Skip to main content

Techniques of fishing– Different Types formula and Fishing



You can catch a fish in many techniques. You can catch it with hands; you can impale it on a spear, catch it with a hook, trap it, and throw an explosive on it (not recommended and even illegal). We had time to create many possible ways of fishing because we have been fishing and eating fish for 40,000 years.
Picture or catching big fish

Here are some formula and types of fishing, some more, some less popular:


Noodling is fishing with hands practiced in South America. Fishermen catch catfish by pushing hand into a catfish hole where this fish lives.

Picture of Catfish noodling
Flounder tramping is a formula of fishing practiced in Scottish village of Palnackie on every year. People participate in catching the flounder (which is a species of flatfish) by punch on them.

Picture of Flounder tramping method

Spearfishing techniques is fishing with ordinary spears or with their variants like harpoons, tridents, arrows, Hawaiian slings, Pole Spear and spearguns.

Picture of Spearfishing techniques

Netting is a Technique of fishing which uses fishing nets. There are many kind of nets for different uses and different fish. Cast net (or throw net) is a little round net with weights on it edges. Gillnet is standed in water vertically (using combination of weights and floats) and catches fish which try to pass through it. Trawl net is large, conical a dragged by ship.

Picture of net fishing


Angling is the Techniques of fishing with a hook (angle), line and rod. Hook has bait on it and is occasionally weighted with a sinker.

Picture of Angling

Fly fishing apply artificial flies as lures with specially constructed fly rods and fly lines. Artificial flies are normaly hand made in variety of shapes.

Picture of Fly fishing

Bottom fishing techniques is angling with heavy weight at the bottom of water. It can be done with boats and from the land and its terget is catching the fish that lives at the bottom.

Picture of Bottom fishing

Ice fishing method is angling through the hole in the ice during the time of a year when a body of water is frozen.

Picture of Ice fishing

Fishing from float tube is fishing with a small inflatable boat (very small). It's used from fly fishing and when fishermen use it they don’t scare the fish with splashing.

Picture of Fishing from float tube

Kite fishing method is using kites to carry line and fishhook to the places that are not easily reachable. It was created in China and it is still used on New Guinea and other Pacific Islands.

Picture of Kite fishing

Trapping techniques is fishing done with traps. Basket weir fish traps are work from branches and made so a fish can enter it but not exit. Lobster traps are similar to basket traps but are smallest and have more compartments. Fishing weir is a large trap made of logs and fences, place it in water to forward fish to enter parts of trap from which it can't exit.
Picture of Trapping techniques

Cormorant fishing formula was a practice in China and Japan since 14th century. It uses trained cormorants with ring on their neck which one prevents the bird to swallow the fish when it catches it. Alternatively it brings the bird to the fisherman.
Picture of Cormorant fishing

Electrofishing formula is used in freshwater by fisheries scientists. Electricity is used to knock out fish, check fish population and then return it into water unharmed.

Picture of Electrofishing formula





Comments

Popular posts from this blog

How to Catch and Prepare Eels

Catch and Prepare Eels To most anglers, eels are bait. To others, they are a damn good fighting fish and prime table fare Eels aren’t glamorous. In fact, among fishermen, eels generally fall under the classification of undesirable—unless you’re using them to catch stripers and cobia, but that’s an entirely different story. But here’s a quick story about eels—at least, one of my earliest remembrances of them—that may make you appreciate their virtues. It was a sweltering summer weekend in Hunterdon County, N.J. I was just out of high school, and after cutting the grass for Mrs. Scheier, our former high school health teacher, Chris “River Rat” Lido and I had big plans. We “borrowed” a half-empty bottle of Jameson whiskey from the Scheier’s liquor cabinet and set up tent stakes on the muddy banks of the South Branch of the Raritan River for an overnighter. There, we rigged up and cast out nightcrawlers, gently laying our rods down on V-sticks broken from the nearest oak tree. It didn’t ta

The Beginner’s Guide to Fishing - Catching Your First Fish

How to pick the right bait and the right tactics for 6 species of freshwater fish   For most serious fishermen, it was their family and friends who showed them the basics of the sport. But not everyone was lucky enough to have been mentored to a lifetime of outdoor fun pursuing and catching fish.   The good news is, learning to fish isn’t difficult. And it offers never-ending challenges in the outdoors. Even old hands at the game can learn about new types of tackle, baits, and lures. What’s more, there’s an infinite variety of subtle nuances that can make fishing challenging enough for a lifetime. Fishing can be done virtually anywhere there’s water, and for little cost. United States is blessed with great fishing from coast to coast—in thousands of lakes, ponds, rivers, streams, and sprawling reservoirs. The following fish species are common to many of America’s freshwaters. Each has its own habits, habitats, preferred baits, lures, and methods for catching them. If you’ve

Fishing-Fish Species - Take Me Fishing

Fishing-Fish Species Both resident fish populations and massive runs of anadromous fish, particularly salmon, were crucial to Sinixt People and all western Plateau populations. According to 'Complex Hunter-Gatherers' by Prentiss and Kujit, "salmon provided an accessible, high-density, storable protein and fat source, crucial for winter survival on the Plateau." Early Chinook salmon runs and late steelhead trout runs occurred during spring. A variety of salmon species were abundant by mid-summer, including chinook, sockeye, pink, and Coho. In terms of resident fish species, white sturgeon, bull trout, rainbow trout (including Gerrard rainbow trout) and mountain white fish were all important fresh food sources. Once spring arrived, Sinixt people living all over their vast traditional territory would travel down the Columbia to gather at Kettle Falls. AS Sinixt descendent Lawney Reyes wrote," The great harvest of salmon began in June, when mature salmon returned fro