of the best food fishes, not even excepting the salmon. While some who profess to be connoisseurs in fish-eating, contend that a Striped Bass of less than twelve inches in length, is not fit to be eaten, there are many others who differ wdth them on that point, and who think it has few superiors for the pan. For baking or boiling, it is one of the acknowledged standards, aways command- ing high prices and with a demand generally equal to the supply. Therefore, whether viewed from the standpoint of gameness, or that of table excellence, or both, this monarch of the fresh w^aters, deserv^es alike, the regard of anglers and gourmands. Habitats of ti^ Striped Bass. As far as "near-by " fresh waters are concerned, the Striped Bass is found mainly in the Delaware and Susquehanna, and their tributaries. In the former, as far north as I^ambertville, New Jersey, 28 and in the latter, as far up as Columbia, where its further advance northward has been for years prevented by the dam that crosses the river at that place. Whether the facilities afforded by the re- cently constructed fishways in that dam will be availed of by it, is a question that time must determine. Before dams were built in that river, Striped Bass were taken as far north as Luzerne count}'. Some of the best Striped Bass fishing locaeities. Perhaps the most noted Striped Bass fishing waters of the Susquehanna, are those in the vicinity of Port Deposit, about three miles from Perryville, via. the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Bal- timore Railroad. At no other point on the river are they taken of such size and in such abundance. At times, the water fairly teems with them, twent}^ pounders being frequently hooked, though only experienced anglers would care to tackle customers of that size, and few others would succeed in landing them. vSalted eel-tail is a favorite bait. The spoon or spinner, is also a taking lure, but a live minnow of good size is much more tempting, though not always as easy of procurement. Young catfish, tadpoles, helgra- mites. crawfish, and even ordinary earthworms, are not rejected b}' the smaller ones, in still fishing. Early in the morning, and from four o'clock in the afternoon until sundown, are the hours when Striped Bass are most apt to feed, and always take the lure most readily — especially if it he a spoon or spinner — when the water is clear. Make sure that the water is in that condition be- fore you start, if you desire success. The best season for vStriped Bass fishing at Port Deposit, is during June and July, and as there are no legal restrictions there, fishing for either the Striped or the Black Bass may be indulged there at am^ time. A little further up the river is Conowingo Bridge, where ex- cellent trolling and bait fishing for Striped Bass can generally be had, also, at Bald Friars, a mile and a half further on. Four 29 miles above the latter place, is Peach Bottom or Peters Creek, where there is generally good fishing as also at Kite's Kdd}^ four miles still further northward. Kite's Edd}^ is more notable for Black than for Striped Bass, but sometimes good catches of the latter are made there. In the rapids and eddies opposite and below Safe Harbor, Striped Bass ranging from half a pound to a pound and a half in weight, are frequently very plentiful, sometimes so abundant as to seriously annoy the Black Bass fishermen. Below the dam at Columbia they are usually taken of moderate size, and in fact, in the eddies at almost any point on the river up to the last mentioned place. All of the places named can be reached in a few hours either by the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Rail- road, or direct from Philadelphia, by the Central Division of that road, and by the Pennsylvania Railroad to Columbia and thence down the river. Where Striped Bass are found in the Dei^aware. A few years ago, good Striped Bass fishing could always be had at Chester and Marcus Hook, but for some unexplained reason, they appear to have abandoned those localities. Ascending the Delaware on the Penns3dvania side, they will generally be found at the outlets of the Pennepack and Nesha- miny creeks, especially the latter, and at various other points as far north as Lambertville, where at times, they are caught in great abundance though not of large size. On the Jersey side of the river, the}' will be found in season — which is pretty much all spring and summer — at or near the mouth of the Rancocas, Cooper's, Timber, Woodbury and Salem creeks, at Port Penn, opposite Wilmington, and further down, in Maurice river. All of the places on the Delaware can be readily reached in a little while by rail or steamer ; northward by the Pennsylvania, and the Camden and Amboy roads, and southward by the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore, or the West Jersey and its branches. 30 The character of Striped Bass tackle should be made to con- form to the waters to be fished, and the size of the fish frequenting them. Light tackle will answer in au}^ of the localities named except Port Deposit, where, as Striped Bass of very large size are often killed, it will be well to provide that which is moderatel}^ heavy. Ordinarily, single gut leaders will answer, but there is no objection to double ones, unless it be the cost, which is not heavy ; and, unless you are after big fish only, let the hooks be of moderate size. Experienced anglers prefer those ranging from a No. i to a 2 or 3, the size depending upon the run of the fish. In fishing for Striped Bass in fresh as well as in salt waters, it is well to bear in constant mind the fact that that fish is not a nibbler. In gamin parlance, he does not " monkey" with the bait. Acting on the well-known principle that ' ' the right way to do a thing is to do it, ' ' he rarely stands upon the order of his taking, but takes the bait and goes about his business, if you will let him. The startling st3de of his first dash is apt to unsettle the equani- mity of the inexperienced, and prompt to action far more vigorous than is needful or prudent. Rapid and inconsiderate reeling-in, is apt to follow, and not always with desirable results. Making haste slowly, is good policy if 3^ou are dealing with a large fish, and it must not be forgotten that the Striped Bass is not like the pike or weak-fish — furious for a moment and then subservient. He is built/or strength and endurance and may be counted upon for a protracted fight. If the water admits, long runs may be looked for, and it is for such runs the angler should be prepared. Give him pla}^, deal gentl}- but firml}- with him, and possess your soul in patience while wear34ng out your hoped-for prize. When at length he turns over on his side, giving unmistakable evidence of exhaustion, then, have your landing net or gaff ready and take him. The strike of a big Striped Bass is apt to affect the inex- perienced angler pretty much as does the first glimpse of a deer, the hunter not accustomed to such sights. It unsteadies his nerv^es, and not unfrequently causes him to lose his head, and do unwise things. Therefore, keep on the alert always; expect a strike at any moment, and be prepared to deal with the striker cooly. Your rod should be of a make that will stand a heavy strain — not necessarily heavy, but so constructed that it will not be shattered by such heavy pulls as big Striped Bass are proverbial for making. You will want a good multiplying reel, and about one hundred yards of cable laid hempen line. A nine or a twelve-thread 'Cuttyhunk will answer. BLACK BASS. {J\Iic7'opterus dolomieu.^ This now well-known game food fish, forty years ago, was wholly unknown to the New England States, and to the Atlantic seaboard of the Midddle States, a still shorter period. Dr. Hen- shall, the be.st authority on the subject says : "The original habi- tat of the species, is remarkable for its extent, for with the excep- tion of the New England States, and the Atlantic seaboard of the Middle States, it comprises the whole of the United States East of the Rocky Mountains, Ontario, (Canada,) and East Mexico." ,From this it will be seen, that although a distinctively American fish, it is a transplant in our waters, though it has thriven wonderfully in them. 32 Introduction East of the Ali^eghanies. The first record of their introduction dates back to 1850, when twenty-seven were put in Flax Lake, Massachusetts. Subse- quently, other lakes w^ere stocked in nearly all the New England States and in New York. In 1854, Mr. William Shriver of Wheeling, Virginia, planted a number of bass in the canal basin at Cumberland, Maryland, from which they escaped into the Potomac river, where they have since multiplied to such an extent, that the principal supply of Black Bass for the Philadelphia markets is derived from that river. They were brought to Cumberland in a live box, in the tank of a locomotive. In 1869, several private citizens of Harrisburg, planted a number of Black Bass in the Susquehanna, and four years later, the tributaries of the Susquehanna, Potomac and Delaware Rivers, were stocked at thirty-five different points. Rapid Increase of Bass. The foregoing highly interesting facts indicate in the most unmistakable manner the readiness with which the food-fish sup- ply can be increased in our waters. Thirty Black Bass fry, placed in the canal basin at Cumberland, in the short space of thirt>'-five years, have multiplied so largely as to have become a source of important revenue to the many fishermen of the Potomac river ; and the public spiritedness of a few gentlemen at Harrisburg in 1869, has been the means of stocking the Susquehanna from its mouth to its head waters, with the same valuable fish. The same results have followed the placing of them in the Schuylkill and Delaware Rivers and their tributaries, in which good work the State Fishery Commissioners were greatly assisted by the "Anglers' Association of Eastern Pennsylvania," whose headquarters are in this city. 33 A Fact to be Remembered. It should be borne in mind, in connection with the facts stated, that the present and constantly increasing abundance of this noble fish has been secured at a most trivial expense, and that the in- crease not only enlarges with each passing year, but, that this constant increment is without cost to the people of the State, other than the observance of the reasonable laws enacted for the protection of the Black Bass during its spaw^ning seavSon, and the prevention of what is known as illegal fishing at all seasons. A General Favorite with Angeers. Next to the Trout, the Black Bass is the favorite of Penn- sylvania anglers generally, and, for a number of reasons, among w^hich are the three following : (i) its remarkable gameness ; (2) its omnivorousness ; (3) its adaptation to most of the streams of the State. In regard to its gameness, it is to be said that there is not in the whole range of lure-taking fishes any fiercer fighter nor an}- pos- sessed of greater powers of endurance. It does not struggle for a brief .season and then surrender, but fights to the very last. It has been a matter of dispute with some leading anglers, which of the two, the Black Bass or the Trout, is the gamcst. Taking Mountain Trout of equal size, it is fair to them to say, that they contest supremacy with the angler as fiercely and persistently as the Black Bass ; but as between the latter and the I^ake Trout, the Bass is fairly entitled to the championship. A Generae and Vigorous Feeder. Another commendable characteristic of the Black Bass is the readiness with which it takes either fly or bait. Its favorite and presumably principal foods, are crawfish and minnows, with, of course, flies thrown in as a dessert. While young, insects and 34 lan-ae comprise its almost exclusive diet, but the adult bass, while greedily taking such small game, depends mainly upon the more substantial diet named, together with such other aquatic creatures as helgramites, tadpoles, young frogs, small catfish, and Avhen offered them as lures, crickets and grasshoppers. Not a Depopulator of the Streams. One of the most prominent objections waged against the stock- ing of our streams with Black Bass, was the theory that their voraciousness would prove hurtful to the young shad, as well as to young fish of other varieties ; but experience in Pennsylvania waters, as well as elsewhere, warrants no such belief. Referring to the voracity of the Bass, Dr. Henshall, who is to be regarded as the very highest authority on the subject, says : ' ' The Black Bass is excelled by no other fish that swims for gameness, and among fresh water species by but one — the white fish — for the table. And further, he will not eat the spawn of his mate nor that of his fellow- mates. His natural food is the crawfish and minnow ; he prefers them and they are easily procured. On them he will wax and grow fat, increase and multiph'. The man who alleges that he de- populates the streams of valuable food fishes, or asserts that he 'kills for the love of it,' has never looked into the mouth of a Bass with his e3^es open." Where to Find the Black BAvSS. An enthusiastic and highly successful Bass fisherman informs us that as the streams tributary to the upper Delaware are the natu- ral home of the Trout, the ri^'er itself has become famous for its excellent Black Bass fishing. From Port Jervis to Hancock, every pool and eddy is tenanted by this unsurpassed game fish. Hand- some Edd}', Pond's Eddy, Lackawaxen, Cochecton, Narrowsburg, Calicoon and many other places are first-class fishing points, and all accessible by the New York and Erie Railroad. 