Tuesday, November 13, 2012

News of the Week: November 13, 2012






Don't have time to read 50+ fishing and tackle collecting blogs and web sites? Well, let us do it for you! Follow all of the latest news, articles, and stories on our Whitefishpress Twitter account! Hint: You don't need to be a member...just bookmark the Twitter Feed Page or click on latest links to the right!

THE MONDAY 10: The Ten Fishing Stories of the Week You Need to Know

The Big Lead: A very rare fish is caught of Cabo San Lucas and then gets stolen.



AFTCO gives a half million dollars to support fishing.

Shimano breaks ground on third American expansion.



Flambeau fishing tackle invests in medical device business.

Lake of the Woods musky angler takes 51" monster.



Long rods then and now.

Tony Pawson, noted British sportsman and first British fly fishing world champion, has passed.



A new documentary, The Manzanar Fishing Club, about angling in a Japanese internment camp, has screened in Los Angeles. Hopefully it will get a national launch.



The Burke Pop Top is this week's Vintage Tackle Winner in Field & Stream's vintage tackle contest.



Finishing with a Flourish: Matt Labash is fly fishing through Armageddon.

-- Dr. Todd

Monday, November 12, 2012

Veteran's Day


No posts today. Instead, we reflect on the things that really matter -- freedom, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. None of these things are possible without a strong military and soldiers who put their lives on the line to protect us. We thank all of our serviceman past and present for protecting the things we all hold as Americans most dear.

-- Dr. Todd

Sunday, November 11, 2012

1000 Words


This 1908 photo of a fishing party comes from Winfield, Kansas and is dated 1908. It is cool for many reasons, but I really love the random cane pole held by the lady in the center.


-- Dr. Todd

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Deconstructing Old Ads with Bill Sonnett: Magazine Covers As Advertising - Part One (Field & Stream)



Magazine Covers As Advertising - Part One– Field & Stream
One hears a lot about advertising and the need to make a lasting impression on the prospective customer's mind. I know there are advertisements that were on television 50 years ago that are still recalled sharply by most who watched them: “Ajax the foaming cleanser” - “Plop Plop Fizz Fizz” - that peanut with the southern accent diving into a swimming pool of chocolate before becoming an M&M Peanut. They were in black and white of course, before color television. Try as I might I cannot recall a single Outdoor Life or Field & Stream magazine cover from the past few years. They all seem to look alike with the covers cluttered with print about the “new” and “secret” methods featured within. As Joe Wilcox once said, “these are some of the poorest kept 'secrets' ever known”.

In looking for ads for this column I have occasion to look through hundreds of vintage outdoor magazines and many have covers with the type of pleasing art work that is seldom seen on the front of today's outdoor magazines. After a while many of these illustrations start to look somewhat alike with common themes: the leaping bass or trout, ducks and geese coming in for a landing etc. Once in a while there appears a cover that is so unique that it is not easy to forget. I'd like to present a few of my most memorable in this category, in this the first part of a three part series. I'll start today with Field & Stream magazine. These are NOT my favorite covers, they are not even necessarily about fishing, but once seen they are for me, forever stamped in my memory.

We will start with the cover that for me is so striking that it has always been my number one choice in this category. I have no desire to hunt Cape Buffalo but once seen, this one from the January 1954 issue is hard to forget!



January 1954 cover.


The next cover is from the June 1903 issue of Field & Stream. I don't know if is the cover or that there are just a lot of copies of this issue around, but I have owned two and have seen other copies on different occasions. This cover tends to draw me in and the longer I look at it the more fishing related items I see.



June 1903 cover


The May 1954 cover is definitely not fishing related, and might have been better suited at the time for either TRUE or ARGOSY magazines, but I must admit it is a cover that one does not forget seeing. A leopard leaping on a angry Baboon is not the usual fare for Field & Stream readers.



May 1954 cover.


When I first saw the cover of this July 1955 issue of Field & Stream, I was somewhat stunned. Between the red background and the subject matter it is a hard one to forget. I was immediately reminded of the many ads for the “Cree Duck” lure that appeared in my youth. A friend in Ohio had a very large and fertile farm pond in the 1970s in which there were many very large Bass. His Muscovy Duck hatched a large brood under an overturned rowboat and headed out across the water with them in tow. The large Bass had a field day devouring all but three ducklings by the time they reached the far shore.



