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My boys are asking about fishing, and though I want them to be elitist
bamboo flinging, dry fly snobs. I know this is not very realistic at three. I have some old heddon glass rods I could rig up, and maybe just use a hook and corn and go after bluegill, or would it be better to just get them some lil' zebcos and give in to the spinning rod. If anyone has gone through this, any advice on being successful without making the children hate fishing please share. Tim Apple |
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On Fri, 23 Jan 2009 08:13:29 -0600, "Tim Apple"
wrote: If anyone has gone through this, any advice on being successful without making the children hate fishing please share. Hi, Tim. Welcome back. I've been through this with four grandsons and one granddaughter. Go the Zepco route. The rod is easy for a youngster to handle and not as imposing as a long fly rod with line hanging down. Most importantly, make sure they catch fish right away. Dave |
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On Fri, 23 Jan 2009 08:13:29 -0600, "Tim Apple"
wrote: My boys are asking about fishing, and though I want them to be elitist bamboo flinging, dry fly snobs. I know this is not very realistic at three. I have some old heddon glass rods I could rig up, and maybe just use a hook and corn and go after bluegill, or would it be better to just get them some lil' zebcos and give in to the spinning rod. If anyone has gone through this, any advice on being successful without making the children hate fishing please share. Tim Apple FALSE ADVERTISER! FALSE ADVERTISER! ....I mean, seeing the subject, I was led to believe this was going to be a thread about ROFFians or the Bush or Obama administrations, but nope, it's about fishing... That said, first and foremost, I disagree with Louie about making sure they catch fish. I don't believe in building false expectations. IAC, as to the type of gear, that depends on the person, be they 3 or 30. I think if they show an interest, let them be the guide. OTOH, if it's only you that show an interest in them fishing, I'd hold off on anything. If they do show an interest and are able to use it, I see nothing wrong with a fly rod and a whiff. Frankly, I'm not sure 3 years of age, generally speaking, is old enough to be actually casting anything with a hook, but 5 or 6 is, again generally, about old enough. I was using fly, spinning, and baitcasting rods, albeit with, um, backlash issues on the latter two, to fish by about 5 (prior to that, I was only instructed and used nothing but a whiff). By 6 or 7, I was able to use all three fairly well. I suppose using a "cane pole" setup where an adult tosses the rig and the child holds the pole is safe enough for 3 year olds, if you simply want to let them fish. TC, R |
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"Dave LaCourse" wrote in message
... I've been through this with four grandsons and one granddaughter. Go the Zebco route. The rod is easy for a youngster to handle and not as imposing as a long fly rod with line hanging down. Most importantly, make sure they catch fish right away. The other school of thought is that reels (i.e. extra line) are unnecessary for 4-year-olds. The best equipment may be a long rod (cane pole or fly rod) with 8 to 12 feet of line. This lets the child get used to placing a fly or a worm, then watching for a take and bringing in the fish, without worrying about a reel. -- Don Phillipson Carlsbad Springs (Ottawa, Canada) |
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On Jan 23, 9:13*am, "Tim Apple" wrote:
My boys are asking about fishing, and though I want them to be elitist bamboo flinging, dry fly snobs. I know this is not very realistic at three. Like rdean, I thought this was going to be about ROFF discourse; but I'll offer my non-scientific opinions anyway. Three is kinda young to even have a clue what this is all about IMO. I think it's more important to have them enjoy being near the water, let 'em throw stuff & make splashes, & sneak in a little knowledge about what lives there. If you get around to fishing, it's bobber & worm stuff. Make sure they learn to swim, and teach safety. Don't put sharp objects in their hands or in their control at that age (and that especially includes casting.) A shoreline, boat, or pier where they can sit and drop something right in front of them is best. For younger folks, it's more fun to be able to see the little fishies nibbling on a piece of bread at the surface than watching for the bobber to move some distance away. There are, of course, several deep and ethical issues regarding the death of other creatures at our hands. They're not going to understand, and if they ask, that's probably not what they mean. Keep it simple. IMO, teaching respect for the environment and those other lives is important, but that'll be more by example than pedantry. So, fly rod or Zebco? I'd say neither, until casting becomes a necessity. Right now, a cane pole or a stick & a string will serve your purpose. Joe F. |
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![]() "Tim Apple" wrote in message ... My boys are asking about fishing, and though I want them to be elitist bamboo flinging, dry fly snobs. I know this is not very realistic at three. I have some old heddon glass rods I could rig up, and maybe just use a hook and corn and go after bluegill, or would it be better to just get them some lil' zebcos and give in to the spinning rod. If anyone has gone through this, any advice on being successful without making the children hate fishing please share. Tim Apple I would go this route: http://www.cabelas.com/ssubcat-1/cat602812.shtml Let them pick the rod that suits there liking and help with choosing the lures and bait. Make it fun and when you see that they are not enjoying themselves quit and fish another day. A buddy of mine has been working on his young son and I see the kid is starting to show signs he doesn't like it much. It's because the kid is getting tired of sitting in the boat for half/full day regardless of whether he is catching fish or not. I cherish every chance streamside with my son, he will soon be off to college and I probably won't have the same opportunities until he has completed his schooling. I hope my 2 yr. old daughter takes a liking to it. She enjoys the boats rides and hikes on the stream/river, but she's very young yet... Good luck, JT |