35 Nearer home, there are many stations along the Hne of the Dela- ware, Lackawanna and Western, and Belvidere roads, where the angler can find fair bass fishing. At Portland and the Delaware Water Gap, Delaware, Manunka Chunk and Martinsville are good pools. Below Easton are Carpentenille, Riegelsville, Milford, By ram and Trimble stations, where the river affords excellent fishing. For any of the stations below Easton, the angler can take an early morning train from Broad street station, reach his destination before lo o'clock and return on an evening train the same da3^ If distance lends enchantment to the piscatorial view, the fisherman can choose from many points on the I^ower Susque- hanna. Little Washington, three miles below Columbia, is noted for the excellence of its Black Bass fishing, as is also the Columbia dam when the water is low and clear. Safe Harbor, McCall's Ferry, Fite's Eddy, Peach Bottom or Peter's Creek, Conowingo Furnace and Port Deposit, all yield good returns for skilful angling. The places named can be reached via the Pennsylvania and Columbia and Port Deposit roads. In addition to the foregoing habitats named, these fine fish are also found in the Brand}' wine, the Neshaminy and other tribu- taries of the Delaware below Trenton on the Penns3dvania side ; in all the larger tributaries of the Susquehanna, especiall}- the Juniata, and in the Schuylkill and its lower tributaries, which in- clude the Wissahickon and Perkiomen, with a number of other favorable points, as Royer's Ford, Lafayette, vShawmont and Flat Rock dam. Those who can spare the time, will find in Lake Hopat- kong, N. J., three and a half hours ride from Philadelphia, all the sport they desire, not only with bass, but with pickerel, yellow perch, etc. Outfit. For Black Bass fishing, the best outfit is an eight or nine-foot, nine to twelve ounce rod, moderately springy and made of split 36 bamboo. Competition has so reduced the price of these, that a fair rod can be had at from five to eight dollars — very little more than the cost of a good wooden one. The prices of the finer qualities of split bamboo rods range from $15 to $50, according to the repu- tation of the maker. Within a recent period, the maniifacture of wooden rods has been so improved, as to be regarded b}- many anglers as equal, at least, to the rent and glued. They are less expensive, and can be made of any desired length. The Betha- bara, Lancewood, Greenheart and Dgami woods are the kinds most used and most esteemed for rods. Hornbeam is tough but not springy. The reel should be a multiplier, with a check or drag large enough to hold fifty or sixty yards of G water- proof enameled line. A rubber reel is preferable because of lightness. If the fishing is done with a float, a three-inch cork, barrel- shape, is the best. The leader should be about four feet long and of strong gut. To one end of the leader a Pitcher's swivel sinker No. 9 or 10 should be attached. Some anglers fasten to this a short leader two feet long, to which is attached the hook. A No. I or 2 Sproat hook is about the size. The float can be dispensed with, when casting in rapid or shoal water. A landing net will be found useful, and if the angler is desir- ous to carry his bait with him. the Rudolph floating pail is the best. It has a depression at the top, in which a small piece of ice wrapped in a towel can be placed, the dripping from which keeps the water cool. It can be attached to the boat or to a bush along the shore, obviating the necessity of constantly changing the water. The common tidewater minnow of the Delaware is a good bait, .so is the small stone catfish, the helgramites. crawfish and lamprey eels. With a good rod and tackle, plenty of bait and a good day and place for fishing, the result will depend upon the angler him- self. 37 Close Seasons in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. The close season for Black Bass in Pennsylvania is from the ist of January to the ist of June. In New Jerse}^ it is lav/ful to take them with hook and line from the 30th of May to the ist of December. The close season for seine or other net fishing in that State is from the ist of March to the ist of May. It will be well for those w^io contemplate Trout or Black Bass fishing in New Jerse}', and who are non-residents, to consult the Rules and B}^- Laws of the West Jerse}' Game Protective Society before starting. LARGE-MOUTH BLACK BAvSS. The marked success Avhich has attended the introduction of the Small-Mouth Black Bass, the German Carp and the Wall-Bye Pike into the waters of the Atlantic slope, has encouraged the State Fisher}' Commissioners of Pennsylvania to try a like experi- ment with the Fresh Water Bass of the South and West, familiarly known as the Big-Mouth Black Bass. For several years past, the attention of the State authorities has been directed to this well- known gamey fish, a veiy prevalent impression being, that if our 3^ less rapid rivers, lakes and large ponds were stocked with it, satis- factory results would follow. Why not ? Why should the Big- Mouth Bass fail in the Delaware and Schuylkill, and their several quiet tributaries, wdien it is remembered that, as Goode states, '*the Large and the Small-mouths dwell together in the Great Lakes ' ' ? Why not in our waters ? It is one of the most widelj^ distributed of our fresh w^ater fishes, as it is the most abundant as far north as latitude 50°, from Florida to Manitoba, and as far north, eastw^ard of the Alleghanies, as the James River. Neither it nor its near relative, the Small-mouth, is native to the eastern part of the Middle States, but the latter has made itself at home with us, and is evidently intended to be a permanent resident. Every fresh water stream of any size in Southern or South- western States is full of them, and although less gamey than the northern Small-mouth, are nevertheless attractive sport for the anglers of the regions to which the^^ are indigenous. The Big- Mouth Bass are taken with all sorts of lures, from a fly to the gaudy spoon or spinner, and from a live minnow to a four or five inch mullet. Of ^'oracious tastes, they allow themselves to be so closely approached in the lagoons, along where the lily pads flourish, as to be taken with what is called a " bob," which is a barbarous though very effectual method. Looking confidentl}* forward to their introduction into our ' ' near-l3y ' ' waters, and also confidently anticipating entire success from the experiment, it will be as well to wait for their arrival and acclimation before saying anything about tackle, etc. THE ROCK BASS. This is another fish of comparatively recent introduction in the waters of Eastern Pennsylvania. It has a high reputation for excellence as a pan fish, is voracious, a ready and free biter ^nd full of game. It is abundant in the great lakes, and is occa- sionally found in the Susquehanna, but is not plentiful at any point east of the Alleghanies. Its introduction into eastern waters is of such recent date, that the point has not 3'et been satisfactorily de- -Of^ /V"'...^^.'^^^^^ '\\V The Rock Bass. (A in bloplitcs rupestris. ) termined whether it will or will not prove prolific. It is of the Perch faniih^, frequents sunken logs, roots of trees, etc., and is capable of propagation in ponds. The same laws that protect the other bass fishes apply to it. THE BROOK TROUT. {Saluio fontinalis. ) Although the "near-by '' streams that once abounded in this superlatively game fish, have been entirely depleted of them, and the well-meant efforts of the Anglers' Association of Eastern Penn- sylvania to restock them with other varieties of the same family adapted to such waters — the California and the Rainbow Trout — have resulted in failure, it would be unpardonable to pass this general favorite without at least brief mention. 41 Where Trout must be vSought. A whole chapter might be — in fact, whole books have been — written about this beautiful fish, once so abundant in many of the streams of the lower tier of counties, but because of the merciless warfare waged against them and the well-known illegal pollution of the waters, they have become extinct, wdiile all efforts to replace them with other varieties have proved unavailing. Hence, if the reader desires to enjoy the ro3^al sport of trout fishing, he will have to seek his game in other than "near-by" streams. In almost any of the mountain streams of Northern Pennsylvania, in Pike, Monroe, Sullivan or IvUzerne counties, he will find Speckled Trout in moderate abundance, and usually of small size, though occasionally he ma\^ be fortunate enough to capture some of the bigger ones. He will also find some in the counties of Centre, Mifiiin, Blair, Huntingdon and Bedford, and a few in one- or two of the streams of Cumberland county. Whv Trout are Scarce. The open season 4n Pennsylvania begins with the 15th of April, and ends with the 15th of July, though there are not a few persons who do not hesitate to set the law at defiance and take trout whenever opportunity is afforded them. Those who have a proper respect for law, bide their time, and cast their flies only when they can do so lawfully, and therefore, with clear consciences. Then, nearly ever}^ accessible stream that contains — or is supposed to contain — trout, is waded and whipped almost without inter- mission, until the interdict of the State fishery laws puts an end to it. Unfortunately, among those eager fly-casters, are many who estimate their catches by number and not by size or w^eight, and who are content with the ability to boast that they killed so many, though possibly their creels did not contain a single fish entitled to a prouder designation than that of ' ' fingerling. ' ' Such fisher- men are simply ''pot-hunters," and the aversion of all true anglers. 42 It is not surprising therefore, that trout of respectable size are so scarce in our State streams, or that the annual restocking of those streams from the State Hatcheries has failed to increase the number beyond the thousands of fiy from year to year placed in them, and which are almost certain to be captured and killed before the next installment is planted. A few trout are said to be found in one or two lonely streams within a few miles of Camden, but the number is so limited and the streams so encumbered b}' bushes and other undergrowth, as to render the fishing of them next to impracticable. The open season in New Jersey is from the ist of March to the ist of October. Trout Oi'tfits. As to the outfit needed for trout fishing, it is composed of so many essentials — essentials in the estimation of a regular trout angler — that it would require more space than can be spared to enumerate them. Any of the comprehensive illustrated catalogues of the leading tackle houses — which can usually be had for the asking — will supply the desired information, though it is hardly needful to state that a majority of the so called essentials could readily be dispensed with. The Trout Regions of Pennsylvania. A thorough' informed trout fisherman has kindly furnished the following points, which will prove interesting and valuable to those who think of visiting the trout regions of the northeastern counties of the State, but who are not familiar with the streams of that territor3^ The nearest to Philadelphia, of good trout fishing, is probably at Henry ville, Monroe county. This point is reached by the Pennsylvania Railroad to Maiunika Chunk, connecting there with the Delaware, I^acka wanna and W^estern road. There are several good streams in the immediate vicinit}^ tributary to Broadhead's Creek. 43 Kiglit miles further north, on the last mentioned road, is Cresco, the point of departure for Canadensis, four miles distant. At that point there are five fine trout streams, also tributar}' to Broadhead's Creek. Good accommodations can be had at Cana- densis. Near Fork's Station, next above Cresco, there are several fine streams, all of which have been repeatedly stocked within the past four or five 3'ears by the Peuns}dvania State Fisher}^ Com- mission, and afford good fishing with either fly or bait. Anglers who have more time at command, can take the Xew York and Erie road from New York City to Port Jervis, and the streams entering the Delaware from Pike and Wayne counties. That road skirts the river from Port Jervis to Hancock, a dis- tance of eighty miles or more. Good trout fishing can be had in many .streams in New York and Penns3dvania, running into the Delaware. The Mongaup, a short distance above Port Jer^ds, is noted in that respect. The Shohola and its upper tributaries in Pike county are also good waters. At Lackaw^axen in Pike county, the Delaware and Hudson road to Honesdale and beyond, crosses man}^ good trout waters. Nearh' all the creeks tributary to the upper Lackawaxen, are natural trout streams. At Masthope on the Erie road be3'ond Lackawaxen, is Mast- hope Creek, in which excellent fishing can be had; also at Milan- ville, Calicoon Creek, at Calicoon Depot. Hancock at the junc- tion of the East and West Branches of the Delaware, is the point of departure for many of the best fishing streams of Wa3^ne and of Sullivan count}^ New York. In all those streams the trout takes the fly readily. The}' abound in fine pools that are compar- atively clear of brush. The best flies for Northeastern Pennsylvania, are the "Epting," the " Queen of the Waters," "Black Gnat," ''White and Royal Coachman," "Cahill," " Beaverkill," "RedHackel," * ' Imbrie, " * ' Grizzlv Kino^, ' ' and ' ' Montreal . ' ' 44 THE RAINBOW TROUT. (Salmo ircdcus. ) This beautiful fish, the introduction of which into Pennsyl- vania waters has been repeatedl}' attempted, and generally with but indifferent success, was brought hither from McCloud River, California, and in some localities is known as the "McCloud" Trout, as well as b}^ various other names. The attempt to stock the lower streams of the State with it was made, not because it was either the superior or the equal of our own Mountain Trout, but because it was claimed for the Rainbow that it would live and thrive in streams of as high a temperature as 75°. Again its advo- cates urged in its favor, that it was a much more rapid grower than the Speckled Trout, as well as stronger and more vigorous. As far as rapidity of growth is concerned, there is no dispute, but as to gameness and endurance, our sportsmen almost unanimously repudiate the claim. That it needs as clear and as pure water as our native trout has been fully established, but though placed in our best streams, it has failed to realize in full, the expectations formed in regard to it. A serious objection to it is, that it spawns about the time when the open season for Brook Trout commences. It is hardy, and bears handling and transportation well, but is evidently not adapted to our streams, though it is said that some very fine specimens have been taken in several of the waters of Cumberland county. 45 ^.