July 1955 cover.


Finally, the cover from the June 1933 issue of Field & Stream makes my most memorable list. This is based on my personal memories of camping for many years in northern Canada on a wilderness lake with a rock in front of the tent very similar to this. We would stand there and cast several times a day and more often than not, catch plenty of fish. I guess it is not just the physical location that makes this cover stand out , but the cast and the hope that it will result in a catch. Unlike the battles and catches seen on most fishing related covers, there is a lot more “hope” than “catch” in most fishing.



June 1933 cover.




30 years ago casting from that favored rock in front of my Canadian camp site on the Chapleau River.

-- Wild Bill

Friday, November 9, 2012

The Friday Funhouse


The Video of the Week

Hey lady, it's only a fish!



12 Things I Would Buy If Only I Could Afford Them

This is a cool Meisselbach Deep Sea reel.



These Shakespeare #1740 tournament reels are amazing.



This 1905 patent Charles Wheeler rod is super rare.



A 1914 Bristol steel fishing rod is a great find.



A Heddon 350 Musky Surfusser is a tremendous bait.



A very cool set of three Heddon River Runt Spook Go Deepers, including one in blue shore minnow.



Hardy made a number of cool lures, including this Wiggler.



A Lido Lures saltwater striper lure is super rare.



LOVE these Bon-Net musky baits in the box!



Who wouldn't want a Zebco 33 gold presentation reel?



This is a very cool painting by W.B. Gillette.



Cisco Kids in the master box are fun to find.



As always, have a great weekend -- and be good to each other, and yourself.

-- Dr. Todd

Thursday, November 8, 2012

The New Mitchell Museum!


The Mitchell Reel Museum: The Birth of a Dream

By

Dr. Todd E.A. Larson

There’s a rhetorical question that was often asked by members of a group of Catholic novitiates I used to lunch with every Friday during graduate school: “What happened to the man who got everything he ever wanted?” Between bites, each of us would launch in turn into a long, philosophical diatribe about what a particular individual’s desires actually tells us about them, and if those wants were completely met, what it would mean for them. It made for interesting meal-time conversation.

I think of this as I hear Wallace Carney, the legendary Mitchell reel collector, discuss at length the newly minted Mitchell Reel Museum, which he is happily (and busily) constructing in the mountains of Northern Arizona.

Wallace Carney has always been a kind of maverick collector and historian in that he’s done what he’s wanted, with little worries about what others think. It’s something I admire greatly about him, so when I heard rumors of a physical Mitchell Museum, I had to try and learn more about it. Fortunately, Wallace filled me in on the details, and I was able to track him down and get as many of the details out of him as I could.

The background to the museum makes for a fascinating story. “When we first opened the Mitchell Museum Web Site,” Wallace notes, “it was [co-founder] Mike Read and myself’s dream from the very beginning to do this. To open up a physical location we would call the Mitchell Reel Museum. So it was something we’ve been planning for seven years.” The problem was finding a physical location, and dealing with the significant expense. Both of these daunting hurdles kept the museum just a dream.

That is, until Victor Miller appeared on the scene. Miller started seriously collecting Mitchell reels a year ago, in an effort to replace a collection of Mitchells that had built up over time but had been stolen. “Victor went around trying to find some of his missing Mitchells, and found eBay,” Wallace notes. “He absolutely went nuts. He spent a great deal of time and effort collecting Mitchell reels in the past year. He now has upwards of a thousand reels.”

It was through eBay that he first met Wallace, and it appears that it was a match made in Mitchell heaven. Once he explained what he and Mike Read had dreamed of nearly a decade before, Victor — a man of action, as we’ll discover — simply said “why don’t we just do it?” And amazingly, just like that, the Mitchell Reel Museum went from a dream to a reality.



Inside of the Mitchell Museum.


