$$$WE BUY VINTAGE FISHING TACKLE$$$
RODS: CANE WOOD TRULINES
REELS: FLY & BIG GAME PRE 1945
LURES: WOOD BONE IVORY BAKELITE

Monday, November 29, 2010

Chumash and broadbill


The Swordfish in Chumash Prehistory
John R. Johnson, Ph.D.
Curator of Anthropology, Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History

The fascination that the swordfish held for the Chumash is well documented in myth, art, oral history, and material culture. The Swordfish Dance was an important part of Chumash ceremonies, and at least three rock art sites contain explicit depictions of this species. Swordfish remains are found frequently in archaeological sites along the Santa Barbara Channel, and certain nonedible parts of the fish's anatomy were modified for both ceremonial and utilitarian purposes. New studies based on museum collections help us reconstruct the prehistory of the Chumash swordfish fishery and correlate its development with technological and environmental changes.

According to Chumash tradition, all the creatures of the sea had counterparts on the land. For example, the Chumash considered the sardine to be like the lizard; and the lobster, like the Jerusalem cricket ("potato bug"). People venerated the swordfish as "people of the sea" - marine equivalents of human beings. They believed swordfish drove whales ashore to provide plentiful food for the people on land. Marine biological literature documents that a factual basis lies behind this Chumash legend, because there are reports around the world of swords embedded in stranded whales.

Frequently both swordfish skeletal remains and finished artifacts made from these remains have been recorded from archaeological sites throughout the Santa Barbara Channel region. The Chumash modified swords, vertebrae, and vertebral spines for digging implements, cups, and needles. They made headdresses from the swordfish cranium and decorated them with abalone ornaments for dances.

Swordfish remains first appeared in 2,000-year-old archaeological deposits in the Santa Barbara region. Prior to this time, they have been notably absent in collections from both island and mainland sites. The advent of successful Chumash swordfishing appears simultaneously with two technological innovations: the plank boat (or tomol) which allowed for greater mobility and speed, and the barbed harpoon foreshaft that could be thrust into the fish when it "basked" near the surface in calm waters.

It seems logical that most finds of swordfish skeletal parts might be recovered in island and mainland deposits nearest the places known today as the best fishing areas, but the data only partly support this expectation. The distribution of archaeological sites containing swordfish remains extends beyond the current area of the most productive fishery. According to commercial fishermen, swordfish today rarely enter the main part of the Santa Barbara Channel, yet their remains have been recovered from many prehistoric middens between Ventura and Gaviota.

Climatic changes may account for the differences between the archaeological record and modern observations. Based on analyses of sediment cores, the reconstructed sea temperature curve for the Santa Barbara Basin shows that channel waters have been cooler during the most recent 900 years than they were during the preceding millennium. Most swordfish remains in the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History collection are from archaeological sites dating between 2,000 and 900 years ago when sea temperatures were mostly warmer in the channel. This discovery illustrates how archaeological finds may provide additional information about past environmental conditions as well as illuminate Chumash cultural history.

Friday, November 26, 2010

Three odd tuna Jigs

These jigs are very unusual vintage tuna jigs made in San Pedro, California. Each is marked S R Cressey(the maker was Stephen Cressey). The heads are a glass or crystal material. Would love more info and to add to my collection.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Do broadbill swordfish like black cats?

Written by Ernest Windle, The Catalina Islander 1924.