-^f *'"^^1^^'' THE CHUB OR FAI^I. FISH. {Leucosomus rhothcus. ) Among what are known as the bold-biters, there are few that excel in that respect the Chub or Fall fish. This fish is not re- garded with much favor by trout anglers, for the reason that it is exceedingh' aggressive, very voracious, rises readily to a fly, a worm, or in fact almost anything in the form of a live lure. But for all that, there are a great many who hold it in high esteem for its dashing, gamey qualities, though its powers of endurance are of the limited order and its edible qualities not of the best. Haunts of the Chub. The Chub is found in most of the creeks in the vicinit}^ of Philadelphia, It abounds in the Brandy wine, Perkiomen and many of the smaller streams, and was formerly quite abundant in those which were once noted for their trout, but which favorite of the angler has entirel}^ disappeared from them. Other tributaries of the Schu3dkill contain them. They are perhaps more plentiful in the several large tributaries of the Delaware above the Water Gap than in an}- other part of Eastern Pennsylvania, and are frequently taken in the Neshaminy and Pennypack. 46 When and how to Fish for them. The best time for taking Fall fish is in the fall of the 3^ear, when the}^ are in the finest condition. A grasshopper is a deadl}^ lure for them, as is the large white grub worm, to be found in old stumps and decaying logs ; though they are not apt to refuse a worm a even a bit of dough bait or cheese, and if the right-col- ored fly is offered — one with a big red bod^- — the offer is ver}^ fre- quently accepted, and with a vim that often leads the angler to imagine he has hooked a trout instead of a chub. It is a shj^ fish, exceedingly cleanly in appearance, being silvery white ; graceful in shape, strong in movement, quick as a flash in 1)iting, but not the best for the table. The size \'aries from twelve to eighteen inches, though still larger have been taken. THE PIKE. {Esox rectiadatus) The term, " Pickerel," is applied to all fish of the Pike family, but as we are dealing with only ' ' near b}- ' ' fishes, it will not be necessary to refer to those larger members of this interesting genus, as the Great Lake Pickerel, the Muscalonge, the Great Blue Pike and others ; but confine our remarks to the ' ' Pond ' ' or Common Pike, which is found in most of the fresh waters of the Eastern slope of the Alleghanies, and to the Chain Pickerel. The Pike's Good Quaeities. It is hardly necessar}^ to describe this well-known fish. For table purposes, if from one to two pounds in weight, it is well 47 esteemed, though there are better fish. One of the Pike's special recommendations, and a very important one, is the fact that it may be taken pretty much all the year round, in midwinter as well as in midsummer. Another is, that it is almost omnipresent in our streams and ponds ; in the former, where lily pads prevail to con- siderable extent, and in almost an^- of the latter. There are many ponds in New Jersey within easy reach of Philadelphia where fairly good sport can be had at almost an}^ time of the year. In the large pond at May's Landing, on the West Jerse}- Road ; at Millville, Spring Mills, Atsion, Lake Hopatkong. in Northern Jersey, and in almost any of the mau}^ large ponds in that State, the angler, if properly equipped with tackle, and tolerably familiar with the use of it, may reasonably calculate upon good catches. Some of the branches of Forked River, N. J., are noted for the size, number and qualit}" of the Pike taken in them. Methods of Pike Fishing, Bx\it, Etc. The two principal methods of taking Pike are, with live bait and with the spoon or '-spinner ;" the live bait and the spoon to be adapted to the size of the general run of the fish in the water to be fished. A three-inch minnow will answer where the fish average from three-quarters to a pound and a half, and larger ones where fish of larger size abound. Sometimes a strip of pork, cut some- wdiat in fish-shape, will be taken as readil}^ as the minnow, and thus becomes a good substitute when roach or chub are not pro- curable. Trolling from a boat or from the bank are the usual methods of fishing for Pike ; the latter, of course when practicable, being always given the preference b}^ the angler. The Pike takes the lure most readily on a cloudy day, from early morning until nine or ten o'clock, and from four o'clock in the afternoon until dark ; though at times it will bite pretty much all day. As most of the Jerse}- pond^ are large, and bordered either 48 with swamps or bushes, it is always well — in fact almost incrspen- sable — to have a boat, and for comfort's salke as w^ell as for the sake of success, some one to row who is familiar with the haunts of the fish. Such persons are usually found in the vicinity of the larger ponds. THE CHAIN PICKEREL. This is another member of the Pike family, not as abundant as the Common Pike, but attains a larger size, and is found in grassy creeks, where the water is clear, and in ponds usually well supplied with fresh water. Its flesh, instead of being yellowish, as that of the small pike, is pure white and of excellent flavor. It is very like the Common Pike in shape and habits, though more slender and graceful, but, as is shown in the illustration, its sides are so distinctly marked as to render it easy to distinguish between them. It is predacious in the fullest sense of that word, feeding in- discriminately on nearly all other kinds of fishes, frogs, mice, rats, or almost any living thing that conies in its way, not excepting its own species. The Pickerel, when it attains a weight of three or four pounds and upwards, can be aptly compared to the blue-fish in voracity, and is fulh^ the equal of that devastator of the finny tribes of the vSea, in quickness of motion and in certainty of aim. It has been compared to a tiger in its spring, seemingly accurately measuring its distance and then rushing towards its victim with 49 almost lightning speed, rarely missing, and devouring its catch at a single swallow, unless too large for its throat capacity. The Pickerel is fished for pretty much in the same manner as the Pike, with this exception, that stronger tackle is required. A popular method of taking them is what is called ' ' skittering, ' ' which means "jerking or drawing the bait along the top of the water." In Florida, where it is much practiced for Black Bass, it is called ' ' bobbing. ' ' The tackle consists of a long flexible pole, with a short line, to which a strong spoon is attached. Thus equipped, let the boatman row along the margin of the lily pads, skittering the lure on the surface. Trolling is another method, and quite a favorite one when the water area is large. Strong tackle, of course, is required, and the spoon or live bait will generally prove attractive. THE CATFISH. {SiluridcE.) No doubt some of those who are known, or. would like to be known as scientific "anglers" — not fishermen — will laugh, or pretend to do so, when the}- read the caption of this article, deem- ing — as at least some of them profess to do — the catfish entirely 50 beyond the pale of true angling. But if we are to take so good an authority as the veteran Thaddeus Xorris on that subject, we will find that " the true angler is thoroughly imbued with the spirit of gentle old Isaak. He has no affectation, and when a fly-cast is not to be had, can find amusement in catching vSunfish or Roach, and does not despise the sport of any humbler brother of the angle. ''^ * ^i^ >i< * A true angler is generally a modest man ; unob- trusively communicative when he can impart a new idea ; and is even ready to let a pretentious tyro have his say, and good- naturedly (as if merely suggesting how it should be done) repairs his tackle and gets him out of a scrape." With such authority to back us, we shall proceed to sa}^ a word or two about the despised catfish. Omnipresent, OmnivoroUvS and Toothsome. There are catfish and catfish, and they are nearl)' as omni- present in fresh waters as they are omnivorous, for almost an^^thing is acceptable to them, whether it be a crust of bread, cheese bait, sturgeon roe, worm, liver, or soft crab. The " near-b}^ " angler will have to do with two varieties, the Yellow and the White Catty. The former is the most abundant and is found at nearly all seasons in ponds, ditches, sluices and meadow ditches. It is not what may be termed a cleanly fish. It is a ravenous feeder, but not an eager biter. Having an unusually large mouth and leath- ery jaws, when once hooked, its capture is certain. As to its edible qualities, they are not to be highly commended, though there are other fish that are no better. The latter, known as the WJiitc or Salt Water Catfish, is much the better of the two ; better for gameness and decidedl}^ better for the table. It is a free biter, and not specially fastidious as to bait. As with the entire catfish tribe, it generally prefers quantity to quality. It is an admirable fish for the pan, and as most Philadelphians are av/are, is regarded with so much favor, 51 that " catfish and waffle " suppers at the Falls of the Schiu-lkill, have been and still are regarded as treats of the highest order, fairly rivaling the ' ' planked shad ' ' dinners at Gloucester. The White or Salt Water Catfish is to be found in nearly all the streams within easy reach of Philadelphia, except where the water is swift, and from early spring until late fall, when it returns to brackish or salt water, remaining there during the winter. It is found at man}- places along the Delaware and its Pennsylvania and Jersey tributaries. Light tackle and small hooks will answer for either variety, with sturgeon roe, earth w^orms or raw liver for bait. Catfish may be taken at any time, and are at their best dur- ing the cool months, but bite most freely in summer. Those who undertake to handle catfish, should exercise a great deal of caution, as it is one of the kind that always takes full hold of bait and hook, and whose jaws are so leathery and tough, that when the hook is fairly embedded in them, it is difficult of extrac- tion. It therefore becomes necessary to handle it with the utmost care. As its sharp pointed stiff spines are always erect, there is danger of wounding, and those who have experienced the sting of a catfish need not be told that it is exceedingly painful, and has been known to produce fatal results. This is advice for novices. THE SHAD. {Alosa prcesiabilis.) Although Shad are found in such abundance along the entire coast of the United States as to give them a commercial value almost equal to that of au}^ other fish, comparatively little is known of them, beyond the fact that they make their appearance in the Delaware earl 3^ in the spring — the time of their arrival being influ- enced by the temperature of the water — and that the object is to reach the upper waters of the river for the purpose of spawning. That process accomplished, they turn their heads seaward, and if 52 permitted, return to salt water, remaining there until the following spring. What becomes of them during the winter, the most care- ful study of their habits has failed to reveal. All that is known of them is that they come in the spring and spawn; the 3'Oung are hatched, and in the fall they descend the river and find retreats, thus far, beyond human ken. But what have we to do with Shad in this book on angling ? Only this, that they can sometimes be tempted to rise to a dexter- ously cast-fly, and in a few instances ha^•e been known to take a small bait. The capture of a shad with hook and line is therefore to be regarded as a notable achievement, but those who desire to bring home well filled creels are advised not to select the shad as the subject for their efforts, though of its table qualities nothing need be said. While bony to an aggravating degree, the flavor of the shad when properh^ cooked — planked or broiled for instance — is simply unsurpassed. Thaddeus Norris chronicles the fact, that he was once fortu- nate enough to hook three in succession, when fishing for perch with a bright little minnow below Fairmount dam. and secured two. THE ROACH. Here we have another fish, upon which the scientific angler is vers' apt to look with contempt ; but there is that to be said in favor of the Roach, which cannot be said of an}- other fish in near- by waters — except the Pike — that it will take a bait on almost any bright, sunshin3% warm day during the entire winter. It is small but beautiful, with the tiniest of mouths, and yet an eager though cautious biter. The lightest kind of tackle is best — a very thin line, a single gut snood, armed with several hooks as small as No. II Kirb}^ ; a very light float, and just enough of a sinker to carry down the line. The more delicate the rod, the more suitable for Roach fishing. The Roach is found at Red Bank, on the Dela- ware, and around the whar^'es along the Camden side of the river ; in Cooper's and Neshaminy creeks, and in kindred places. 53 Roach Bait. Varying from six to ten inches in length, quite agreeable sport can be had with them during the warm days of winter. Bait with dough paste, the bait being only large enough to cover the point of the hook. Fish near the bottom, and it may be, that two or three hooks placed at intervals of six or eight inches, according to the snoods, can be used to advantage. The biting is so nearly imper- ceptible as to escape the notice of any but an expert, a fact which renders Roach fishing the more interesting. As a table fish, it does not rank with the best, but will serve to vary the daily diet somewhat. THE GERMAN CARP. {Cyprinidci'.