lummox Posted June 8, 2004 Posted June 8, 2004 from latimes: THIS IS FUN? Rodent reeling byAshley Powers Is the squirrel attracted to the nut--or is it the other way around? They swear it's catch and release. Squirrel fishers tie peanuts to fishing lines, cast and wait. Shhhh. The critter creeps toward the bait, grasps it and … I got one! Then the squirrel takes the nut and runs. College kids love this. Penn State had its Squirrel Fishing Rescue Rangers. UC Berkeley's Squirrel Fishers rates student organization status, meaning it gets some funding. University of Oregon anglers are campaigning for similar standing. Does trawling for squirrel require the same skill and bait expertise as other forms of the sport? With no official experts to consult — come on, it's squirrel fishing — we asked a few presumed ones for tips on "hooking" one. John Harris, small-mammal biologist, Mills College, Oakland: Squirrels are picky like a toddler, Harris says, and prefer sweets to roughage. He has seen squirrels grub on pecans and scorn buckwheat. (Can you blame them?) Generally, they go where food is — they're fishing for humans. The exception is the Mojave ground squirrel, a night-crawling desert-dweller that Harris has studied: "You'd die before you'd get one of them. They're very secretive." Gregg Bassett, president, the Squirrel Lover's Club, Elmhurst, Ill.: Put the critters at ease. Speak squirrel; use an even tone, the way you would talk to a puppy. Or repeatedly slip your tongue off the roof of your mouth — the clackclackclack sounds like a squirrel's "bark." Peanuts are OK; black walnuts or acorns, better; macadamia nuts, best. At least, Bassett says, until someone invents peanut butter cologne. Yasuhiro Endo, Harvard University grad, Sunnyvale, Calif., engineer and co-creator of a popular squirrel fishing website: Fish where humans won't freak out the squirrels, like a campus, Endo suggests. When critter hugs nut, tug slightly and it will cling like a climber to rock. "I don't know what else," he says. "Maybe you have to be born with the talent." (The site — hit count about 1.4 million — is http://www.eecs.harvard.edu/~yaz/en/squirrel_fishing.html ) Jason McIlhaney, co-president, University of Oregon squirrel fishers club: Begin with peanut, unshelled, unsalted. "You don't want to kill the squirrels with high sodium intake," McIlhaney says. As with fly-fishing, let your line soar. (The club's casting coach, nicknamed Hawaiian Superman, was weaned on island fly-fishing.) "Some people get it all tangled or do this big arc thing," McIlhaney says. No arc needed Quote
ketch Posted June 9, 2004 Posted June 9, 2004 I havn't tried anglin for squirrel, but. When I was a kid one of my worst wuppins was from Goose Stringing. I was told that Geese really like bacon (uncooked) but can't digest it. So one piece of 10 - 15 pound test and a piece of bacon. Feed it to a goose. A bit later you can pick it up rinse it off and feed it to the next one. I got caught when my uncle came out to see what the squaking was about in his goose pen. I had six geese all strung up and was trying to work some of the slack out. Quote
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