"do black cats make the best broadbill swordfish bait?""is it unlawful to use a live cat as a bait to catch swordfish?"
These two questions are now receiving considerable attention among the Catalina sea fraternity. No one has yet tried the stunt at Avalon.
Anglers arguing in favor of the experimental state that the big broadbills are caught outside of the three mile limit and "on the high seas", consequently it would not be illegal to try the experiment. Those that are opposed to the plan state that it would be unsportsmanlike, and no matter whether it was on high seas or not, it would be "cruelty to animals."
The report that black cats made good bait for catching swordfish, is said to have come from the Mexican commercial fishing grounds near Cape San Lucas, lower California.
The report is as follows:
One of the San Pedro commercial fisherman near Cape San Lucas became violently angry at a black cat that had sneaked on board his fishing launch while the boat was tied to the dock at San Pedro. "It was always in his way," he said , so he kicked it overboard.
Then the fishing launch was about ten miles from shore, the report said. In a repentant mood, the captain of the fishing launch went to the cabin to get a rifle to shoot the cat. He circled the fishing boat to get a better aim.
Out popped the head of a Broadbill swordfish.
One swipe of the great sword and the cat was lifted clean out of the water, apparently dead.
The swordfish immediately swallowed the cat.
"Get rid of the whole d----- bunch." the commercial fisherman is reported to have said to one of his crew. There were three little black ones and one with stripes.
One at a time the kittens dropped overboard.
The Broadbill swordfish is said to have followed in the wake of the fishing launch, until the last kitten, striped like a little tiger, was dropped into the sea. This kitten the Broadbill swordfish refused to kill.
Watching the antics of the swordfish the fishermen became interested, turned back, and picked up the little striped kitten. It was brought back to San Pedro, the report stated.
The problem of placing a live kitten on an angler's fishing line so that the animal could be trolled as bait for swordfish is an additional puzzle. To pierce the live kitten's body with a fish hook, would be cruelty to animals. A dead cat would have no more attraction in the water than an artificial lure, dead flying fish, rock bass or barracuda.
Frankly, folks we are very fond of dogs and cats.
Our "admiration" for the angler using a live cat for a swordfish bait would probably cause us to give unusual publicity to the socalled sportsman.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Still looking for old fishing tackle


After over 20 years of collecting vintage fishing tackle you would figure I would have it all. Well not quite. I am searching for old tuna jigs. Bone and Ivory jigs are the most commonly found but I am looking for them inlayed with different materials. Inlays include abalone, mother of pearl, catalin, bakelite and wood. Other materials that the old jigs were made of were wood. Those inlayed with abalone are a favorite. Lastly I am looking for lures called Hetzels. They were made in Hermosa Beach by a Frank Hetzel. Materials were catalin, plastic and Bakelite.
Another item I am looking for is sportboat memorabilia. Any sportboat Items from the 30's - 70's. Old photos of Jack Ward, Bill Poole, Russ Izor, Jim Peterson, Dick Helgren, Cookie Cook, ect.
All items are being put toward a future history book on socal sportfishing.
Thanks, Eric

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Our newest pet

Just got our newest fish mount in from www.lyonsandohaver.com. They are based out of San diego. The fish is a 43" california halibut. Lance Lyons is the artist behind this fish. His work is incredible. If anyone ever has any interest in having a fish or game mounted by the very best taxidermist I have ever seen swing by or call the shop. We have been their Ventura county reps for over 15 years now and are never disappointed.

Watch Barry Brightenburg catch the winning fish for the zg

Do you like to toss the Iron?

If you are jig fisherman we probably have the jig your looking for. We have widened our selection of jigs. Salas, we carry 7x light and heavy, 7xjr light and heavy, super 7x, 6x6, pl68, 6x, 6xjr, oky, yoyo 1, yoyo 3, opop and cp105. Tady, we carry 45 light and heavy, 15, 4/0, a1, a2, aa and ba's. Killer jigs include the bt65 and pep5. Lastly we carry the full line of Candy Bar jigs, the 112, 200, and the 150 light and heavy.
We build a full line of custom jig sticks. The calstar bt530, bt540, bt100j, bt90j, gf900h, gf900m and gf900l. Seeker favorites are the ulua and baby ulua. We build these sticks old school with cork tape or tuna cord. Also they can be built with the more modern x shrink wrap. We try to keep these rods as light as possible and are building more with the fuji bmnag guide with a short wrap.
Jig reels, the favorites are still the newell p332 and p338. I have switched over to the trinidad 20dc. It is a pricey reel but will outcast about anything. Other recommendations are the trinidad 20, torium 20, saltist 35 or 40.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Eric's Tackle hats just arrived

Just got a shipment of new hats for the shop. Flexfits, flatbills and trucker hats in a bunch of colors.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Friday, October 1, 2010

Big hammers newest baits!

We now have a good stock of Hammer's newest bait the SLEDGE HAMMER. The bait goes 9" but is thinner then most others. Also the 51/2" bait is now in. We have 8 colors of each.

Monday, September 27, 2010

Bird season is allmost here need a dog box



Owens dog boxes

old article on steelhead in ventura river

Flow of Time Changes River
Article appeared in the Los Angeles Times, Saturday, January 12 1985/Part III
(and edited by Ed Henke in 1998)
Steelhead Fishermen Once found a Paradise Along The Banks of the Ventura. by EARL GUSTKEY, Times Staff Writer.