^ As far as we have knowledge, the German Carp is the only edible fish ever successfully introduced into American waters from foreign countries. The history of its acclimation is interesting, as well as encouraging, and the. more so, in that the " near-by " fresh waters have so largely profited by its introduction. The encour- agement to be drawn from this fact is, that having been successful in adding one valuable food fish to our native list, there is a possi- bilit}' at least that others equally well adapted to our waters wall be found, and like the Carp, become profitable members of our many but still too few food-fish families. When Introduced into the United StatEvS. It is only about twelve years ago, 1877, that Mr. Rudolph Hessel, who, at that time, was connected with the United States Fishery Commission, brought to this countr^v from Bremen, three hundred and forty-five German Carp. They were taken charge of by Professor Spencer Baird, the then efficient head of the Commis- sion, and under his capable direction, arrangements for artificial 54 propagation were immediately made. In addition to that gentle- man's theoretical knowledge of the methods of propagation and of the prolificness of the Cai-p in German waters, he very soon ascer- tained by practical experiment, that a valuable acquisition had been made. Immediate Demands for Them. Those strangers were rapidly propagated, and as freely dis- tributed through the country as the supply admitted. No sooner were their leading characteristics made known, than there vSprung up a great demand for them. The readiness with which they could be propagated, their prolificness, hardiness, rapid growth, adapta- tion to American waters, and their fairly good edible qualities, commended them to favorable consideration. Utilization of Waste Land. Farmers learning that swamps and bogs, not a\-ailal3le for arable purposes, and unsightly as well as unhealthy, could, at a small outlay of money and labor, be converted into pleasant-looking ponds, in which the German Carp would live and rapidh' multiply, became eagerly desirous of securing them. Thousands of acres of previously waste lands were thus utilized, and where, as is usually the case, there was a small stream of water, the owners had the satisfaction of not only seeing those waste places converted into profitable use in the shape of 'fruitful fish-ponds, but of securing, in addition, a supply of ice from them for summer use. General Adaptation to American Waters. With the first introduction of the German Carp, there was a generally prevalent impression that the}^ were adapted to pond-life only, and that they were b}^ nature opposed to streams, save those of the most sluggish kind ; but later experience has entirely dissi- pated that idea. 55 It was only a few years after the first distribution b}* the United States Fish Commission at Washington, that the capture of strange-looking fish in a gill seine was made in the Delaware, and shorth^ thereafter a number were taken with hook and line in the Schuylkill, where a few had been placed under the auspices of the Fairmount Park Connnissioners. Some escaped from overflowed carp-ponds, finding their wa}^ into the nearest streams,/ where they speedih' multiplied, until, it can be said of them to-day, that in the few intervening 3'ears the}- have — with the exception of the shad — become the most plentiful of the larger sized fish in our rivers. Will Take the Bait. Another erroneous impression was, that the German Carp would not take the bait except on rare occasions. It soon began to be practically demonstrated that such was not the case, it being found that they could not onh' be tempted with certain kinds of bait, but during the greater part of the year — the exceptional months being the wintry ones, when, if the weather is very cold, they retire to the deepest waters, where there is mud bottom, re- maining there until the recurrence of more genial temperature. River and creek anglers were frequently astonished to find themselves contending with large, active and rather gamey fish, upon landing which, they discovered that they had been dealing with wdiat were to them entire strangers, that had to be taken to some ichthyological expert for identification. The Carp increased in pond and stream with mar\'ellous rapidit}'. ProlificnEvSS. x\n idea of the Carp's prolificness will be gleaned from the fact that a female of four or five pounds contains, when ready for spawaiing, from 400,000 to. 500,000 eggs. If but ten per cent, of that vast number are hatched and survive, it is not difficult to un- derstand why those comparative strangers ha\'e already* become so numerous. 56 In view of such facts, the introduction of this fish into Ameri- can waters is to be regarded as a valuable 1)oon. Large as were the anticipations of those through whose agency they were brought here and distributed, they have been greatly exceeded by the prac- tical results, and it is very evident that most of the ' ' near-by ' ' rivers have been sufficiently stocked with them to warrant confi- dence in the belief that they will become so abundant as to have a commercial as well as a sporting value, and that in a few years they will be found side by side on the fish stalls with the striped bass, perch, pike and other well known varieties. A Provider for Game Fishes. There is one feature connected with the carp that entitles it to favorable consideration. Not being predacious, and yet a wonder- ful propagator of its species, its 3'oung will suppl}^ food for the Black Bass, Striped Bass, Wall-Eye Pike and other kinds that sub- sist entirely on animal food, mainly, upon live minnows. The Carp's most marked characteristics are hardiness, fecun- dity, extraordinary rapidity of growth, adaptation to pure waters that are not too rapid, and last but not least, a readiness to take the bait. Habitats. There are as yet no well defined Carp habitats. Large num- bers of \'er\' fine ones have been caught with worm bait at the mouth of Woodbury Creek, and also in other Jerse}^ tributaries of the Delaware ; and in the Neshaminy and Pennypack. For several years they have been taken of fine size in almost an}' pool between Fairmount dam and as far northward as the Black Bass frequent. They have also been killed in the Susquehanna, which is a most favorable indication. It is yet too soon to determine their habits, as far as biting is concerned. A gentleman of Philadelphia who has perhaps taken 57 more of them up to this time than an\' other, has been unable to determine whether their feeding times are or are not influenced by the tides. They appear to bite as well on flood as on ebb, and he thinks 'the^^ move in schools, picking up their food wherever they chance to find it. Bait and Tackle. The most taking bait thus far found, has been the common red worm, obtained near manure heaps, grains of wheat, a green pea, bread crumb paste, a bit of macaroni partially boiled in plain water, are all acceptable. Light Bass tackle is best, with a sinker just heavy enough to keep the line on the bottom, with the baited hook on the ground. A gut leader is always preferable, as the carp is a wary fish. The hook should be ver}' small, the bait ditto, as the mouth is of the most limited dimensions. It is easily frightened, therefore, the more profound the quiet the greater the likelihood of success. When a bite is perceived, do not be in a hurry, as the fi.sh will begin to move when it has fairly mouthed the bait. When it does move, then strike. The close season is from the ist of Ma}^ until the ist of Sep- tember, the lav^-eading thus : " It shall not be lawful to catch, kill, take or remove in any manner from any public lake, stream or spring, any fish of an}- size or age of the species known as the ' German Carp, ' during Ma\^ June, July, or August of any year. ' ' There is no close season for Carp in New Jersey. Three VarietiEvS. There are three distinct varieties of the German Carp, all of which have representatives in Pennsylvania and New Jersey waters. They are respectively known as the " Scale Carp," the "Leather Carp," and the "Mirror" Carp. ^*.y THE ASIATIC OR SCALE CARP. {Cvprinus carpio coiuDiiDiis.^ The first named, the " Scale Carp," is said to be the original species improved, though it is not stated what the original species looked like. It has regularly, concentrically arranged scales, as is shown in the illustration. It is a handsome fish, and whether for gameness or the table, has thus far the preference over the other varieties. Whether it is less prolific or whether there has been a sparser planting of them, has not yet been determined, but thus far, the scale species is not nearly as plentiful as the " leather " or * ' mirror. ' ' The Leather Carp. 59 THE LEATHER CARP. iCyprinis carpio coriaceus^ sive Jiudiis.) The ' ' Leather ' ' Carp has the marked peculiarit}' of having on its back a single row of scales — sometimes none at all, while the other parts of its bod}^ are covered with a soft, thick skin, velvety to the tonch, and which becomes slini}^ when handled. KING OR MIRROR CARP. ^^^r^j.^.^ J (^Cyprinus carpo specula vis.) The third is the King or " Mirror" Carp, so-called from the very large and irregularly placed scales which run along the bod^^ in three or four rows, leaving the rest of the body bare. Each of the three has its admirers, hence it is difficult to de- termine which is really entitled to general supremac3\ All of them are beautiful, and are so strongly built and so well formed as to readily explain their gamey qualities. Another characteristic is the unusual quantity of blood. When being cleaned, this becomes very apparent, and suggests that if they were bled — as all fish should be immediately after capture, the quality of the flesh 6o would be materialh^ improved. They are also exceedingl}^ tena- cious of life. Instances have come under the writer's obser^^ation , in which, after being out of the water for three or four hours, they become as lively as ever when restored to their native element. No apology is offered for the amount of space given to these fish. They are to be regarded as most valuable additions to our list of food fishes, as they are the only one of trans- Atlantic origin ever made. Their remarkable adaptation to American waters has already been practically demonstrated as well as their enormous capacities for reproduction. In many parts of Europe they are regarded with much favor for table purposes, and there is room for the belief that when they have lived in our fresh waters for some time, the quality of their flesh will be materially improved, at least, such is the opinion of those who ha^'e given them careful study. Having thus, in a familiar way, given the habitats and most marked characteristics of the " near-by " fresh water edible fishes, it only remains to be said, that as " whatever is worth doing at all is worth doing well," so the person who desires to indulge in either " near-by " or " far off " freshwater fishing, should enter upon that kind of recreation properly equipped. Assuming that such outings will be repeated at least several times during the summer and fall, a moderate outfit will be found essential to comfort and success. Such an outfit can be expensive or inexpensive according to the taste and exchequer of the pur- chaser. A novice should begin with what is known as a light perch or bass rod, unless he aspires to the taking of the large striped bass at the mouth of the Susquehanna, when a heavier will be required. Next, a good, smooth-running, hundred yard reel, a nine-thread Cutty hunk cable-laid or braided hempen or silk line; a small assortment of hooks of different sizes, which may comprise Sproat, Limerick, Kirby, Chestertown or any other of the standard varieties. The hooks should be snooded, and single gut w^ll be found sufficient for any but the heavier fishins:. A few two and 6i three foot leaders may come into pla}-, also a few light dipsies and split shot, and one or two neat floats. If bass or trout fishing is contemplated, a pair of wading pants, a landing net, a basket creel, and a reel for drying lines will be needed. vSuch an equip- ment can be made to cost a great deal of money, or it can be pur- chased at an outlay within the means of almost any one, and will answer the purpose as well as the more expensive, besides being adapted for the lighter kinds of sea fishing, which w^ill be con- sidered in subsequent chapters. But whatever materials comprise the outfit, let them be of good quality. There is no economy in buying cheap tackle. "NEAR-BY" SALT WATER FISHING. Although the sea — or any salt water— is not less than from fift}^ to sevent3^-five miles from Philadelphia, so man}- are the lines of communication with it, so rapid the transit and so reasonable the fare, that places even more than a hundred miles away, may properl}' be classed under the head of " near-by " fishing localities. The nearest points, as Atlantic City, Somers Point, and Ocean City, can be reached in from ninet}^ to an hundred minutes, the first named by three roads, the latter by one — the West Jersey. By taking one of the earliest morning trains, either of the places named is reached by it in time to afford the angler, who has but a single day for a fishing outing, six or eight hours sport and ample time to secure a home passage by the latest train. There are other points as Sea Isle City, Townsend's Inlet, Avalon, Anglesea, and Cape May southward, and the many places on Barnegat Bay as Tuckerton, Beach Haven, Harv^ey's Cedars, Barnegat City, Waretown, Forked River, Toms River and Sea- 62 side Park, which can be reached by the latest train in the after- noon — leaving generall}^ about four o'clock — and giving a whole day's fishing next da}^ and a returning train the evening. That, to be sure, involves the additional expense of a night's hotel accom- modation, but compensation is found in the facts that you have a longer time for fishing, and the best part of the day — the morn- ing — for its enjoyment. There are main- who can take a day's fishing on legal holi- days only, as Decoration Day, Fourth of July and Labor Day — when banks, stores and public offices are closed — therefore, whether it rains or shines, whether the tides suit or otherwise, having no choice in the matter, they must take things as they find them — favorable or unfavorable. There are others who are not thus tied down by business, wdio can go and come at their own pleasure, and who therefore can arrange for a fishing trip to the seashore and thus Avoid Disappointme:nts. At nearh' all prominent fishing localities, are persons who are willing to give the needed information in regard to tides, bait, boats boatmen, etc. A line addressed to such persons will generally bring a prompt response, if the request is accompanied with a postage stamp for a reply. In lieu of a better resource, apply to the post- master, who will either himself answer, or hand you a note to some one who will. Being thus informed, subsequent arrangements can be intelligently made, and you will be well repaid for your trouble. You may have tide, boatmen, bait, fish and weather just right on any legal holiday, or on any other day you may select for j^our outing ; the fish ma^- be plentiful and in a biting mood, and you may have a good time, and then again, 3'OU may not. It is, there- fore, alwa3^s advisable — if sport is your object and 3-0U can do it — to make vour arran2:ements some davs in advance. 