Friday, September 11, 2009

Friday Funhouse

The Video of the Week
This is an AWESOME (if very long) Brown Trout video.



Things I Would Buy If I Could Only Afford Them
This is a beautiful Payne fly rod...oh yes, it also happened to be owned by Zane Grey. Let the bidding commence.


This Winchester 9611 Fluted Spinner proves that in tough economic times, Winchester tackle is like gold in the bank.


The title of this auction says it all: KOSMIC REEL!


This is an awfully nice H.L. Leonard fly rod with tube.


A box of trout flies from the Lucky Bug Shop in Butte, Montana is a happy find for any fly angler.


If the Pflueger Hawkeye isn't one of the greatest American fly reels of the 20th century...


This Shapleigh Reel Oil bottle has to be a tough one for the collector to find.


A Shakespeare Rhodes box from ca. 1906 will turn a nice lure into an incredible combo.


Holy Punkinseeds, Batman! This one's got the Punk Heads going crazy.


We love creels here on the blog, and boy does this one ever have eye appeal.


This Meek No. 4 is an amazing Kentucky reel.


A George Gayle No. 3 is also an incredible find. Good week for the Kentucky Reel collectors!


A slim body Heddon 150 in the box in my favorite color--Green Crackleback--is a wonderful find.


The Myers & Spellman is a very, very rare lure.


3 Pflueger Pal-O-Mines in Scramble? Yes, please.


Johnny Horton was a very popular singer, and made some nifty lures too.


The Johnson Pink Princess is always popular.


This is a really, really rare Heddon trade rod made for Sloan's Sporting Goods Co.


Reason #491 to buy every book on tackle available: Oregon Bamboo by Joseph Beelart.


This is a huge CCBC Pikie Minnow in Goldfish Scale.



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

-- Dr. Todd

Thursday, September 10, 2009

BREAKING NEWS: New World Record Brown Trout?

Dan Basore sends us a link to a story posted yesterday about retired Rockford contractor Tom Healy's 41-pound, 7.25 ounce German Brown trout, caught on a crankbait in the Manistee River in Michigan. Wow, that is a huge fish. If the fish is certified it will be a new world record, breaking the existing 1992 record by 1 pound 3.25 ounces. What an incredible fish!


Initial reports can be found by Clicking Here. The latest news from the The Ludington Daily News can be found here.

More on the story as it emerges!

-- Dr. Todd

Thursday Review: the Mitchell Match and Auto Bail Book (2009)

Thursday Review: the Mitchell Match and Auto Bail Book

From merry old England comes a new book on Mitchell reels--The Mitchell Match and Auto Bail Book by James Partridge. A detailed and entertaining look at the reel most famous for its distinctive automatic bail mechanism, it covers the Auto Bails from the introduction in 1955 as the Otomatic to the end of production in 1990. In between, a bewildering variety of reels were sold, and Partridge goes a long ways in helping us sort out the details.


The book begins with an overview of Otomatic patents before jumping into the introduction of the Otomatic in Europe in 1955. Vintage ads help to illustrate this section, and the color photography, coming from a variety of sources, is generally of a high quality throughout and quite helpful.

The book follows each model (330, 440, etc.) through a general linear progression. Inserted into this are a few trade reels, like the Albatross-MItchell Otomatic 330. My favorite of these reels--the Mitchell 440 in blue--is an example of what is good about this book. It aided me in distinguishing what version of this neat reel I own, and thus helped me to better understand when it came out and where it fits into this family of Mitchell reels.

There is coverage of some of the less popular models--such as the high speed 840 and 841 models and the Auto Lightning Casts as well as the Browning Mitchells and even a few oddities.

There is much to like about this book. It covers a lot of information, presents it in a generally clean manner with large full color photos, and fills a nice gap on our collectable reel bookshelf. It does not, however, cover every model of the Match and Autobail Mitchells, which may invite a revised edition somewhere down the line. Additionally, internal photographs as well as photos of the disassembled working mechanisms of various autobails would have been useful.

I love Mitchells and my very favorite spinning reels, in this order, are the Mitchell 308 and the Mitchell 300. So I definitely have an interest in Mitchell reels. So while this book may not be the final word on the subject, overall, it is a good effort and very much a welcome addition to any reel collector's library. Like all Mitchell books, when it sells out its limited run, expect used copies to triple or quadruple in value.

It is available directly from the author by Clicking Here.

-- Dr. Todd

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

The Return of the Wooden Creek Chub Striper Pikie?

The Return of the Wooden Creek Chub Striper Pikie?

I was perusing the Pradco Web Site when I stumbled upon this. Yes, the Creek Chub Striper Pikie is back, and in wood no less!

