LIFELINES | Cross Currents | The Cod Rush | Swales and Whales |
Possessions | A Lobster Tale | The Lure of the River | Nova Scotia Motor Fishing Boats



Lifelines: Canada's East Coast Fisheries

The Lure of the River
Sport Fishing in New Brunswick
 
Everyone A Fisherman
The Lure of the River: Sport Fishing in New Brunswick

 

Sport Fish Futures

From fly to lure: sport fishing for the future.

After World War II, the development of the spinning reel and monofilament line and the spread of smallmouth bass into southwestern lakes changed New Brunswick sport fishing enormously. By the 1950s, lures ranging from spinners to plastic worms to minnows, frogs, and a dizzying variety of other creatures had replaced worms or real minnows for catching brook trout and other species. Today, lure fishing for brook trout, rainbow trout, landlocked salmon, and especially black or smallmouth bass has become so popular that lure fishermen outnumber fly fishermen by at least ten to one.


Premax fibreglass rod - 
Collection: Bill Ensor

Premax fibreglass rod with Platil Spinette spinning reel,
one of the earliest spinning combinations used in the province. After World War II, fibreglass replaced bamboo as the most popular rod material because it was less expensive and more resistant to fatigue, the elements, and neglect. The reel would have been equipped with monofilament line, light and strong in comparison with silk and gut. This system's frictionless delivery and weighted lure enabled an inexperienced fisherman to cover as much water as a veteran using traditional fly-fishing tackle. Thus rods and reels like this outfit, used on the Magaguadavic River and Chamcook Lake, Charlotte County, in the early 1950s, increased pressure on freshwater game fish such as trout, landlocked salmon, and bass.
(Collection of Bill Ensor)


Most fly fishermen practice their sport on rivers in the north and east, while lure fishermen throng to the more accessible lakes and rivers of the south and west. But a lesson has been learned: increased pressure has led to increased protection. With strictly enforced bag limits and continuous restocking programs, New Brunswick's sport fishery should have a healthy future.


Bass fishermen - 
Collection: Larry Carr

Bass fishermen head out for a day's fishing
during a tournament sponsored by the New Brunswick Sportfishing Association on the Mactaquac Headpond, Saint John River, May, 2001
(Collection of Larry Carr)



THE BUZZWAGON | ORDINARY FLY FISHERS | RUN TO THE RIVER
DR. GEORGE FREDERICK CLARKE | THE MOVE TO CONSERVE | SPORT FISH FUTURES


Design

 

 
Menu - Lifelines Menu - The Lure of the River

Back