63 A Salt Water Fisherman's Outfit. The outfit needful for angling in salt waters, although required to be stronger and stouter — as far as tackle is concerned — than that used for fresh water fishing, is much more simple and less ex- pensive. As most sea-fishing is done from boats, there is not only no necessity for long rods, but an almost positive requirement that the extreme length shall not exceed eight and a half feet — seven and a half is better. The lumbering, heavy rod— once called the standard — should be wholly discarded, and the much lighter, more easily handled and equally effective one purchased. Such a rod can be had of excellent quality for from four to five dollars at an}' of the tackle stores. If 3'ou can afford the outlay, alwa3\s carrj^ two, for the sea is big, and there's no telling what kind of a fish will take your bait. Accidents, 3'ou know, will happen, and it is exceedingly provoking to find ones-self at sea, with a broken rod, and the fish biting. Sea Lines and Reels. There is no better line for sea-fishing than the cable-laid hempen, Cuttyhunck or its equivalent. A nine-thread is strong enough for any ordinary fishing, and is to be preferred, as the tide friction is not nearly as great as when a heavier one is used, conse- quently, a lighter dipse}' will answer. It will not be amiss, how- ever, to have a heavier one in reserve. A good reel is indispensable to comfortable and successful sea- fishing. One that will not corrode is to be preferred; but whether of brass, nickel, German-silver or rubber, be sure to get one that runs smoothl3\ If, in making your selection, 3^ou come across one that has a halting, hesitating, harsh movement, incontinently reject it, even though made of solid silver. You can suit yourself as to price, as reels are made at from one dollar to fifty, with all intermediate grades. From five to ten dollars will purchase one of excellent quality, which should be of the capacity of about one hundred 3'ards of line. 64 Snoods and Leaders. Gut snoods and leaders are always preferable to twine. They are a little more costly but the additional expense is not hea\'3\ Some salt water anglers think two or three foot leaders indispens- able, others reject them entirely, preferring the simple long snood, looped on to the line. Tightly twisted snoods are not the best, as they are apt to be affected by the salt water and unravel unplea- santly. Hooks. Of hooks there should always be carried a good assortment, avoiding how^ever, the too frequent error of buying the largest sizes. A few years ago the impression prevailed that large hooks were absolutely essential for sea fishing, but, as light, short rods have superseded the long heavy ones, so the smaller hooks have, to a considerable extent, taken the place of the larger. In point of fact, the cumbrous tackle of years ago has been pretty much laid aside, greatly to the enhancement of fishermen's com- fort. As there is no certainty as to the depth of the water in which sea-fishing is to be done, and as the tides vary in force, it is well to provide an assortment of dipsies, varying in weight from half an ounce to four ounces. They are made of many shapes and are known as swivel, screw, hollow-ball, etc. The hollow-ball is used mainly for sheep' s-heading, the others for almost any kinds of sea-fishing. A Few Other Essentials. A pair of cheap overhauls, a landing net, a pair of plyers, a good sized, sharp clasp knife, a fine file, a bit of sand paper, and a small sized leather caba to contain the tackle. A drying reel, for drying lines that have been wetted with salt water, should con- stitute part of the outfit. It costs only fift}- cents, and will pay for itself twice over everv season. 65 There are those who cannot be persuaded to abandon the old- time, heavy hand-line in sea-fishing. That kind of tackle is one of the relics of a past age. It is cumbrous, tiresome to handle, un- certain and frequently most annoying. If you intend becoming a professional or even an amateur fisherman, make up your mind to begin with the rod and reel, and cast the hand-line to the "owls and bats. ' ' You can use the rod and reel in any water, where a hand-line can be, and in many places w^here the latter is not avail- able. Other things being equal, 3' on w^ill catch more fish, and 3'our sport will be ten times greater. The rod is not of course recommended for cod fishing, though it might be made available there. ^- THE FLOUNDER. (P/afessa vulgaris.) Although this singular fish has no title to the designation of "gamey," it has two virtues, which are of a highly redeeming character. The first is, it is the pioneer of the lure-taking sea fishes in the spring, and the last to leave in the fall. It is on hand, generally speaking, from the first of April until November, biting 66 all the time, when opportunity is aitorded it. It is a gentle nibbler, but sometimes takes vigorous hold, and if the hook is not too large to be swallowed, the catch is sure. Naturally-, from its peculiar shape, the Flounder feeds on the bottom and must be fished for there. Small hooks are required, and as to bait, while it no doubt has its preferences it will take almost any that is offered — a bit of clam, or sand worm, crab or mussel, alike appear- ing to be relished. Second Redkkmin'g Virtue. The Flounder's second redeeming virtue is its excellent table quality. Although not the best fish the sea produces, it is far from being the poorest, in a word, when properh' cooked, it is fit for any table. As to the Flounder's habitat, it may be said to be everywhere. Barnegat Bay abounds with them in earl\- spring, especially in the vicinity of Forked River, at Harve}-'s Cedars, Beach Ha\'en, and indeed anywheres in the Bay, and in greater or less al)undance at almost any point along the Jersey coast. thp: black fish. ( Ta u toga on His . ) Among the earliest sea-biting fishes is the Tautog or Black Fish, so called. Its arri\'al is pretty nearly contemporaneous with that of the Flounder, and like that earh' bird, it takes the bait at once. It is a free biter, and when taken of a pound weight and upwards, may be called gamey, as it is powerfully finned and ver}^ .stronglj^ built. The Tautog loves rock-strewn tideways, wrecks, old wharves, and piers, where small mollusks are to be found. It also frequents the sedgy and sodd\- edges of meadows, where the water is deep and the tide not too strong, and can be taken from early April until the middle of October. The tackle required is pretty much the same as that for weak- fish in point of strength, but the hooks should be smaller and of stronger wire. The Chesteftown is admirably adapted for Tau- tog fishing, though for that matter, an}' of the stronger vStandard kinds will answer. Fasten the snood so that when the line is per- pendicular, the hook will be somewhat less than a foot from the bottom. Hard clam, sand worms and fiddlers are greatly relished. The Black Fish. In regard to its qualities, the Tautog has few superiors. The flesh is white and firm, and if properly cooked, it is one of the most toothsome of salt-water fishes. It must not be confounded with the Sea Bass, which is frequentlj^ done, because, perhaps, that fish after it is dead, is nuich blacker in hue than the Tautog, which in respect of color, is singularly mis-named. The Tautog has a heavy coat of scales, that is not readily removed unless the fish is first dipped in strong vinegar. A better way is to skin it, which is easily done, and is considered preferable with a great many of the smaller thick-skinned fishes. 68 THE WEAK-FLSH OR SQUETEAGUE. ( Cj 'nosi'ou regal is. ) This beautiful fish, which in point of rich coloring has no superior in our coast waters, is varioush^ known as the "weak- fish," "blue fish," "sea trout," " wheatfish " etc., but whence it derived its most commonly applied name, " weakfish," has never been satisfactorily determined. It is one of the gamest of our sea- fishes, equalling in that respect the Striped Bass, but lacking that noble fish's powers of endurance. It takes the bait with the same greedy avidity, and its first dashes are tremendous, if the hooked fish be of good size, say two or three pounds. The larger the fish the more powerful its struggles, and the more prolonged its contest for life. Eaki.y Biters. A few years ago it was generally believed along the Jersey coast, that weak-fish would not take the bait until about the first of July, but that belief has been completely exploded by facts. For five years past the writer has caught them in large numbers in Cape May waters, earl}^ in May, though none but females, and they in gravid condition seemed inclined to bite. As the season advances, they make their appearance all along the coast, the dif- ference in time between their first arrival at the Cape and at Atlan- tic City or Barnegat Ba}^ being from two to three weeks. They remain during the summer and until the latter part of September, when the}^ commence their southward migration in schools. They are then in their finest condition for the table and in their gamest 69 moods. Immense quantities of them are taken at that time, the almost entire coast from Sandy Hook to Cape May being lined with 3'achts and other small craft filled with eager fishermen. During the summer, the weak-fish are found in all the estu- aries in greater or less abundance, and at various points in Dela- ware Bay on both sides, from Ship John Light to the Breakwater. Although there are certain stages of the tide w^hen they feed most vigorously, the}' are very capricious, frequently biting freely at most unexpected places, tides and times. Various Methods of Angling for Thkm. The}' are not strictly surface fish, nor 3'et what are know^n as bottom fish. In some localities in Barnegat Ba}', especiall}^ on the flats, opposite Waretown and Forked River, they are most readily taken with a float and a light sinker, and wath the hook wdthin two or three feet of the surface. Those caught there, and in that way, are usuall}' of small size. In Great Egg Harbor Bay the same style of rig will answer, but only on the flood tide, when the flats are well covered, and the water from six to ten feet deep. The fish there are of larger size than in Barnegat Bay. x\s a rule, the largest fish are not taken near the surface, though of course there are exceptions. The writer's experience has satisfied him, that the most effective tackle for deep water fishing — from fifteen to thirty feet and upwards — is a sufficiently heavy sinker to keep the line taut, and the lower bait on or very near the bottom. At a snell's length above the sinker, loop a single snell on to the line, and three or four feet farther up, a two or three foot leader, or a single-length gut snell. The lower hook should be smaller than the upper, as the chances are largely in favor of capturing hake or king-fish while angling for weak-fish. When They Bite Best. During the flood-tide, the weak-fish generally keep in the channel-ways, where they go in search of food ; but when the tide 70 begins to ebb, the}' are almost certain to seek the deeper water, where they remain until the next change of the tide again entices them to their feeding grounds. Experienced fishermen regard the latter half of the flood and the first of the ebb-tide as the best stages for successful fishing. They will take the bait readily at night. Big Catch or SroRT? When a big catch is desired and sport is only a secondary con- sideration, a comparatively heavy, short rod is needed — one that will bear the weight of a sinker sufficiently heavy to carry the line and the bait quickh' to the bottom, and also admit of the rapid reeling in of the fish ; but if real sport is the object, use a bass-bait-rod. from seven and a half to eight feet in length, a reel that will carry a hundred yards of the finest linen line and i o or 2 , oo hooks of the make you prefer. A light sinker will answer. The large hooks, once considered indispensable, should be avoided. A Taut I^ine. The sight of the weak-fish is said to be keener and sharper than that of an}- other estuary fish, hence the greater probability of a good catch when the water is not ' ' thick, or ' ' riley. ' ' It takes the bait with a rush, and the moment the strike is felt, keep a taut line on your prize until it is safely landed. Do not permit an inch of loose or slack line, for the mouth of the weak-fish is large, and the sides of the jaws thin and tender, so that when the hook penetrates that part, as it is very apt to do, there is certain to be a large orifice, which, if the line is not kept taut, enables it to throw out the hook and escape. Table Qualities. Although a small weak-fish has little or nothing to recom- mend it for table use, the larger ones are just the reverse. The 71 meat is white, and that of the four and five pounders, almost as flaky and well flavored as that of the salmon ; but to have it in perfection, the weak-fish should be bled before it dies, and cooked soon after being caught. As far as bait is concerned, soft or shedder crabs are always acceptable, indeed, maj^ be regarded as the best, though at times a piece of clam, a black muSvSel, the throat-latch or e}'e of a brother weak-fish, or a three inch shiner, will prove equally attractive. In the spring of the ^-ear, shrimp bait is by all odds the best and for that matter, is good at any time if the water is clear. For the earliest fishing on the Jersey coa.st, go to the Cape May thoroughfares about the middle of Ma}^ For later fishing 3'ou will find them in almost au}^ of the estuaries of the coast, and in great abundance at many points on both sides of the Delaware Bay, notably at Slaughter's Beach, on the West and at Ship John Light, Fortescue Beach, Bay Side, and on the "Shell beds" oppo- site Fishino: Creek. THE SPOTTED SQUETEAGUE. This comparatively scarce fish in Northern waters, a mem- ber of the weak-fish family, is a native of the South, and is especi- ally plentiful along the Carolina coast and on the iVtlantic and Gulf coasts of Florida. It is in several respects better than its relative, the weak-fish, being not only as voracious a biter, but nuich more ganiey, and with greater powers of endurance, while its table qualities are decidedly superior, the meat being white, firm, flak}^ and well flavored. It is besides a much better keeper. It is to be regretted that so few of them visit the North. Those that are taken are generally of good size, weighing from two to five pounds. In the South, they are known as "Sea Trout," and are so abundant there as to have a large commercial value. THE BLUE FISH. {Temjiodon Sa/ tutor.) ' • The pirate of the ocean ' ' is one of the appropriate designa- tions