As the web site declares, "Anglers who are serious about catching heavyweight fish - whether muskies, stripers or other mammoth predator species - won't want to be without the new version of a classic Creek Chub lure. The 8 inch, 3 3/8 oz Wooden Pikie offer the classic Pikie's distinctive fish-imitating profile, but is super -sized, traditional wood construction and equipped with ultra heavy-duty hardware and through wire construction. It is designed to cast L-O-N-G distances but is equally effective as trolling plugs."


Interestingly, they also relaunched the CCBC Jointed Giant Pikie Minnow in wood as well.


Both lures are currently available in 8 colors and retail for $13.64 and $15.74 respectively.

Has anyone bought one of these yet? It looks like the pressed eye would make it easy to identify as a 21st century product, versus the tack and glass eye versions of the 1970s and before.

Does this herald the launching of a new line of classic baits in wood?

-- Dr. Todd

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

News of the Week: 08 September 2009



Fish perform jailbreak...Melvin Olshansky--owner of huge tackle wholesaler--passes away...Lobstermen go to war with each other in Maine...Pixee lures are becoming popular...Fly Girl Fashions finds inspiration from fishing tackle...Manzanar opens for historic fishing tours...the great water bobber experiment...clothes pin baits are 'reinvented'...the awsomeness that is the MEPPS Black Fury...tragedy strikes as an angler is lost in Britain...Koi Herpes Virus may cost Britain $3 BILLION dollars in lost revenue...Martha's Vineyard Striped Bass & Bluefish Derby pins, unmasked...a PGA golfer who would rather fish...the Tyee Club...a 90 year old fly shop frozen in time...it must be THE NEWS OF THE WEEK!

The Big Lead: Hey, if you're fishing near Sarasota and happen to catch a robot, these people will be VERY happy to hear from you.

Fish perform startling jail break at breeding farm.

Melvin Olshansky, the former owner of Maurice Sporting Goods in Chicago, has passed away.

Lobstermen in Maine have resorted to violence.

Alaska's Pixee Lures are busting out everywhere.


Fly Girl Fashions finds inspiration from fishing tackle.

The Manzanar Historic Site opens up for historic fishing tours.


One man engages in the Great Water Bobber experiment


From the "Everything Old Is New Again" Files: Field & Stream's Joe Cermele shows you how to make the Clothes Pin Bait.


Having a blast with the ultra light rigs.

The new owner of Ken's Bait & Tackle writes that Walleyes are everywhere in Minnesota's Otter Tail Lake.

The skinny on the Mepps Black Fury.

A tragedy strikes Britain as an angler is lost in the river

Why Big Fish, Thick Cover, and Long Rods may just be the answer to your fishing prayers.

Koi Herpes Virus may cost British fishing industry 1.87 BILLION pounds sterling. You read that correctly.


The truth behind the Martha's Vineyard Striped Bass & Bluefish Derby.


How one fly angler walked himself to health.

This PGA golfer would rather be fishing.


British Columbia's Tyee Club is still going strong.

Finishing with a Flourish: A 90-year old fly shop, frozen in time.



-- Dr. Todd

Monday, September 7, 2009

Labor and the Fishing Tackle Industry

Labor and the Fishing Tackle Industry
(Reprinted from the 02 September 2007 Blog)

Today, the majority of us will celebrate the working man in America by watching a ball game, attending a fireworks celebration, or stuffing ourselves with burgers and hot dogs. I thought I would take a minute to reflect on the meaning of Labor Day as it concerns the history of fishing in America.

Labor Day had humble beginnings, being organized by the Central Labor Union and celebrated for the first time on Tuesday, 05 September 1882 in New York City. By 1884, the first Monday in September was chosen as the official Labor Day, and was soon widely emulated. The New York Times ran a detailed article on 07 September 1886 entitled "Parades in Other Cities: How Labor Day Was Observed by All Classes of Workmen." That year in New York City itself, 14,000 working men paraded before Mayor Grace. In 1894, it became an official federal holiday.


Labor Day Parade in Buffalo, NY, ca. 1900

The fishing tackle industry was largely built on the backs of the American working man and woman. It was one of the early industries to hire women in large numbers (almost all factory dressed flies were tied by women, and women predominated in the manufacture of fish hooks) and over the years offered gainful employment to hundreds of thousands of employees, American workers who built communities, raised families, and fought and died for their nation.

