KEVIN PERKINS | |
Never mind smelling the flowers, don’t forget to take time out to see the satirical side of fishing life and grab a laugh along the way as well. So here’s a regular column from Kevin Perkins to remind us that life is for laughing at, or taking the p*** out of, whenever we can. |
CONTEMPLATING THE IMPONDERABLES We anglers are lucky because our chosen sport allows us time to reflect on life, and contemplate the imponderables for hours on end. Such thoughts as: If you have been fishing, without catching a fish, have you just been ‘ing’? This must be the case because many of you return home to your loved ones, and when they ask how you got on, they receive the reply, “I’ve just had the worst ‘ing day ever.” On the same subject, isn’t ours one of the few sports where we pay for nothing? In almost every other leisure activity you turn up, pay your money and get to do the sport (golf, cricket, bowling, football, tennis etc, etc.). Imagine going to a golf course, paying your green fees and then walking round all eighteen holes (carrying your clubs) without playing a single stroke because all the greens and fairways were being used! I can’t see that catching on. We buy a day ticket, but it won’t guarantee you catch a fish. I say we should have two-tier day tickets, a reduced rate for actually fishing, and an additional charge if you catch a fish. Communal bivvies Then there are the list of things that you would now only need one of because you can share, such as: One Radio or TV tuned to one station. Etc, etc. Complete camouflage The list goes on and on – the more you and your colleagues save, the more you can spend on those items that you really must have, such as the extended Really Twee range. This now incorporates: Camouflaged rod rest tops, camouflaged weighing sling and net bag, camouflaged bed chair covers, camouflaged underwear, including socks. And now, revealed for the first time – Camouflaged Bait. Following along the evolutionary chain of camouflaged line, then sinkers, there now comes the ultimate Stealth Method – bait that fish can’t see. They won’t know they’ve picked it up until it’s too late. Comes in liquid form for you to ‘Glug and Go’ (Do not shake or stir). Tackle Trouble Reels – who designs them? Let’s start with line capacity. Freshwater reel – holds 300 yards of 10lb of line. Why? Unless they have started marlin fishing up at Rutland, the instances of you needing even half that amount of line are nominal, to say the least. The continuing reduction of line diameters makes the situation even worse. But the trouble is that you have to fill up that spare capacity with something to make the reel usable. How many hundreds of miles of nylon are sitting on reel spools, as backing that will never be used? How many of us take a new reel out of the box and fill the spool(s) to the brim with fresh line before we set off? All of us! Come on reel manufacturers, either give us spools with sensible capacity, or supply plastic arbours to reduce the spool diameter (used to happen with some makes, I seem to remember). ‘Balanced’ double handles – something we have seen on multipliers for years. If it is such a necessary or desirable feature then let’s have it as standard on all fixed spools. Must be as cheap (or cheaper!) to fit a double handle than some of those weird and wonderful ‘folding handle’ mechanisms we see. ‘Baitrunner’ facility. Very handy, but wasn’t it Dick Walker who warned of the perils of line twist when fishing with a slipping clutch? Isn’t a fixed spool reel in conflict with itself when offering two forms of line delivery? (Shades of the old ‘Malloch’ side casters). Stem Length – Is it not possible to work towards standardising the distance between the lip of the spool and the handle? On some reels you can hardly touch the spool lip when holding the rod, whilst on some others, the bale arm will flay skin from your knuckles when reeling in. No? Must be just me then!! Read ‘THE ALTERNATIVE ANGLER’ every Friday! |