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![]() "Don Phillipson" wrote in message ... "Dave LaCourse" wrote in message ... I've been through this with four grandsons and one granddaughter. Go the Zebco route. The rod is easy for a youngster to handle and not as imposing as a long fly rod with line hanging down. Most importantly, make sure they catch fish right away. The other school of thought is that reels (i.e. extra line) are unnecessary for 4-year-olds. The best equipment may be a long rod (cane pole or fly rod) with 8 to 12 feet of line. This lets the child get used to placing a fly or a worm, then watching for a take and bringing in the fish, without worrying about a reel. -- Don Phillipson Carlsbad Springs (Ottawa, Canada) A cheap fly rod with the line tied to the end eye and a small worm or fly and bluegills is the way to go. Make it a cheap rod, so you will not get upset when something happens to the rod. My wife's good friend's first husband was all upset when the split heirloom split bamboo rod got busted by the son when on the first fishing expedition. Max was an idiot. In more ways than one, but taking a valuable rod fishing with a 5 year old is idiocy. |
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![]() Tim Apple wrote: My boys are asking about fishing, and though I want them to be elitist bamboo flinging, dry fly snobs. I know this is not very realistic at three. I have some old heddon glass rods I could rig up, and maybe just use a hook and corn and go after bluegill, or would it be better to just get them some lil' zebcos and give in to the spinning rod. If anyone has gone through this, any advice on being successful without making the children hate fishing please share. Tim Apple I've taken my daughter fishing when she was 3. As others have said, she wasn't coordinated enough to cast any type of rod. I would hook a bluegill, and let her _try_ and reel the fish in. She usually could not do that herself, but wanted to. I found the little Zebco setups to be much easier for her to handle. Fly rods....even 7' rods, were just too long for her to control. She's 6 now, and still enjoys going to the pond to fish. She can somewhat cast a bobber setup on her Snoopy pole, and has no problems landing fish. We mostly fish a small wooly bugger under a bobber......sometimes we adorn the fly with cheese. She can work the fly well enough to get the fish to eat it. I have had her try and cast my fly rods, but she's much more effective with her Snoopy setup....which directly relates to more fun for her. Our fishing sessions are usually short. No more than a hour at a time, and almost always in conjunction with doing other fun stuff. brians, proud papa |
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On Jan 23, 7:49*am, wrote:
That said, first and foremost, I disagree with Louie about making sure they catch fish. *I don't believe in building false expectations. Three years old ain't exactly the time to build the character trait of patience ;-) Catching fish is good. Even at the "best" fish catching place, you'll eventually have a day when the fish aren't to be found, and then you can start telling them that that's how fishing goes. But at the start, I'd maximize the likelihood that the kids are going to catch fish. They don't care what they are, bullhead, suckers, chubs, sunfish, whatever. I spent many hours at a golf course pond that only had goldfish and bullheads in it. A 12" bullhead or gold carp was a trophy! But, we almost always caught something. Jon. |
#10
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Tim Apple wrote:
My boys are asking about fishing, and though I want them to be elitist bamboo flinging, dry fly snobs. I know this is not very realistic at three. I have some old heddon glass rods I could rig up, and maybe just use a hook and corn and go after bluegill, or would it be better to just get them some lil' zebcos and give in to the spinning rod. If anyone has gone through this, any advice on being successful without making the children hate fishing please share. Tim Apple Always hard to say, as too much depends on the individuals concerned, but three years old is too young for anything much. I would wait at least three years before doing anything much at all, and then be extremly careful about forcing it. I refuse to give angling instruction of any sort to less than ten year olds, and will only do it under very specific circumstances anyway. This is old, but it may give you some insight; The Legacy Once upon a time, in a magical land long ago and far away, now almost lost in the wavering shimmering mists of time, a small boy sat on a summer afternoon at the side of a small stream below a weir, with his father, watching entranced, as glinting silver fish were landed with a magical wand, and sundry other esoteric and fascinating implements, and were carefully transported to several large jam-jars for his closer inspection, wonderment and delectation. The Sunday afternoon seemed like an eternity, and more or less fulfilled the boys vision of paradise. What could possibly be better than this? He had been to this spot several times already with his father, and each trip had been a revelation and a source of endless interest excitement and delight. His father telling him which birds were which, and how one could tell by their song and the way they flew, how to tell which trees where which by looking at the leaves, and all sorts of interesting and fascinating things. At last the afternoon drew slowly to a close, and the boy lifted one of the heavy jars preparatory to removing these fascinating and colourful creatures to his place of dwelling for further study and enjoyment. "Well", said his father, "You can take them if you like, but they will only die, there is not enough space in the jar for them, and they need more oxygen than the water in the jar can supply them with." The boy was very