Mostly, these fishing tackle industry employees' names are lost to history. For every Charley Heddon or William Shakespeare, Jr., there were 100s of workers whose names we will never know but who designed, built, and packaged the tackle we use and collect. Fortunately, a few of their names and deeds have been preserved. People like Nettie Cruse, forewoman of the dressed fly division of Enterprise Manufacturing Co. of Akron, Ohio, who died tragically in the great fire that consumed the Pflueger factory in 1891. Louis Valentine, who worked from 1906-1958 assembling Pflueger reels by hand, and who was thought to have completed 500,000 Pflueger Supremes in his lifetime. Don Martin, who left his position on the factory line at Shakespeare to join the Marines in 1941 and died in the Pacific fighting at Tarawa. I bought some Shakespeare spinner blanks from Don's baby sister who remembered that he had the kindest eyes.


Anonymous Shakespeare worker assembling reels at the Kalamazoo, MI factory

Organized Labor and the fishing tackle industry had at times a difficult relationship. Pflueger underwent a series of turbulent strikes in the 1930s, caught up in the labor turmoil in Akron spawned at the great rubber factories like Goodyear and Firestone. Shakespeare and Heddon suffered violent strikes in the post-World War II era, and even smaller companies like The Sunset Line & Twine Co. in California had labor problems that made national news. But these were exceptions; the majority of tackle companies, big and small, had placid relationships between management and labor. In fact, in my interviews with former employees of Pflueger I conducted in preparation for my next volume of Pflueger essays, everyone I talked to had nothing but good things to say about working in the tackle factory. From what I know of Shakespeare, Heddon, and other companies, there was a similar sense of community elsewhere too.

So this Labor Day, in between trips to the cooler or during the seventh inning stretch, pause for a moment and reflect how even in your chosen hobby--whether it is researching fishing history or collecting fishing tackle--the fingerprints of the American working man and woman are everywhere. They built your fishing tackle, and they built your nation.

Have a safe and happy Labor Day.

-- Dr. Todd

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Dealer Display Cards, Part 8

Dealer Display Cards, Part 8

This week Texan Colby Sorrels has sent in one of the neatest dealer display cards I've seen--the Kant Snag hook Point-of-Purchase display card. Neat piece!



-- Dr. Todd

A Thousand Words

A Thousand Words

This is absolutely a favorite vintage image, courtesy Doug Jobe (naturally). Perfect peresentation, with fish and tackle. Really, it's a model for these kind of photos!



-- Dr. Todd

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Deconstructing Old Ads with Bill Sonnett


Deconstructing Old Ads with Bill Sonnett

I was originally drawn to this March 1909 National Sportsman magazine by the cover. One does not often see a leaping bass on the front of a 100 year old magazine.


But alas , it still has a fly in its mouth, not a plug. My first surprise upon opening the magazine was that the opening article was about a canoe camping and fishing trip taken in the immediate local of my home. Seemed a bit strange, hearing about long portages and tent camping on the shore of lakes that are now wall-to-wall cottages and where the sound of "Jet Skis" seems to be ever present. There were no remarkable ads in the magazine but there was the following write up on the new and ever more popular sport of "Baitcasting". Read this short write up and I think you will agree that the writer understood fully that the fun of baitcasting is as much in the act of casting to a particular spot as catching that bass laying just where you thought he might be.


-- Bill Sonnett

Friday, September 4, 2009

Friday Funhouse

The Video of the Week
I guess I'm a sucker for a Big Fish Slapping A Man video.


Big Fish Slaps Man - Watch today’s top amazing videos here

Things I Would Buy If I Could Only Afford Them
This is a nice clean Montague Catalina freespool saltwater reel.


This 4/0 Ed vom Hofe trolling reel is a real beauty.


This is an awesomely rare Pflueger Supreme reel.


Wow! This Otto Zwarg in the box is a superb example of this master craftsman's skil.


Holy Heddons, Batman! This is an AWESOME 300 fat body in Bar Perch.


A small Buckeye Bug-N-Bass is breaking records.


This Hardy Bros. All-in-One Fly Wallet was clearly owned by a serious angler.


The Johnson Auto Striker is an odd looking but attractive lure.


This Wicker creel has a lot of eye appeal.


Any Orvis Bamboo fly rod is great, but it is even cooler when it comes with a tartan plaid rod case.


A nifty hinged shrimp (super strike?) has attracted a lot of bidding.


This Keeling-Woods Expert is a super sweet bait.


I love the unique look and feel of Perez reels.


This early Bingo is in a bizarre amalgam of colors. I love it!


This Allcock & Co. reel has attracted a broad range of interest from the fly reel guys.


How about a Mitchell 486 new in the box?


Our Cool Item of the Week is this 10 year anniversary Heddon gold ring.



The Angler Spring Hammer is a combination priest-knife made in West Germany. A sweet combo!


A dealer box of Creek Chub Tiny Tims is a great find.


This Staley-Johnson Twin Minn in the box is a super combo.


Spinning Reel guys are in love with this French patented Doperr model.