Victor Miller first became involved in Mitchells back in the 1960s when he was fishing them regularly. He started collecting them not long afterward, and sadly, it was these Mitchell reels that were stolen and that spawned his renewed interest in collecting Mitchell reels. A former railroad man, he had a successful career with UPS, from which he has since retired. A lifelong collector, he is a dedicated body builder who has worked with everyone from Arnold Schwarzenegger to Lou Ferrigno. He has collected everything from guns to cars to guitars during his 67 years. And once he makes up his mind to do something, it simply gets done.

This is why, to Wallace’s shock, within just a few months, he found himself in the Chino Valley of Arizona in the American Southwest, where he’s lived for over four months building and preparing the Mitchell Museum on property owned by Victor Miller. Running the Mitchell Museum Web Site certainly gave Wallace a great background in what was necessary to run a museum, but the move to a physical location, as he’s discovered, has been a tremendous amount of work. He’s basically lived and breathed Mitchell 24 hours a day since he moved out to Arizona.

Setting a museum up physically is a difficult task. The first step was to incorporate, which they did as a 501C3 which will make the Mitchell Reel Museum a non-profit organization. The incorporators were Wallace Carney, Mike Read, and Victor Miller, as equal partners. The Museum, with the three founders’ collections as a base, will evolve to include many of the rarest and most coveted Mitchell reels, as well as the common ones, from the first version Mitchell to the presentation reels.

Wallace plans to put the physical museum itself up on the Mitchell Museum Web Site, and plans for virtual reality tours, updated information, etc. “It will be a beautiful display of reels,” he noted. “Our goal is to share, and you can’t share with just a physical location. You need a web site to allow someone from Thailand to access the information.”

The Museum itself is also evolving. While it will be open to the public eventually, for now the plan is to open it by appointment only, and to groups of four or five people at a time. The physical site is being remodeled (to the tune of more than $100,000), and the complete restructuring of the property will allow for a world-class display of Mitchell reels.

Eventually, they hope to move the Mitchell Museum an hour and a half up the road to Las Vegas in to one of the many casinos. It seems like a match made in heaven, and would certainly help expose Mitchell reels, and collecting tackle in general, to a whole new world.

The goal is also to eventually host a Mitchell Museum grand opening, in conjunction with an international Mitchell conference. “It would be a great location in America for such a conference,” Wallace notes. “Vegas has such a central location, and offers so many things to families, that it should be a great location for accessibility to people from around the world.” All of the attractions of Vegas, one of the most popular destinations for families in the world, makes it a perfect destination for Mitchell collectors.

Additionally, while no final decision has been made, it appears that the Mitchell Reel Museum may one day serve as the center of a Mitchell reel collecting organization which will be hopefully help connect Mitchell fans across the globe, facilitate the research and publication of new findings, and make for a central clearing house for all things Mitchell.

I asked Wallace to sum up what he hoped to accomplish with the Mitchell Reel Museum, and he responded with infectious enthusiasm:

“I want to happen what always happens when a person of a certain age comes across a Mitchell reel, and says ‘I remember that!’ The old memories start coming back. There are two points to the museum. The first is to show people what Mitchell did, and to spark their interest into rediscovering Mitchell reels as a collectible. This is tied to the second thing, which is to get them interested in fishing with those very Mitchell reels, and help them reconnect with their children, parents, wife, husband, etc. The main goal is thus to inform people of Mitchell reels and their history behind, and to get them out fishing with them.”

Wallace was nearing the final stages of his work when we talked in mid-October. He was awaiting the carpet and tile man, and of course, the many small things that need to be done to finalize a display. But the heavy lifting, fortunately, is mostly behind them. “By the end of October we should be ready to start moving in,” Wallace notes. “We hope to have a grand opening in early 2013, or sooner.”

I personally feel this is the most important thing to happen in Mitchell reel collecting since the launch of the on-line Mitchell Museum Web Site. I absolutely cannot wait to see the results of all this hard work, which I’m sure will serve as a beacon for the Mitchell reel collecting world, a lighthouse (if you will) to help novice collectors navigate the rocky shoals of the collecting world. “I find that a lot of people, if they have a Mitchell 300, think this is the only reel Mitchell made,” Wallace notes. “When they discover Mitchell made over 300 models between 1939 and 1989, they are blown away, and want to see them. This can be a home for them.”

