Here’s a story for you on fishing etiquette..........
Last year I was fishing the Vedder for steelhead with another buddy. We parked in a popular spot, walked in, and saw lots of people. I try to avoid fishing with others so I walked downstream and around the corner. I found two other guys fishing this sweet hole. I stood back, surveyed the water, watched these two older guys for a bit and it was obvious they knew what they were doing. There was about 50 meters of fishable water above them. I walked up to the guys and said hello. One guy turned around and grunted, the other fellow did nothing
. I stepped a little closer, and asked how the fishing was. One guy was receptive to a conversation so we ended up chatting for a few minutes. Then I asked, you mind if I fish above you guys? He said “ya sure, go for it”. There was a pause, and then he said “thanks”. I said thanks for what? He said for asking if you could fish above us
. Then we got into a discussion about fishing ethics and the lack that is on the rivers these days
. These guys were in there late 40’s, early 50’s so they’ve been around when fishing etiquette was alive and kicking. I’m mid thirties and have been around long enough that I’ve witnessed some etiquette and have always practiced it myself.
So I fish upstream for 20 minutes, and get nothing. I look downstream at the guy that I was talking with, and he gives me the head nod to fish in his spot
. I gather my belongings, and head down to him. We have a chat and he tells me that there is a steelie on the far side and he wants me to give it a go. He lights a smoke, stands back, and lets me swing my pin. I fish it for about 5 minutes in the spot he tells me, float down, fish on
! I bring a nice 7 lb doe steelie to shore. He shakes my hand and takes a picture of me and my fish and tells me he gets more joy out of someone else catching a fish than he does
.
This goes to show you that fishing etiquette does go a long way and can still be seen every now and then...........even on the Vedder
Here’s another story from the same day, just a few hours after.
Same fishing hole, just me and my buddy now. Two young guys (late teenagers/ mid twenties) come around the corner fishing their centerpins. They don’t come up and chat at all, they just start fishing right away from the top down to my buddy. I was fishing a little further downstream at this point. These guys fish the hole right up to my buddy, probably within 10 feet, let their float drift about 20 feet past him
, then move around him, probably 10 feet below him again and keep fishing
. You can see where this is going. My buddy is fairly confrontational , and he gets into it with those two guys. Anxiety levels ramp up within seconds, I walk up and ask what’s going on. The young guys said your buddy just started screamin at us for no reason. I explain the scenario that happened earlier on in the day to these young lads, they say nothing, and move on
.
Same fishing hole, two different approaches, two different results. It all depends on your approach
Just thought I’d share this with everyone since there seems to be an etiquette theme going on lately.