Ventura--- This is about a noble species of fish, a river that's fallen on hard times and a fisherman who can't forget.
Ed Henke remembers better days for the Ventura River. Henke's name might sound familiar. He played football at USC and was an NFL linebacker for ten seasons, most of them with the San Francisco 49ers, from 1949 to 1963.
He grew up in Ventura, a star athlete at the high school and junior college there. But Henke always had a problem with football. As good as he was, it interfered with important stuff, such as winter steelhead fishing on the Ventura River.
The best days of his life, he says, were those in the late 30's and 40's that he spent fishing for 30-inch steelhead on the river, and building driftwood campfires in the evenings on the river's little delta, where the Ventura flows into the sea. There, Henke and his friends watched summer sunsets outline the channel islands against fading horizons, not knowing their steelhead river was about to fade away, too.
"We were awfully innocent then," he said recently. "We never knew there'd be dams on the river. There was a bad drought in the late-1940's, and before we knew it there was a dam being built in 1946 on Lower Matillija Creek. That knocked the steelhead runs in half immediately. It was the beginning of the end."
Henke lives in Northern California now, and fishes for steelhead on a couple of North Coast streams, the Smith and Klamath. But he keeps in touch with his old river through membership in Friends of the Ventura River organization.
"When I was a kid, in the 1930's and 40's, the Ventura was more than a river," Henke recalled. "It was a treasure. It belonged to all of us in Ventura. When the steelhead were running, the river brought us all together, all ethnic groups and nationalities. I had a lot of Spanish, Mexican-American and Portuguese friends I met on the river and fished with for years. We even saw the Chief of Police on the river a lot, fishing.
"One old guy who taught me how to fish was an old Portuguese guy, Joe Orniega. He was in his 50's or 60's then, and had been around Ventura since the 19th Century. He liked to fish the surf, at the mouth of the river."
I fished a lot with the Pierano brothers, who ran and owned the grocery store across the street from the Ventura Mission.
"We used to take our rods to school. Afterward, it was a nickel bus ride to the Ventura Oil Fields where we'd get out and walk three miles to Foster Park. It was another four or five miles to Coyote Creek and we'd walk there too.
"I'd fish until dark and often caught steelhead running 15 to 20 inches. There was one that went 29 inches. When I fly fished, it was a wingless royal coachman fly. But those things never worked until one of us tore the wings off one day.
"The opening day of the fishing season was practically a holiday. A note from a parent got you out of school for the day, if you wanted to fish.
"Geez, I can remember in the late 40's, looking down in some pools of the Santa Ana Creek (a major Ventura tributary), and seeing layers of steelhead stacked up like cord wood.
"We hiked into the back country in the Summers, along the creeks, looking for holes with land-locked steelhead. Upper Santa Ana Creek, Upper San Antonio Creek, that was where there spawning grounds were. We found 25-30 inch fish back in there.
"And in those days, the Ventura wasn't the only steelhead stream we had. We had the Santa Ynez and the Santa Clara rivers too. One of the best steelhead spots in the entire Santa Barbara-Ventura area was Upper Santa Cruz Creek, a tributary of the Santa Ynez. The creek was wiped out when they built Lake Cachuma.
"In 1946, on opening day of the fishing season, I caught 13 steelhead before 9 a.m. on Upper Santa Cruz Creek. They were all 24 to 28 inches. One day in 1945, my brother and I brought home five over 34 inches from Upper Santa Cruz. In the winter, fish that size would weigh 20 pounds, but they say they were more like nine in the summer.
"The Santa Clara used to be a tremendous steelhead river. At the mouth, we used to fish the surf, with spinners and casting rods. I remember a day when my best friend caught a 13 pounder in the surf right at the Santa Clara mouth. I even remember what he used, a No. 3 copper spinner.
"We caught salmon occasionally in all those streams, but they were basically steelhead waters. Today, you could find people in Ventura who've lived there for years who'd be surprised if you told them you could still find steelhead in the river.
"But, when I was a kid, it was a part of your life in Ventura. Fishermen from all over Southern California filled up the hotels when the steelhead were running.
"Now, the river's kind of a down on its luck from what it was. But it's nice to know there are at least a few steelhead coming back every year. And it's nice that some of the people down there are trying to hold on to them, and maybe even increase the steelhead numbers. But it can never be what it was.
"Let me tell you this. The winter before they built the Matillija Dam, I remember hiking back up there and counting 125 big adult steelhead-just the ones I could see-- in several deep holes. The winter after the dam was built, I hiked back up there and obiously there was none one to be seen. I cried. I mean, I really cried. We thought we'd have steelhead forever. It cut my heart out."
*************
A steelhead is an ocean-going rainbow trout. Its life cycle is similar to a salmon's except for one major difference: It doesn't necessarily die after spawning.
Juvenile steelhead normally spend a year or two in a stream before migrating to the ocean. Some wait a third year. Some, for no known reason, never leave the river.
In the ocean, steelhead grow rapidly. Unlike salmon, which remain relatively close to the coast, steelhead venture thousands of miles into the Pacific. They feed on small fish, krill and crustaceans.
