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Annalisa Barbieri
Wednesday March 1, 2006 The Guardian Fishing is one of those activities that, until you do it, you can't possibly see the point of it. Such a lot of standing around, such a solitary sport; surely it's for loners, losers and misfits? And anyway, isn't it easier just to go to the fish counter in the supermarket? When I started fishing nearly 10 years ago, I thought all those things, too. I never realised that fishing would lead me to become acutely aware of my environment, an amateur entomologist, obsessed with the provenance of my food and a bit of a nutritional nutter. Some payback for learning to cast and flick a line across the water. Yesterday the Environment Agency launched a new initiative with a very unsnappy name: "A better environment, healthier fisheries; better fisheries for our nations." The idea is to promote fishing within local communities as a way of ... well, doing all sorts of stuff. In a recent similar project that trialled in Wales, 1,000 jobs were created in tackle shops, bars and hotels, over 400km of river habitat was improved, and £27m was brought to the area by angling tourists and their families. These are good results, but the most surprising side effect of fishing was seen last year in a local scheme called Get Hooked on Fishing. It ran in Birmingham and 250 youngsters were introduced to fishing; some of those who took part used to play truant, were antisocial and had committed crimes, but after learning to fish only 2% went on to reoffend. For "kids" who have been repeatedly told they're good for nothing, or had trouble learning conventional subjects at school, fishing can instil a real sense of self. Fishing also has a remarkable way of teaching you accountability in a way that, even all these years later, I can't fully explain. But it's very hard not to care about water pollution when you spend so much time at the water's edge. The Environment Agency is of course keen to push fishing because it earns money on every rod licence sold (if you're over the age of 12, you cannot fish in England and Wales without one). Its strategy stretches over the next five years, and as we all become more environmentally aware and talk of hybrid cars and switching to eco-electricity, it would be amazing to see what would happen if more people fished and understood that fish are the sentinels of our society. Where they go, life flourishes; where they aren't, life's in trouble. http://www.guardian.co.uk/fish/story/0,,1720448,00.html -- Rodney Long, Inventor of the Mojo SpecTastic "WIGGLE" rig, SpecTastic Thread, Boomerang Fishing Pro. ,Stand Out Hooks ,Stand Out Lures, Mojo's Rock Hopper & Rig Saver weights, and the EZKnot http://www.ezknot.com |
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