given the famous Blue-fish, a fish that has afforded as much enjoyment to those who are not particular as to the manner of fish capture, as perhaps, any other that swims. While it is one of the most unyielding of fighters, the usual method employed for killing it is not, in any sense, sportsmanlike. It requires no skill — the fish hooking itself. It is only a contest of strength between the person who holds the trolling line and the struggling fish at the other end of it. It is that simple fact, coupled with the exhilara- tion of the sailing, however, that gives blue-fishing its special charm in the estimation of so many. Any one — even the merest novice — who can stand the sea when a stiff breeze prevails, and whose hands can endure the friction of the trolling line, is just as likely to be successful as the most experienced angler. It is well that it is so, for while the love of fishing is innate, only the com- parativeh^ few have the time and opportunit}' for indulging it, that are requisite to constitute them anglers in the true .sense of that term. Hence, thousands find healthful and delightful recreation in trolling for the murderous blue-fish, not a few of them being of the weaker sex, who, ever on the alert for chances to place them- selves on an equality with man kind, have discovered in that sort of recreation a wished-for opportunity, and rarely fail to improve it. When thkv come. The appearance of the Blue-fish along the Jerse}^ coast is regu- lated in a large degree b}" the temperature of the water, though it is suggested by those who have made it a matter of close stud}', that the time of their arrival is governed by that of the men- haden and other fish which constitute their fa^'orite food. Be that as it may, they are sure to put in an appearance about the ist of Jiuie, remaining until October, the larger ones not migrating until the latter part of the month. Outfit. Blue-fishing is such a simple process, that little can or need be said either in regard to the tackle, bait or style of fishing. The requisites are a stout cotton line some three hundred feet in length, and a squid of bright metal of such style as may suit the taste or caprice of the purchaser. The hands should be protected against the friction of the line by a pair of stout gloves, woolen or leather, or a set of gum finger-stalls — the gloves to be preferred. Troll- ing naturally suggests a sail boat and a spanking breeze, for with- out both, blue-fishing cannot be done. Therefore, after hav- ing secured your line, squid and gloves, your only care will be to find your boatman and the breeze. Old Fashioned Squids. Prior to the days when brilliant squids became fashionable, a piece of wood, covered with dried eel-skin, and with a hook 74 attached, was almost the only squid known, and it is said by those acquainted with blue-fishing twenty-five 3'ears ago, that fiill}^ as many were taken with that primitive lure as with the more highly finished and costly ones of to-day. Rod and RkeIv Bluk-fishing. But Irolling is not the only method of taking this formidable fish, nor is that method generally regarded as sportsmanlike. The other method, although not generally practiced, is one that taxes alike the tackle and the skill of the angler. A great deal has been said within a few years in regard to Tarpum fishing in the waters of Southern Florida. Men who have succeeded in capturing that king of fishes have rightly earned renown, and their names have been duly chronicled as being fairly entitled to a place on the scroll of fame, but notable as such achievements have been, they are scarcely more so than the taking and killing with rod and reel, a twelve or fifteen pound blue-fish, when on his way southward in October, in the full vigor of health and strength. Those who have tried conclusions with such, will readily agree that they are the gamest of the game, and with powers of endurance that are truly wonderful. , Stout tackle is of course required for the kind of angling alluded to, not so much in the rod as in the line and hook. An eighteen thread Cuttyhunk two hundred yards long, and a corres- pondingly large reel will answer the purpose, with a large, strong hook attached to piano wire. Without this last precaution, you may as well not attempt the capture of the Blue-fish, for his jaws are so armed with formidable teeth of razor-like sharpness, that a line quadruple the size of that recommended, would be instantly severed if brought in contact with them. How THE Angling is done. Thus equipped, the fisherman anchors his boat at some point near where the blue fish are in the habit of frequenting ; and in 75 order to keep his hook from sinking too deep, a float should be placed three or four feet above the bait. While an artificial bait — as a minnow — will sometimes tempt a strike, something more edible will be found decidedly more effective in still fishing. A piece of fresh menhaden or other bright colored fish, is a sure bait. Having thus prepared himself for the fray, the angler awaits the arrival of his intended victim. His patience may be severely taxed, or he may be at once rewarded with a strike. When it does come, there will be a commotion, for no sooner does the blue-fish feel the prick of the hook, than he darts awa}' at a rate that threatens to make instant wreck of tackle, but, as with all other fishes of his class, this one must be dealt w4th coolly and calmly. Give him line freely but judiciously, and if possible, keep it taut all the time. He may " run up " on you, and when he gains that "coign of vantage," he has a way of ridding himself of the hook not readil}^ comprehended, but withal a fact. Therefore, keep a taut line, reeling him tow^ards 3'ou whenever he manifests the slightest disposition to humor your inclinations in that respect. If— as he is almost certain to do— he goes with the tide when hooked, your labors become the more severe, but perseverance and good tackle handled with masterl}-^ skill, will ultimately win, and when 3'ou have landed 3'our first big blue-fish, 3-ou wdll be likely to confess that you never before tackled one of his size, that struck more fiercel}^ ran with greater swiftness, pulled harder or fought longer or more bravely. Those who have taken the "Tailors" of the Chesapeake and of the estuaries of the Atlantic coast, can form an idea of the tremendous powers of the adult blue-fish. Tailors are the young blue-fish. Perhaps no other fish common to American salt w^aters, possesses a greater amount of interest for the angler or the ichthy- ologist. The more "the wolf of the sea" is studied, the more interesting it becomes. Either always hungry or slaying for the mere love of it, the blue-fish is a fit representative of the Ish- maelite, whose hand was against everybody and ever3^bod3^'s against his. Built for strength and swiftness, armed with teeth of 76 the most formidable character and stimulated b}^ an appetite that appears to be insatiate, he roams the waters at will, carrying havoc and death with him wherever he goes. Professor Baird, in his well-known description of the blue-fish and its habits, says: — * ' Such is the glutton}' of this fish that when the stomach becomes full, the contents are disgorged and then again filled. ''^ * -'^ ^ Going in large schools in pursuit of fish not much inferior to them- selves in size, the}^ mive along like a pack of hungry wolves, destroying everything before them. Their trail is marked by frag- ments of fish and b}' the stain of blood in the sea, as, where the fish is too large to be swallowed entire, the hinder part will be bitten off and the anterior part allowed to float away or sink." And this destructive spirit is displayed b}^ the younger fish, as fully as b}^ the adults. The authority just quoted, estimates the number of blue-fish captured during the season at not less than a million individuals ; that as probably not one of the fish in a thousand of those exist- ing in the sea is ever taken by man, therefore, there is a thousand million of them on the coast between New Jersey and Monomoy. An allowance often fish per day to each blue-fish is not excessive, w^hich gives ten thousand million of fish destroyed by them daily, and as the stay of the blue-fish is about one hundred and twent}^ days, we have, in round numbers, twelve hundred million millions offish devoured by them in a season. "Again, if each blue-fish averaging five pounds, destroj^s even half its own weight per day, we will have during the same period, a daily loss of twenty-five hun- dred million pounds, equal to three hundred thousand millions for the season.". These are stupendous figures, absolutely bewilder- ing, and would not be quote i but for the fact that they have been prepared by so reliable an authority as Professor Baird. When the blue-fish season arrives, you will hardly be at a loss where to look for them. Sometimes Barnegat Bay is literally alive with them, as is Great Egg Harbor Bay. Outside is the place to look for them, and the various inlets are the channels of egress to where they abound. 77 THE KING FISH. Hakk — Whiting — Barb. (^Mtiiticirrus nebidosis.) This fine representative of sea food-fishes has alwa^^s enjoyed a most en^^iable reputation, whether for the table or for gameness wlien hooked. In such high esteem was it held b}^ the New Yorkers in colonial days, that in order to show their high appreci- ation of its many admirable qualities, they called it the King fish, considering the appellation mutualh^ complimentary to the fish and to the King. It needs not the telling to those familiar with the edible char- acteristics of the King fish, that they rank with the best, and are generalh^ held in such repute by fish epicures. For its size, it is one of the heaviest of fishes, which is largely due to the fact that it is remarkable for the solidity of its flesh, and for the comparativeh^ small portion of the fish itself which goes to w^aste in the cleaning. The flesh is pure white, of close, laminated, flaky texture, and whether for the pan or for chowder, is preferred to most others hy those who claim to be experts in fish preparation and eating. Although not in any way related to the weak-fish, the King fish appears to be very fond of his company, as is evidenced by the fact that the two are so frequently taken on the same 78 grounds. So common is this companionship, that as recommended in describing weak-fish tackle, it is alwa3\s advisable to have a small hook for the bottom one, and it on the ground, in order to accommodate the King fish. It is most conunonly found on a clean sandy bottom, prefer- ring the edge of channels and sand bars during the flood-tide, retir- ing to the deeper waters as the tide recedes. It makes its appear- ance co-temporaneousl}' with, and departs a])out tlie same time as the weak-fish. At times it is exceedingh- plentiful. The season of 1888, as was that of 1880, was noted for the a1)undance and size of the King fish along the entire coast, but especially at Anglesea, where the writer and a friend took an hundred and sixty-eight on a single tide, most of them of good size and some of them ver3^ large for those waters. It is gregarious in its ha))its, running in schools, and fre- quentl}^ remaining in one locality as long as toothsome bait is fiu"- nished b}^ the fishermen. As to the gameness of the King fish, there can be no dis- pute. Its claims to distinction in that respect, are very strong even among the smaller ones, but when a two or three pounder is hooked, all doubts on the subject are removed. It is a free, in fact a ravenous biter ; not so impuLsive as the weak-fish, but fully as earnest, taking hold with a vim that lea\'es no room for the infer- ence that business is not meant. vSeizing the bait in a lively man- ner and without nibbling or hesitation, he only needs the prick of the hook to start him off at a rate of speed that fairly astonishes. Swimming low, his runs are generall}' long ones until he is brought up on a round turn by the angler, when he changes his tactics, and if the water is deep, resorts to the methods adopted b}- the sheepshead— diving downward repeatedly, and if he is a two or three pounder and you are not on the alert— the tip of your rod is almost certain to be drawn under the water. The persistence with which he maintains his struggles to escape, fairl}^ entitles him to the designation gi\'en to him b}^ Scott, ' ' the king of game fishes." 