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Old 06-06-2003, 11:33 AM   #4
RRsafety
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Join Date: May 2003
Location: Sterling, MA
Posts: 20
catching stripers

Before the Internet I certainly could never have gotten started fishing, but if I were a Brooklyn Eagle reader in October of 1888, I would have read the following on page 6:


"Where are you bound fishing at this time in the afternoon?" I asked a South Gerry pilot the other day when I met him coming down Atlantic avenue with his rod.

"I am going down to the ferry dock, of course."

"Well, I hope you'll have luck and that you'll find the crop of hoop skirts and old boot plentiful this season, " I said some what sarcastically.

"Now look here, young man," he replied, "I'm not fishing for hoop skirts and boots. I'm fishing for striped bass and I'm going to get some, too. There are plenty of striped bass around the docks and some of them are big enough to suit any man. I've cought fourteen pound bass of that dock. What do I use for bait? Why, I use these blood worms. They are the latest fashion in bass bait. Some time ago the striped bass would not touch anything except shrimps. Then they go tired of shrimps as a steady diet and wanted shedder crabs and then they changed off on sandworms; now they only hunker after bloodworms. There are bloddworms you see here. They are all alive, you see, about four inches long and light borwon in color. They are transparent and there is a steak of blood running through them from end to end. I think they sparkle in the water. We find them buried in the mud of the river banks at low tide. That's the only way I know to catch the. They feed on seaweek, and if you put them in a bosx abong damp seaweed they will keep alive for days."
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