They return to spawn in the stream of their birth after one or two seasons in the ocean. Most California steelhead are known as winter and fall run fish, meaning they attempt to re-enter the rivers in fall and winter when heavy rainfall produces high-volume flows that break apart sand bars blocking river mouths.
In the case of larger rivers with year-round flows, where sand bars seldom block the mouths, the re-entry of steelhead is less predictable.
At sea, steelhead are steel blue on the back with bright silver sides. There are sharply defined black spots on the back, head, sides and dorsal and caudal fins.
In fresh water, steelhead develop more like stream rainbows. The back becomes olive green, the sides are less silvery.
Most steelhead caught by fishermen weigh less than 10 pounds, but fish weighing more than 20 pounds are sometimes caught on North Coast streams. On Alaskan streams, they have exceeded 40 pounds.
Steelhead populations can be an accurate barometer of the impact of man on the river:
--Smith River, Del Norte County -No dams, no industry, very little riverside development, high flows. Results. An estimated 25,000 steelhead enter the river every winter.
--Ventura River-- Two dams, a diversion canal, considerable industry and development, low flow. Results. very few steelhead a year, down from the 4,000 to 5,000 annually in the 1940's
*************************
The Ventura River has been in a slump for 203 years. The river got along fine with the Chumash Indians who lived along side and were nourished by the river for thousands of years.
But since the day in 1782 when the Franciscan Padres at the new San Buenaventura Mission opened the gates to their six-mile-long wooden aqueduct at the mouth of Canada Largo Creek, a Ventura River tributary, man has been removing water from the river.
He's also been dumping toxic substances into it for a long time, building dams and re-routing the river into impoundments, building housing developments next to it, tearing up its stream bed with bulldozers.
Incredibly, a few adult steelhead will return to the Ventura River system to spawn..
The pressure on the Ventura River, which drains 228 square miles of the Coast Range, slowly grew when first Mexican and then American farm settlements in the Ventura area were hit hard by droughts in the 1890's
In the drought of 1863-64, according to local historian R. G. Percy, 195,000 of 200,000 cattle perished. Ranchos sold for $2.00 and acre and less. It was estimated at the time that there wasn't $6,000 in cash in all of Santa Barbara County.
Oil was discovered in Ventura in 1916. A tiny farm town quickly became a little oil boom town. Serious discussion of a major water impoundment above the fertile valley North of Ventura began about 1925.
The eventual result was the Casitas Reservoir, filled in 1959. In terms of steelhead runs, of all the encroachments man had made on the river, this was the most telling, the knockout punch. In the few months it took to fill Casitas, Southern California's last good steehead river became a memory
The construction of Casitas was preceded by another major reversal for steelhead---the completion of Matillija dam in 1948 on Upper Matillija Creek, a major steelhead spawning tributary.
The succession of blows to the Ventura's steelhead runs seemed to stop around 1970. In fact, in recent years, the Ventura has won a few battles.
--In 1969, a suit was successfully brought against Shell Oil Co. for discharging ammonia into the river.
--In 1971, a planned shopping center on the river's delta that would have encroached on critical flood plain areas at the delta was blocked. That effort spawned the birth of Friends of the Ventura River, a 500-member Organization that has led other battles to prevent further encroachment on the river.
--In 1974, a cement plant was planned for a riverside site just north of the city. It, too, was defeated.
--In 1976, Friends of the Ventura River unsuccessfully tried to remove a sand and gravel mining operation from the bed of the river a few miles north of the city. The mining continues but under regulations requiring mining to occur no closer than 100 feet from the water line.
--In 1979, a waist treatment plant was discharging raw waste into the river near the city itself. Discharge requirements were stiffened and a new plant was built.
--In 1979, a mobile home park was planned for a bluff above San Antonio Creek, a major tributary. Friends defeated the the proposal. A Girl Scout camp is there today.
Earlier this month, Friends of the Ventura won its biggest battle. A year ago, it filed suit against the Casitas Municipal Water District, asking that the district be prevented from carrying out an announced plan to extract even more water from the river. In Ventura Superior Court, Judge Joe Hadden ruled for Friends of the Ventura River, stating that the water district's plan failed to comply with California environmental law.
Friends of the Ventura River is undertaking other projects, hoping to return the river to at least a semblance of what it must have been when the padres built their wooden aqueduct.
***********************************
There is one last glimpse remaining of what the Ventura River system once looked like, when shadows of condors often flickered across the river. Matillija Hot Springs is a small canyon resort on Matillija Creek, just off Highway 33, near Ojai. There's been been a resort here since 1871. Here, Lower Matillija Creek flows around huge boulders, under a canopy of old eucalyptus, willow, sycamore, cottonwood, alders and oaks.
The image of big, ocean-fattened steehead battling their way upstream here, seeking that part of the creek where they were spawned, isn't difficult to imagine. Once, half of all steelheads in the Ventura River spawned in 23-mile-long Matillija Creek.
It's only a mile from the Hot Springs to the dam holding up Matillija Reservoir.
Only a mile -- and 203 years.
The Ventura River. It's one that got away.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Congrat's to f/v SHARK'S PARLOUR