79 As alread}' stated, the Kiiig-fisli is of the bottom kind, and must be fished for there. Having a small month, a small strong hook is requisite, and a correspondingh^ small bait. In angling for it, do not make the mistake of offering a large bait. A two foot leader looped about a foot above the sinker, is a good rig, but it will, the writer thinks, be found a more certain method to have a single gut snood looped three or four inches above the sinker. With a light springy rod, and correspondingly light tackle, in wTtter of from ten to fifteen feet in depth, and with King-fish plen- tiful, no better angling sport could be desired. ^ As alread}^ remarked, plentifulness of the King-fish is not always an assured thing. Sometimes the}^ disappear almost entirely from the estuaries, remaining absent for two or three years, then suddenl}^ reappear in great numbers and of large size. Although not remarkable for beaut}^ of coloring, it is far from being a homely fish in that respect. It has man}- handsome tints, and when first taken from the water is a comely creature, making up in gracefulnCvSS of form and admirable proportions for strength and endurance what it lacks in other particulars. The King-fish is not fastidious in its tastes. Hard clam bait, cut small, is always acceptable ; shedder crab is never refused, black-mussels are greatly relished, and fish bait cut from the side of a small sea bass is always welcomed. THE SPANISH MACKEREL. [Sconibcromorus luaculatiis. ) The Spanish mackerel, whether for beauty, svriftness, grace, gameness or edible qualities, fairly challenges comparison Avith any other fish that swims in salt water. Although taken at times along the entire Jerse}^ coast, it is rarel}- numerous there, and when it does appear in au}^ considerable abundance, is generall}' found far from the shore — farther than where the blue-fish usually forages. Being evidentl}' finer constituted than that bold bucaneer, less 8o strongly built and not nearly so belligerent, the Spanish mackerel, although a snappy and vigorous biter, lacks the well-known powers of endurance and the persistent pluckiness of the blue-fish. He fights while he does fight with all his might, but his struggles are not protracted, and when he gives up, he does so entirely. His surrender is complete, and when landed, he displays faint evidence of the fiery vigor that only a few moments before, characterized him. Habitats and Habits. For a long time, indeed until 1880, the most earnest and extended investigation had failed to discover the spawning grounds of this fish, when it was announced on what is now undisputed authority, that the lower end of Chesapeake Bay was one of the principal localities. ifftU'iii^,,>i Spanish Mackerel. Several years ago, the writer was astonished while visiting Crisfield, at the lower extreme of the eastern shore of Maryland, to learn that Spanish Mackerel were taken in that vicinity in immense numbers ; vSeveral thousand having been caught at a single seine-haul, a short time previous. The abundance there and the whole way down to Cape Charles still continues, though the fish are small and exceedingly shy, rarely taking the bait, but when they do, showing vigorous fight. Although the companion of the blue-fish in its murderous maraudings, the Spanish mackerel is not a frequent prize for the 8i troller, which may be in some measure accounted for b^^ the facts that the squids used for bUie fishing are too large for its compar- atively small mouth, but more reasonably, because it is less inclined to feed in that way than its more greedy companions. Possibly some of these days a lure will be devised that will tempt and capture it more readily. Economic Value. At present, nearly all that are sent to market are taken in seines and pounds, but the number has never been sufficiently large to bring the price down to figures that enable any other than the affluent to have it grace their tables. It has been computed that at twice the price ordinarily paid for the best sea fishes, the Span- ish mackerel is the cheapest, leaving excellence in other respects out of the question. Having an exceedingly small head and a stomach of the most limited capacity, nearly the entire fish is eat- able, and those who have partaken of a fresh one nicely broiled, need not be told that in point of flavor and delicacy it may have a peer, but certainly not a superior. The Spanish mackerel makes its first appearance in June, about the time of the arrival of the blue-fish, but its stay is shorter, as it cannot abide colder water than 60°, and will not remain any time wdiere the temperature is as low as that. It leaves before the blue-fish, and like the shad and other migratory fishes, goes to unknown waters. By the middle of September they are usually non est inventus. The finest that reach our market come from Seabright and other localities on the North Jersey coast. They are taken there of good size, much larger than at the mouth of the Chesapeake. THE SHEEPSHEAD. A glance at the fine illustration will give the reader a fair idea of this peculiar fish, peculiar in shape, as well as in some of its 82 The SheePvShead. (Scirgiis ovis.) other leading physical characteristics. Its name is derived from the marked resemblance of the front teeth to those of the sheep, and a very appropriate name it is. In addition to the front teeth, which are used for wresting from their fastenings, barnacles and other crustaceans, the mouth of the Sheepshead is paved or covered on the upper and lower jaw, with a sort of tooth-mosaic, with which powerful, apparatus, moUusks and barnacles are readily crushed and their meaty contents appropriated. Handsome Fish. The sheepshead, as it usually seen on the fish stalls, is dull and dingy looking and far from inviting in appearance ; but such is not the case when first taken from the water. Its scales are large and brilliant, the crescent-shaped bands are a deep rich black at the back, gradually lightening to a gray tint near the bell}^ and its magnificent equipment of fins is displayed to the best advantage. Taken altogether, it is when alive, one of the most beautiful of sea fishes, as it is one of the most gamey and toothsome. «3 To capture a Slieepsliead is one of the longings of most fisher- men, many of them spending days in a vain effort to achieve such a triumph. But Sheepshead fishing is one of the fine art branches of anghng, though, until within a few years it was mostly done with the hand-line. But now, as in the case of nearl}^ every other kind of heavy sea-fishing, the rod-and-reel are most generall}- used, much to the enhancement of the anglers' enjoyment. Time of Arrival. Like all tropical fishes that find their way northward, the time of the Sheepshead' s arri^'al is generally presumed to be regulated by the temperature of the water, being rarely caught along the coast of New Jerse}^ before the first of June, where, some seasons, they come in great numbers, and in others in onh^ small detached parties. The writer has seen thousands of them off Brigantine Beach lying or resting upon the bottom, all attempts to induce them to bite proving unavailing, though half an hour thereafter, several fine ones were taken at the ' ' wreck ' ' not more than a fourth of a mile away. How Thky Bite. In southern w^aters, especialh' on the Gulf coast of Florida, they are readily tempted with fiddler crab, and on the Atlantic coast of that State, no more attractive bait than a small bit of the hard part of a clam is needed. They bite quickly and must be snubbed at the first indication of a bite, if fiddlers are used. Along the Jer- sey coast, where the fish are larger and in finer condition, the}^ are more wary about bait-taking, biting with a great deal of delibera- tion, as though the biter was not hungry. But slow and cautious movements must not be accepted as meaning anything less than the securing of the bait. He goes about it his own way, taking more time to it than is usually consistent with angling tempera- ment. The least disturbance of the bait is apt to stop the nibbling 84 or sucking, as the Sheepshead is not in the habit of feeding upon moving provender. Patience and quiet are the virtues needed, and their full exercise is peremptorily demanded, if success is desired. You ma}^ be rewarded with a bite at once or you ma}^ spend a whole day in the vain endeavour, therefore, prepare your- self in advance, for a wait. Capturing a Sheepshead. If the fellow you are after is of the more impetuous kind, all the better. Your enjoyment will be .so much the greater. Many a listless angler has caught a Sheepshead, by simply failing to have discovered that one was mouthing his bait. When full hold of the bait is taken, there will be no longer occasion for hesitation. Strike and prepare for a contest. If immediately^ upon being hooked, he shoots towards the surface — as he is ver}^ apt to do— take in all the line you can in the little time allowed you, for he is certain to make a dive towards the bottom, and the movement is so speedy as to require you to have rod-and-reel in position for the rush. Let him have line, but restrain his movements by keeping it taut. If he repeats hi.s sudden downward swift plunges, continue to humor him as advised, until, ultimately, you will find his dashes less frequent and violent, and you will begin to think you have about won the day. But be not over-confident. When he nears the surface, drawn thither by the line, he becomes desperate and makes his final and not unfrequently successful effort to get away. Be prepared for it. Have your landing net ready and take him in if you can. If he goes down again and fails to break your hook or your leader, you may then pretty certainly calculate upon victory. Where the hand-line is used and main strength is pitted against fish power, the contest is not so prolonged, nor is the pleasure nearly as great. Hooks, Tides, etc. The breaking of the hook is not so much due to the strength or struggles of the fish, as to the fact that it is apt to be caught at 85 disadvantage, between the powerful crushing teeth. If the fish is hooked in the Hp, escape is not nearly so probable, but, as 3'ou can't fasten the hook just where you want it, you must take 3'our chances with the "sheep," The best time of tide for taking Sheepshead is what ma}' be termed medium tides, that is, an hour before and after high and low water, when the current is compara- tively slack, for the Sheepshead is not fond of swift water. Bait. As to bait, a number of kinds are used. A favorite one along the Jersey coast is the razor clam, but it is not always procurable. Sand clams are also acceptable and good sized lively fiddlers gener- ally welcome. The Sheepshead has a soft side for a piece of shedder crab, but wdiatever kind is selected — save fiddler — a bait-string should be used in order to prevent smaller fish from readih^ nibbling away the tempting morsel. TiVCKLK. As to tackle, only that of the best qualit}^ should be used. A twelve thread cable-laid Cutt^diunk is strong enough, and though nearly every tackle dealer has hooks made speciall}- for Sheeps- head, and charges a good round price for them because they are hand-made, strong and sharp, the writer has found the largest sized Chestertown adequate for the purpose. It is a mistake to use ver}^ large hooks as so many do, though the practice is falling into disuse. But a strong hook is requisite, whatever the size. A light sea-rod or a stout bass rod will answer, and it should not exceed eight feet in length, and should be furnished with the kind of reel recommended for general sea-fishing. Habitats. Sheepshead, although sometimes taken in what, experienced fishermen term, out of the way places — have haunts, where they 86 usually keep, and where they must be sought ; in the vicinity ol wrecks, as the famous iron one off Brigantine Beach, or those a mile from Hereford Inlet, seaward ; along steep, soddy, meadow banks, where the water is deep and the tide does not run too strong. In Barnegat Bay, at several points, they are at times very plentiful and are caught in large numbers— near Tuckerton, Beach Haven, Barnegat Inlet, in the deep water off Forked River, and at the bridge that crosses the Ba^- near Toms River. The thorough- fares above Atlantic Cit\' and Long Port a few miles below, are excellent points, as are Great Egg Harbor and Corson's Inlets. The two latter places can be reached by rail to Sea Isle City, thence to Ocean City, where all kinds of sea-fishing may be had in season. At many places in the sounds between Cape May and Townsend's Inlet, fishermen have fine vSport, and those who desire to partake of it, can hardly go astra}^ b}' visiting any of the localities named. '.^f^r^^CT'' ^*&i^^^ THE SEA BASS. {Ccntrop?^isfus atrarius. — Linn. ) Here we have a fish known to nearly all who have ever cast a baited hook in salt water along the Jerse}' coast. It is, perhaps, more abundant — size not considered — than any other. It is not a game fish, but what it lacks in that respect is fully made up in its estimable qualities for the table. For chowder, boiling or frA-ing, it has few superiors, the flesh being pure white, laminating in com- pact flakes, just juicy enough to be agreeable, and of a flavor that is hardly surpassed by any other sea fish, when properly served. The Sea Bass is usually a bottom fish, and must be sought there or not at all. lyike nearly evers' other sea fish, this one has a score or more of names. Its habitats are almost everywhere along the coast, in the bays and sounds when young, and adults in immense numbers outside at many places. The Sea Bass is found in almost an}^ of the coast waters where rocks or ledges abound ; along the soddy banks pf the thoroughfares, but espe- cially on what are know^n as the * ' Banks, ' ' a number of which exist along the coast from Cape May to Long Branch. The Five Fathom Banks oif Cape May, those about six miles from the shore, opposite Anglesea, and several others farther north are noted for the number and size of the Bass taken on them. The water ranges from thirty to sixty feet in depth, and those who care more for quantity than for genuine sport, can indulge their inclinations to the full there. Large sloops and schooners visit nearly all of the "banks" daily, generally taking out full complements of pas- sengers, who pay a dollar for the passage, are provided with line and bait, and are entitled to all the fish they catch, the number being larger, generally, than they can carry with them. Those ' ' bank ' ' Basses range in weight from half a pound to five pounds or more. They are ravenous feeders, taking clam or fish bait with equal avidity, and giving full employment to the fishermen as long as they feel disposed to bait, cast and pull up their spoils. The rod for such fishing should be a stiff one, as a heavy sinker is required, and if two or three hooks are used, the chances of taking big fish on each one are good. As the tendency of the Sea Bass, when hooked, is down and downward, the reeling of them in is simply hard work. Hooks of medium size are best, and as the mouth of the Sea Bass is large and of the leathery order, when once hooked capture is almost certain. They bite most freeh^ during slack water. THE CROAKER. {Micropagiis undulatus. — Cu vier. ) Eight years ago, the Croaker was unknown to the hereabouts present generation. About that time it made its appearance in immense numbers along the entire coast of New Jersey, causing a great deal of excitement among sea-fishermen. Whence the}' came, where they belonged and whether the}- had come to stay were leading questions. A few veterans whose memories carried them back some forty or fifty years, remembered a like visit, and that was all. The second >-ear they returned in diminished numbers, their abundance decreasing until now only an occasional one is taken. It is an outside, bottom fish, consorts with the weak-fish, takes the same bait, is a ravenous biter, with leathery jaws and a moderate sized mouth. In southern waters they are always abundant, and are fairh^ esteemed for the table. Those taken here were not regarded with much favor, except for the fun of catching them. They ranged in weight from half a pound to two and a half pounds. The writer weighed a dozen taken by him, which drew the scales at thirty pounds. THE SPOT OR GOODY. This lively little fish is noted alike for its vivacious habits and its excellence for the pan. Although the angler in salt water is 89 vety apt to make its acquaintance in the