This Phillipson glass rod made for A&F is an incredible pack rod.


This is as sweet of a Valentine as you're likely to get. However, if I ran the company, I'd make the box in a heart shape. Hmmm. On second thought, maybe not.


How about a seriously rare Ed. vom Hofe Sand Eel in the box.



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

-- Dr. Todd

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Thursday Review: David Kinney's The Big One

Thursday Review: David Kinney's The Big One

Every now and then a fishing book is published that transcends the fishing genre. Such is the case with David Kinney's The Big One: An Island, an Obsession, and the Furious Pursuit of a Great Fish (Atlantic Monthly Press, 2009: $24.95). In it, he tells the incredible true story of the 2007 Martha's Vineyard Striped Bass & Bluefish Derby. It is also one of the most gripping books of its kind I've read in recent memory.


Kinney is at his best uncovering the fascinating lifestyle of Martha's Vineyard sport anglers, especially those whose obsession is the Striped Bass. For those who don't know, the Derby is a rite of passage for the locals, and for men like Lev Wlodyka--the protagonist in the story--the most important thing in life. Following the almost surreal exploits of this master angler, winner of five previous Derbys, we witness the good, the bad, and the incredible during this one tournament. Amazing catches, huge fish, controversy, in-fighting, and charges of fraud are around every corner. All of this makes the book read like a screenplay.

Of great interest is the detail with which Kinney explains the attitudes and lifestyles of the Martha's Vineyard natives. From the working class fishermen to the ultra wealthy, the island is a strange amalgalm of folk who seem to only agree on one thing: that the Derby is the most important event on the calendar.

Wlodyka is an appealing (and tragic) figure mainly because we all know someone like this. A person who fishes so much they think like a fish; for whom the fishing Gods alternately bless but give no peace. This is seen no more clearly than this Derby.

I won't spoil the plot, but I will go on record as saying that The Big One goes on the short list of the best fishing books I've read in the past two years. It is well worth picking up, and would certainly make a fantastic gift this holiday season.

-- Dr. Todd

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

10 More Fishing Tackle Histories on the Web

We had a tremendous response from our list of 10 fishing tackle company histories available on the web, so here's a list of ten more freebies!

Frabill became one of the more important tackle manufacturers in America, and are justly proud of their history.

Of course, almost no one in America who fishes can live without a MEPPS. Here's a bit of MEPPS history.


East Coast anglers need little introduction to the Acme Tackle Company.

Nick Creme helped popularize the plastic worm. Creme Lures are still popular even today.

The Rapala is the world's best selling fishing lure, and Rapala History is fascinating.

The Worth Co. was a major component maker for tackle firms for decades.


In the wake of the Rapala revolution came the Rebel Lures.

Lindy/Little Joe has a nice history behind it.

Ohio's own Erie Dearie is a walleye fishing legend.


Know any other links I might have missed?

-- Dr. Todd

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Voices from the Past: The Death of Julius Vom Hofe (1907)

Sometimes you read an obituary and a portrait of a person emerges that is very unlike your perception. Other times, an obituary reinforces your impressions of what a person was like. This obituary of Julius Vom Hofe, the great reelmaker, from the 04 May 1907 Forest & Stream magazine, basically describes the kind of guy I always envisioned JVH to be. To me, the best part of this profile is the fact that perhaps for the only time in his life, he escaped the shadow of his brother Edward.

Julius Vom Hofe

Because he was of a quiet, retiring disposition, few anglers knew the late Julius Vom Hofe--whose death was announced in these columns last week--but they were all familiar with the class of work he put into his fishing reels. Mr. Vom Hofe's fishing reel factory, on South Fifth Street, near the Brooklyn end of the new Williamsburg bridge, adjoined his residence in Keap street, and he was seldom found far away from home or shop. When the fishing was good he might be found at his little cottage in Bay Side place, Hammels, Rockaway Beach, or in his fishing boat near by. Generally he went out alone, and only those in whom he confided knew how great was his store of knowledge concerning practical fishing as well as reel making. Jamaica Bay was an open book to him, and his special favorite was the striped bass, whose haunts he knew intimately.

Mr. Vom Hofe's birthplace was Altena, Westphalen, Germany. He came to the United States in 1848, his twelfth year. He began the manufacture of reels in 1857, in New York city, and five years later removed to Brooklyn. His reels were exhibited at the World's Fairs in Chicago and St. Louis, at both of which the highest awards and gold medals were received by him. Four years ago his son, Edward, died, and since then his health began to fail, the end being due to apoplexy. He is survived by Mrs. Vom Hofe, two sons, Julius and Alfred, and three daughters. His sons will continue in the business in which they were trained by their father.


--Dr. Todd