Jim Sloan's team Shark's Parlour has taken the 2010 catalina classic. The striper was caught on day 2 and weighed in at 177.4 pounds. Great to see our locals win again. Good job guys!

Friday, September 17, 2010

Aloha spirit charter tomorrow

Sean Blackshear wanted me to let everyone know that he has a couple spots available for tomorrow. They are limited load and are leaving early. Call Sean @ 805-990-1370

Thursday, September 16, 2010

An old photo and an e-mail I just got from the pac dawn





"Hey,
The fish are biting so we added a few more trips. They are within a days range, average fish from 25 to 35 lbs. The price has been reduced on the overnight trips from $275 to $225 including permits. We have a trip departing tonight, call Fisherman\'s Landing for reservations @ 619-221-8500.

Other trips added are:
fishing on Tuesday 9/21 departing Mon night
fishing on Wednesday 9/22 departing Tue night
fishing on Wednesday 9/29 departing Tue night
fishing on Thursday 9/30 departing Wed night
fishing on Friday 10/1 departing Thurs night

All trips are $225 - permits included - Call Fisherman\'s for reservations or sign up online.

Hope to see you out there.

Thanks!

Pacific Dawn Sportfishing"

That's a shot of Peaches himself with are mentor Greg Ewart

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Virgs sportfishing getting the longfin

The Princess, with 5 anglers and the Admiral, with 28 anglers caught 90 Albacore between the two boats. They started fishing about 65 miles SW and fished towards the inside at 35 miles.
www.virgs.com

New news for the Pacific Queen


Just spoke with captain Bill Cavanaugh. He is on the way up to Avila beach and has caught Albacore this morning. He will be running tomorrow night at 10 p.m. for albacore and will be limited to 35 anglers. Price is $225 and the fish are on the chew.
Check out the PQ's website

www.pacific-queen.com

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Shannon Rose wins Zane Grey tourney

With no fish caught on day 2 the Shannon Rose is the 2010 ZG invitational billfish tourney winner. Captain Jimmy Kinsmill and angler Barry Brightenburg caught 2 fish the first day of the tourney. Releasing 1 and boarding the other. The keeper weighing in at 204#s. The area was just outside the upper finger, some 35 miles below the point where the fish were taken. Day 1 jackpots were over $15,000. I will up date the total wins asap.

Monday, September 13, 2010

Zane Grey marlin tourney


Day 1 saw two fish caught and released. Both fish were on the f/v Shannon Rose(formally gene's machine). Captain Jimmy Kingsmill and angler Barry Brightengurg. Great job by two of my fishing buds.

Albacore go on chew in morro bay


spoke with a couple customers today. They are up in Morro Bay about 50 miles off the beach with good scores of longfin. The pacific horizon out of avila beach had 63 fish for 7 anglers.