disappointed at this information, but knowing that his father was always right in these matters he carefully took the jar to a shallow place a little further down the bankside and released the fish slowly from the jar watching entranced as they flashed away into the faster current above. His father released the contents of the other jars and the two slowly packed up their equipment placing it all carefully in the ingenious special boxes and containers designed specifically for the purpose, and stowed them in the large seat box. Some of the drawers in the large seat box had not yet been opened in the boys presence, and he was all agog to know the secrets of their contents. "Next time we will try for some perch "said his father, "are they as big as those we caught today " asked the boy, "Oh they are often much bigger" was the hardly credible reply. "But some of the fish today were four inches or more" the boy exclaimed, not wishing to be disrespectful to his father, but hardly able to believe that even larger and more interesting denizens could be charmed from the tantalizingly close but nevertheless unreachable depths of the stream, "I have caught a couple of three inchers with my net, but those were the biggest". "You will see" said his father. "When will we go again then father ? how many will we catch? How much bigger are they, what colour are they, are they silver as well?", the boys imagination was so fired by the prospect of even greater pleasures that his stream of questions became almost unintelligible with pent up excitement and joy. "Next Sunday, we will try to catch a couple, and then you will see for yourself" his father told him smiling, "in the meantime I will give you a book to read which describes all the fish and animals in the stream, how they live, what they look like and how to catch them". "Next week on your birthday I have another surprise for you as well". The week crept slowly by seeming like a lifetime of torture to the small boy, the book full of unimaginable incredible and hardly understood secrets was devoured several times over, and not being new in the first place became rather tattered by the end of the week, his father worked away, and so he was unable to ask any of the thousand questions burning in his mind. His mother simply replied "ask your father, when he comes home", and this was no help at all. Then at last on the Saturday his birthday finally arrived. He had gone to bed unable to sleep for excitement and anticipation of the coming day, determined not to fall asleep in case of missing something. The chapter on Perch had been read and re-read a dozen times and then he had somehow unaccountably fallen asleep. He awoke to find his parents at the foot of the bed and across the bed was a long thin package wrapped in red cloth. He was immediately wide awake and looked for quite a while almost in awe at the package knowing full well that it must contain the object of all his dreams, a wand as magical as his fathers. He slowly unwrapped the package revealing the most beautiful thing he had ever seen in his whole life, a lovely yellow rod of cane with brown blotches and red and black whippings, silver rings, and a special fitting to attach a reel. He was speechless with happiness, and was hardly able to tear himself away from the rod to even get dressed. The next couple of hours passed in a sort of haze, as even more objects of wonder and delight unfolded to him, a reel with cotton line from his mother, a set of floats from his elder brother, several small packets with split shot, and float rubbers and a host of other things, and then to crown it all a seat box with drawers and boxes just like his fathers. He could hardly believe it, his parents were quite poor, and he knew such things must cost a veritable fortune, how was it possible that they had obtained such treasures? He thanked them as best he could, and spent the rest of the day sorting his treasure into the drawers and boxes of the seatbox, rearranging and replacing every single item, carressing and savouring each one before placing it so that it was just so in its rightful place. He knew the contents of his box off by heart, the exact position and description of every single piece of tackle, and even what most of it was for. For some unknown reason the boys father did not take him fishing on the Sunday, and although disappointed the boy was not too upset as he had his treasures now, and there would be other Sundays. He knew his father sometimes had to do things which grown-ups do on Sundays, and was content to wait, although a week seemed like forever to him then. It would be nice if the story had a happy end, but for reasons which have nothing at all to do with the story, and which at the time were quite incomprehensible to the boy anyway, he never saw his father again, until almost twenty years later as he lay on his deathbed and the boy, now a grown man, was called to his side. He was instantly recognisable, although old and worn and very ill. It was difficult to say anything at all, and the boy stood in silence for several minutes before the man in the bed asked him "Do you still enjoy your fishing?" The ban was broken, and it seemed as if the sunlight and joy and birdsong of that far off summer afternoon had entered the dark and gloomy room. The old man´s eyes lit up, and the two spent a long time talking of fishing and other things, until the nurse came to shoo the visitor away. The boy now a man visited his father every day for a week, and plans were made for a fishing trip as soon as he was well enough. This trip too unfortunately never materialised, the old man died on the following Fríday night, passing away peacefully in his sleep. Some of the boys relatives came to the funeral, and afterwards at the funeral lunch bemoaned the fact that the old man had left the boy nothing. The boy kept his silence, and many thought it odd that he just smiled. "If they only knew" he thought, fingering the old and tattered book in his suit pocket, seeing again the sunlight dappling the water, and the bright minnows flashing in the current. Tight Lines! ~ Mike Connor |
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