There is additional good news for Mitchell collectors. The outstanding on-line Mitchell Reel Museum will also be getting a complete facelift. This is the premier source of information in the world for all things Mitchell, and its latest version will be an even greater boon for collectors. Note also the Mitchell Mates web forum has moved to the Mitchell Reel Museum web site, and is a great place to stop in to ask questions or just chat about Mitchell.

Wallace Carney is one of those focused individuals who takes on a task, and like a bulldog, latches on to it until the job is complete. It’s a completely admirable trait, and perfectly suited for the creation of a museum from whole cloth. He will likely relocate to Arizona to run things for the first year.

More details will certainly emerge over time. Until it is completed and ready for access to collectors, the exact address of the Mitchell Reel Museum will be withheld, but Wallace promises all this information will be forthcoming shortly. It’s just the loveliest news I’ve heard in the collecting world all year.

Wallace and I chatted the afternoon away about various Mitchell-related subjects, and as I heard the enthusiasm and joy in his voice, the whole time that same question kept popping in to my mind that led this article: What happened to the man who got everything that he wanted?

In the case of Wallace Carney, I surely hope the answer is simply, “he lived happily ever after.” After all, how many of us get an opportunity to live out our dreams? And for collectors, there are few sweeter dreams than those of the Mitchell reel.

-- Dr. Todd

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Snarls & Backlashes with Finn Featherfurd




We continue our series on overlooked American angling magazines with one of my all-time favorites, The American Angler. This lovely magazine shares a title name but no other relation with FOUR other magazines over the course of 120 years.

The first and most famous of these was Charles Harris' American Angler which ran from 1881 through 1900, before it merged with Field & Stream. It set the standard for the American angling magazine.

In 1916, a new monthly magazine was born in New York. Published by J.P. Muller, this monthly had an elevated standard of writing, and of all publications of the day, it was far more interested in fishing history and lore than any others (it ran a series on famed anglers from Walton to Henshall in its first year). It ran many historical pieces, including the greatest ever on lure history -- "Whence the Plug" by Sam Stinson, reprinted in Arlan Carter's seminal Nineteenth Century Fishing Lures.

The magazine was also interested in both tournament casting and saltwater angling, two areas largely ignored by most main-stream fishing and outdoor magazines. For this reason, I find issues of this magazine far more rich for research purposes than any other contemporary publication.

Alas, it was too good to be true. It underwent a format change in 1919 but could not be saved, and was out of business by 1922. It was a great shame. But it was not the last magazine to bear this illustrious name!

Tune in next week to learn about the REALLY rare American Angler magazine!

-- Finn

Finn Featherfurd is the pseudonym of a sad and lonely retired professor and newspaper columnist who has spent the better part of the past four decades (unsuccessfully) chasing fish in the Lower 48. A long-time collector of vintage fishing tackle of all kinds, he is currently fascinated by pre-1920 children's fishing reels (40 yards and smaller). When the spirit moves him, he will contribute occasional pieces and essays to the Fishing for History Blog. He can be reached at finnfeatherfurd@yahoo.com.

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Voices from the Past: The New Yorker (1951)




The following blurb came from the June 2, 1951 New Yorker magazine. Every issue they have a column of gossip called "Talk of the Town" and the following piece made me smile.

Secret Vice

A local family with a high regard for ancestral relics has been treasuring for seventy-five years of so a handsome gold-headed walking stick, originally the property of a respected forebear, a noted divine. According to family legend, this ancestor, forgoing lunch, always set out for a long walk every Sunday right after sermon, the stick tucked under his arm, his head bent in meditation. He would return in time for vespers, from the direction of the North River, beside whose placid waters, it was generally assumed, he had continued his self-communion. He left the cane to his only child, a daughter, and she left it to her only child, a daughter, and it was immobilized until last month, when the divine's great-grandson, upon receiving it from his mother as a sixteenth-birthday present, examined it carefully, unscrewed its head, and drew forth a small, sturdy fishing rod.


