Hi all,
I am not new to this blog. Did a lot of reading but not much writing so far. This post covers multiple topics.
Regulations etc.
I got my first fishing license in at the time Czechoslovakia as, I think, 12 year old. I had to go for a couple of weeks and take lessons. I had to pass knowledge test with questions about how to fish, different techniques, different fish species, habitat, how to handle fish after hooking to make sure it could be released. After passing the test I could fish only with older licensed fisher and there were still some other limitations. Maybe it was a little bit extreme, but I liked it. It was sort of like getting diver's license for 17 year old for me. It was big achievement for me and I was proud. Do I think there should be test similar to hunting license? YES.
Community, newbies
I work in IT and had once to decide between two different technologies. When I was going through discussion forums I noticed that one community was strongly RTFM oriented. For those not familiar RTFM is Read The F*** Manual. Second technology had very friendly community; very supportive towards new users. I picked second one and even though first technology was more mature at the time, it eventually disappeared. While second one strives.
Let's just show new anglers more support and guidance and I think the most of them will respond well. Sometimes you just didn't do search or were too confused with the rules. Maybe that person already read the regulations and needed confirmation of his/her understanding. Isn't that what forum is for as well?! If someone takes time to write read the regulations, the one could just provide the answer or just ignore the message; someone else, less bitter person will answer that question.
Snagging
I fished Vedder, Squamish and noticed a lot of foul hooks. I noticed that a lot of, what to me looked like seasoned anglers had a lot of foul hooks. My guess - 60-70%. Yes, heavy pink run. But ... is that snagging? Is foul hooking considered snagging? Those people were not doing it intentionally. Maybe smaller hook, maybe shorter leader, maybe different technique? In my case, I learned that my sinking tip was too heavy.
As I said, I am new poster but was reading forums for several years so go easy on me. No wrong intentions here. I like this forum mostly very useful and supportive.
Cheers,
T.
P.S.: As I said I grew up in Czechoslovakia ... and yes we kept carp in bath tub. Reason was very prosaic, everybody wanted carp. While there was tons of them where I lived, it was big disappointment for kids if parents didn't manage to get live carp for Christmas. That's why everybody bough carp as soon as possible ... hence the need to keep it alive for couple of days since kids loved it and it was like family pet. I remember a story where kids hauled big carp back to pond and released it.