course of a day's fishing, it is not alwa3's abundant north of the mouth of the Chesapeake. Sometimes spots appear in immense numbers. The writer saw so many caught at a single haul of the seine at the Breakwater a few years ago, that difficulty was experienced in lycwes in getting wagons to take them away. The Spot, so called from the dark mark near the gill-cover, is also known as the ' ' Lafayette, ' ' from the fact of its having appeared along the coast in great numbers in 1824, the year of The Spot or Goody. {Leiostomus xanthurus. ) General Lafayette's visit to America. The}' have no special habi- tats, being found in greater or less abundance all along the coast. The}^ are vexatious little scamps, as they give a sharp nibble and then dart swiftly away. If you find them plentiful, rig your light- est line and rod with three or four very small and very sharp hooks, and let your bait be ditto. Clam is readily taken, as are small bits of fish, with the skin adhering. Professor Baird said of it, "Of the smaller pan fish of our coast, in excellence of flavor, none is considered superior to that known as the Lafaj-ette, ' ' an opinion that will be fully endorsed by all who have tasted that fish, nicely fried and served hot. The approved method of frying them is to swim them in boiling sweet oil, or pure sweet lard. 90 ^A/ THE BLACK DRUM, (Young.) {/^o^f^oji /as Ch roni is. ) The name of this fish is derived from the fact, that it makes a noise not unHke that of a drum, or the twang of the heavier string of a bass fiddle or of a piano. The drumming is frequently heard by fishermen while sitting in their boats awaiting a bite, as well as when the fish is landed. When heard in the water, it is generally an indication of the breeding season, the louder notes supposed to be the call of the male fish to his mate, the fainter ones the response, though that is simply conjecture. Habitats and Habits. The Black Drum — so called, is perhaps the largest fish with which hook and line fishermen are called to contend along the sea- coast and on the shell beds on the Jersey side of Delaw^are Bay, for a considerable distance above Cape May. It is a very solid fish, sluggish in its habits, with a great depth of body compared w^th its length. It i.s not handsome, the prevaiUng color being a bronze, partaking largely of the brown. The body is covered with an exceedingly heavy coat of scales, which in the larger fish are verj- difficult to remove, a garden hoe being sometimes used for the purpose. The teeth are not of the cutting order, but blunt and strong, and evidently intended for grinding and crunching mcl- lusks of almost any kind. The Drum is charged with being ver}^ destructive to the 03^ster beds, though there is no absolute evi- dence on that point. It is fairl}- presumable that with such a formidable crushing apparatus and w4th the Drum's well-known fondness for shell-fish of nearly every kind, if hungr}^ as it generally is, it would not pass an oyster bed without testing its qualities. Surf Fishing for Drum. The usual method of fishing for Drum along the coast, in the surf, is with the hand-line, with a heavy sinker attached; the hooks being fastened above the lead. The fisherman having baited his hook with a good sized, whole clam, secured with a bait string, takes his position either on the beach or in the water, and makes as long a cast as possible. Notwithstanding the weight of the sinker, the constant action of the waves urges it towards the shore, the fisherman taking in the slack line, which he coils in a box or small bucket suspended from his neck. The Drum is frequently taken where the water is so shallow as scarcely to hide his body. Rod-and-RkeIv for Drum. Another method is with the rod-and-reel, which has almost entirel}^ superseded the hand-line, except with the old-timers. Strong tackle is of course required, as the Black Drum ranges in weight from ten to seventy or eighty pounds. In Delaware Bay, where the " shell beds " are a mile or more from the shore, Drum fishing is done from boats, which is much more pleasant than cast- 92 ing for them along the beach. The baiting is the same, the only difference between the two methods being, that when a good sized drum is hooked in the surf with a hand-line, the contest is one of physical strength, while in the rod-and-reel hooking, it is one of skill. They scarcely ever bite except while the tide is running up. The illustration represents a young fish, which differs from the adult in color as well as in shape, the color being lighter and the body banded or striped as shown. It is besides, more symme- trically formed and decidedly handsomer than the adult. The season for Black Drum fishing begins early in May along the sea coast ; a little later in Delaware Bay. It is a fish of little economic value when of large size, the flesh being dry and insipid. The younger fish are more toothsome, but the}- are rarely seen in ' ' near-by ' ' waters. ZIM^ THE RED DRUM -CHANNEL BASS. ( ScYDi a eel la fa.) This is essentially the game fish of southern salt waters, taking in respect to that quality, the precedence of all others. It is not a frequent visitor to the Jersey coast, but is sometimes found there, and when found and hooked, the person hooking it likely to make ^3 note of the fact. Although of the Drum family, giving utterance to the same drumming noise, as the Black Drum, it differs from that variety in shape, and somewhat in habits, It is lighter in color, is thick-bodied but more slender, and has one or more black spots, the number on the tail ranging from one to eight or ten, and without regular arrangement. Sometimes there is an entire absence of the spots. Just why it is called the Red Drum, can hardly be rightly attributed to its color. Goode says: "The chief objection is, that the fish is not always red; in the young, there is not a sug- gestion of this color, while in the adult it is more a tint, an evanes- cent metallic reflection of claret from the scales, which is often abvSent, at all events, soon disappearing after life is gone." The biting of the Red Drum does not generally correspond with its other vigorous habits, as it is prone to nibble at first as if testing the quality of the bait, then coquettes with it, sometimes carrying it a yard or more, when the inexperienced angler is apt to pull, but it is not safe to do so until he darts away with it at great speed. However, Red Drum are so scarce on the coast that no instruction need be given for their special capture, and none can be as to their particular habitats, except that they are more frequently taken in the surf than elsewhere, and occasionally on the shell beds in Delaware Ba3\ THE SCUPPAUG— PORGY. {Stenofonms chrysops.) This is an important fish commercially considered, known in many places along the coast as the " Scup, " remaining pretty much all the year round, though most abundant in June and July. Professor Baird says the bigger fish make their appearance first, the smaller ones following in graded sizes, the smallest coming last. The largest average from two to four pounds, and are said to be the breeders. They do not bite readily early in the season, but when done spawning, feed vigorously. 94 The Scup or Porg}^ feeds upon worms, small crustaceans, mol- lusks, etc., taking the bait freeh', the smaller ones becoming very / '^\4.A ^ ^\. ^ '■f'^^ The Scuppaug — Porgy. annoying at times, Ijecause of their excessive greediness. It is a bottom feeder, rarely found in shallow water, and alwaj'S avoids, if possible, that which is discolored. How TO Fish for Porgy. The Porgy is an adroit bait-robber, its sharp perch-like teeth, enabling it to purloin that which was intended to be partaken of only in connection with the hook. It is most abundant on the coast of New England, and in the vicinity of New York, steamers carr}' large numbers of fishermen to the Porg}^ banks. They are at times equally abundant at points along the Jersey coast, but have no particular place for rendezvousing, therefore, it would be 95 impossible to designate precisely where they are to be found. If, in the course of a da3''s ii.shing, the}^ are met with in considerable numbers and you desire to take them, rig 3'our tackle as if for perch, cover the point of the small hook well with clam or crab-bait, have a pair of snells, swivel sinker, and fish near or on the bottom. The flesh of the Porgy is much relished by some, but others pronounce it dry and tasteless, its juices being rapidh^ absorbed in the cooking ; still it is b}- no means a fish to be despised. STRIPED BASS SURF FISHING. Under the head of Striped Bass, it was promised that farther on. something would be said in regard to the taking of that fine fish in salt water. Although the female never deposits her eggs in the sea — but in fresh and brackish waters — the finest sport is found with this fish along the sea-coast and in the estuaries. It is onl}^ within a few j^ears that Striped Bass surf-fishing has become popu- lar along the Jerse}^ coast. For j^ears, casting for Striped Bass from the rocky shores of the coast North of New York has been popular, and it needs not the saying, exciting in the highest degree. As that is not within the " near-by " bailiwick, Ave pass it by, to give place to the surf-fishing along the coast south of Long Branch. Some Notable Near-by Pipages. The rivalry has been ver}^ strong there, each fisherman being anxious to outdo his opponents in efforts to capture the biggest. Some of the contestants have had marked success, especially in the vicinity of Ke}' East and Asbury Park. At the former place, a Striped Bass weighing forty-two pounds was taken with the rod- and-reel, and many others of smaller, but still very large size. Elsewhere along the coast, handsome surf-catches have been reported, and every j^ear the sport becomes more and more popular, and the rivalry stronger. 96 That it is in the highest degree exciting, is evidenced by the zeal and determination displayed by the fishermen, Avho spare neither expense nor time in preparing for the contest. Some fish all day withont a nibble, others land splendid fellows. Tackle for Striped-Bass Sea Fishing. The tackle must necessarily be strong and of the best. As long casts have to be made, a sinker from two to four ounces, and a stout stiff rod are essentials. The rod should not be so stiff as to render it unwieldy and awkward to handle. Shedder crab is the most taking bait, and as the casts are long and alwa}\s swift, the bait should be secured with a stout thread. An eighteen thread Cutty- hunk line and a number 6 or 7 Sproat, a number 5 or 6 O'Shaugh- nessy or a Limerick of the same number of hook are among the requisites. As the fishermen usually stand in the water while fishing, hip gum-boots should constitute part of the outfit, together wdth a gaff. In the EstuxVries. Less pretentious but equally satisfactory Striped Bass fishing is found in nearly all the estuaries — notably in the shallow creeks or thoroughfares in parts of Barnegat Bay, Great Egg Harbor Bay and in the vicinity of Townsend's and Hereford Inlets. The best time, when the tide suits, is early morning or near sundown in the even- ing. The fish do not run as large as those taken in the surf, but they are apt to be more plentiful and of sufficient size to insure fine sport. Being of wary habits, quiet is essential to success. The best season for salt water Striped Bass fishing is from the latter part of August until the last of October, though they bite fitfully durins: the entire summer. ^^jlay, 1231 Chestnut Street, Sei,ten.ber, PHILADELPHIA. Boating, Crabbing and other Summer Pleasures, GO TO Kev-BaSfe lBea©h On the New Jersey Coast, midway between New York and Philadelpliia, six miles south of Long Branch. First-class hotels, good drives. Excellent opportunities for prolitable investments. For particulars, address, Edward Batchelor, If you ^iT\oke, TRY Batchelor MlW Plor DeBatchelor, HIGH GRADE and BUMBLE BEE, NICKEL CIGARS, FACTORY No. 1, 1231 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. For Sale EVERYWHERE. "BUTTON" Porler I Putli5lier5, - I Book5eIkr5 DintK Mid CWstnul Streel5. AMERICAN FISH CULTURE.— Bt/ Thaddeus Nortis. Embracing- all the details of Artificial Breeding- and Rearing- of Trout; the Culture of Salmon, Shad, and other fishes. Illustrated 12mo. 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Twenty-eight pages; is issued week!}', and each issue contains vaUiable illustrated contributions and editorials on Fish, Fishing and Fish Culture; Notes and Queries as to the Habits, Habitat and Modes of capture of Game and other Fish ; Reports of Fishing (in season) from all parts of America, etc., etc. It is tiie Fisherman's Vaper— the only one in America. $3.uo a year. THE ANGLERS' GUIDE TO THE FISHING WATERS OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA. By William C. Harris, Editor " Ameri<'an Angler.' This book is invaluable to the angler and tourist. It tells how eight thousand fishing waters are reached, the species of lish therein, hotel accommodations and cost, charges of guides, boats, etc , baits used and best months' for fishing. Handsomely bound in cloth. Price fl.OO. THE TARPON OR " SILVER KING." I>y F. S. Pickney ("Ben Benf") History and methods of capture. This royal fish, the largest taken with rod and line, is fully described, also the outfit needed for his capture. Handsomely boiuid in cloth, gold andsilver. Price, post-paid, ^1.50. THE NEW AGRICULTURE; OR, THE WATERS LED CAP- TIVE. This work describes the methods discovered by Hon. A. N. Cole, through which the farmer and the market gardener can increase their crops fourfold. The system pro- vides eftectually against the effects of drouth and frost, and is indorsed by all the prom- inent farmers' clulis and other agricultural authorities. Fully illustrated and handsomely bound in cloth and gold. Price ^l'.oo, postage free. PORTRAITS OF GAME FISHES. On gray tinted Bristol board, 7x9 inches, at the following prices, post-paid : Single copies, 10 cents ; Fresh Water series {2;-i) at $2.00 ; Salt Water series 1,37) at $3.50, whole series (60) at S5.00. THE SPORTSMAN'S GUIDE TO THE HUNTING GROUNDS OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA. By William C. Harris, P^ditor " American Angler."' Many thousand of shoot iug and hunt- ing grounds accessible to the field sportsman are herein located, the greater number being tabulated from per.sonal letters to the e^ .-^^ ^^■' 0.0-0- "t::^' ;W^