-- Dr. Todd

Monday, November 5, 2012

The News of the Week: Nov. 5, 2012

NEWS OF THE WEEK




Don't have time to read 50+ fishing and tackle collecting blogs and web sites? Well, let us do it for you! Follow all of the latest news, articles, and stories on our Whitefishpress Twitter account! Hint: You don't need to be a member...just bookmark the Twitter Feed Page or click on latest links to the right!

THE MONDAY 10: The Ten Fishing Stories of the Week You Need to Know

The Big Lead: One of our favorites around here, the Fly Fishing Rabbi Eric Eisenkramer, is interviewed on NPR.



San Rafael girl is better angler than you.

A review of the new show Fighting Tuna.



Fisherman Bob has a good start to his angling.



The Art of the Angler show is coming up on Nov. 11 in the Catskills.

A unique use for a tackle box by Heloise.

Fishing spoons and spinners for salmon .



This is an awfully nice canal catch.



Manager Davey Johnson is a fly angler.



Finishing with a Flourish: Wy this wild stretch of the St. Croix river may not be so wild anymore.

-- Dr. Todd

Sunday, November 4, 2012

1000 Words


There is nothing amazing about this photo, but that is why I really like it. It's a classic fish photo from the 1950s showing an angler, a wooden boat, and a pike. I like it.


-- Dr. Todd

Saturday, November 3, 2012

Deconstructing Old Ads with Bill Sonnett: The Helga Devil – The Untold Story Continues...




The Helga Devil – The Untold Story Continues...

The April 1946 issue of Field & Stream contains the advertisement seen below for The “Helga Devil”. I am quite familiar with this lure but really don't recall up to now ever seeing a nice advertisement for it in any of the major outdoor magazines.



By reading the ad thoroughly you will know about as much a I do about this odd bait. I must give them credit for not taking a back seat to anyone when it comes to overblown rhetoric. Again and again we see ads claiming a particular fishing lure to be the “greatest lure ever invented” or something similar. I don't ever recall seeing the claim “A lure the world has been waiting for....” and a lure “designed to do everything that is expected BY ALL SPORTSMEN.” It is also a little hard for me to visualize this four inch long bait as effective on “pan fish” as claimed. In an effort to come up with more information on the Helga Devil or its maker the Etchen Tackle Company of Detroit, Michigan, I Googled both names. In most cases this popular Internet search engine tells me that it has instantly come up with several million “results” for whatever I am searching for. “Helga Devil” and the Etchen Tackle Company came up with only 8 results which must be some kind of a record. All of those results, with the exception of “Helga's Deviled Eggs” had to do with Internet sales of this vintage bait. No information there. The box says distributed by the “Trading Corp. of America”. Google them and the name came up in Columbus, Ohio. Called their number and they assured me they had only been in business about 30 years and were not related to the 1946 outfit in Detroit. George Ritchie's book MADE IN MICHIGAN FISHING LURES surprisingly, had nothing to ad to the above.



In all its glory --- the “Helga Devil”


So what do have to say about this bait. As the ads states, “It's Different”. After World War ll thousands of small companies sprang up across the Unites States, attempting to get a foothold in the growing economy. Most were only short lived. That appears to be the case here. In the 1980's I regularly attended NFLCC lure shows in Detroit and the surrounding area. Someone must have hit the mother load of boxed Helga Devils as they were for sale in large numbers. I still occasionally see them today, but almost without fail, they are mint in the box--unfished. This last fact alone pretty much tells the tale as far as the commercial success of this very “different” fishing lure.



-- Wild Bill Sonnett

Friday, November 2, 2012

The Friday Funhouse


The Video of the Week

The most delightful exchange on fly fishing between two of my heros: David Letterman and Jimmy Kimmel.



12 Things I Would Buy If Only I Could Afford Them

This is the neatest fly tying chest you're likely to find from Wheatley.



This W&M Fre-Line spincast reel is super cool.



I covet this Winchester Simmons trade reel so bad!



Oh my. This Vom Hofe Tobique is superb.



This Zangi in the box is a great find.



A Fat Body 150 in the box is just incredible.



All time record for a Bronson Invader?



The CCBC Fintail Shiner is a pretty lure.



A CCBC Wiggler in the box is one of my favorite lures.



How about this cool "Dial-A-Depth" bobber?



I love Goldfish Shore on a River Runt spook.



Nothing beats a great wood Musky Jitterbug.



As always, have a great weekend -- and be good to each other, and yourself.

-- Dr. Todd

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Ben Wright's Spinning Reel Report (Oct. 2012)


OCTOBER 2012

A FEW SPOOKTACULAR PRICES PAID WITH SOME TRICKS AND SOME TREATS !!!!!!

SPOOKTACULAR PRICES:

Abu 506 SCF nib @ 281.22

Alcedo Micron Deluxe RE-PAINT @ 410.00

Alcedo Micron Settanta ewb @ 450.00

Art Fargo spin-caster exc @ 250.00 crazy !

Blasi blue flash ewb @ 326.00

Fin Nor No 3 like new w/pouch @550.00

" " " e+wb&pouch @650.00

" " '4 nib w/pouch @ 850.00

same as above @ 760.00

Garcia Mitchell 524 nib @ 162.50

Zebco 44 CF nib @ 107.00

TRICKS---A random list with NO BIDS. were the starting or buy-it-now prices to high ???

Airex Spinster no 5 like new @249.95

Bowell auto reel exc- @ 895.00

Bronson 4-way 200 exc @ 129.98

Daiwa 8100 exc @ 124.99

Dam Quick super 2S 275 two speed exc- @ 450.00

Langley spin-lite R810 nib @ 149.95

Martin mohawk 27 exc- @ 139.88

Mitchell 508 Dual nib @ 880.00

TREATS--- A random list of some REAL DEALS

Daiwa 7600 exc @ 5.50

" 7300 exc @ 9.99

Dam Quick:

110N exc @ 31.02

super 270-c exc @ 20.45

Finessa 280 exc+ @ 26.00

333n e+wb @ 20.75

Heddon:

200 scf exc- @ 15.99

282 minor wear @ 11.50

garcia mitchell 306 exc @ 14.99

" " 300a exc @ 9.95

Luxor Supreme no 2 FB exc+ @ 33.00

South Bend sea-matic 808 by shakespeare e+wb @ 47.77

Tom Cat 25 nib @ 9.99

zebco cardinal 7 first version exc @ 24.09

wordens jet caster w/belt exc @ 55.00

ABU:

rare Record 450 exc- @ 900.25

600 second version e-wb @ 150.00

700-L exc- @150.00

Airex:

spinster first version nib @ 64.00

impala CF like new @ 43.03

Dam Quick:

110 nib @76.00

microlite exc @ 72.00

330 nib @ 61.66

220nib @ 81.00

English:

Illingworth no 3 finish wear @ 198.39

Hardy altex no 1 mk11 ewb @ 222.50

French:

Ru mer 201 nib @ 71.00

Louison first version exc @ 247.06

Luxor Luxe A ewb @ 100.00

Italian:

Niagara super exc @ 102.50

Alcedo 2C/S medallion marked 2C/S nib @ 157.50

Holliday 30 first version exc- @ 172.12

Mitchell:

508 like new @ 340.00

510 exc @ 115.00

Shakespeare:

2081 nib @ 50.00

2090 ewb @ 76.00

Swiss:

Recordette 21 Black nib @ 113.50

Record 400 nib @ 76.00

Blasi blue flash ewb @ 91.99

Zebco:

Super Rare ZEE BEE 202 CF Black w/red handle and push button. one of 6 salesman samples nib @ only 175.00

Other Reels:

Odd ball Grampus hydro spin Japan nib @ 104.01

Harrison auto-max 100 nib @ 164.49

Jorgensen 6 japan nib @ 50.03

Flo-Line e-wb @ 149.00

Last were Supplements to the Australian reel book by the late Bob Dunn

1995 @ 82.93

1997 @52.21

1998 @ 54.47

1999 @ 52.21

and 2000/01 @ 93.17

winter is on the way

Ben