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This is how things are supposed to work when two anglers meet on a river. But then I caught a fish. Then another one and this second fish was quite nice. A nice eighteen to twenty inch Rainbow. I released the fish and went on about my business, continuing to fish this nice stretch of river, which incidentally was no bigger, the average driveway.
The next thing I knew, the other fishermen were in my freakin' back pocket! I mean these guys surrounded me like I was trying to do something horrible to one of their children. Then the interrogation started. What are you using? How big was that fish? Do you always catch fish here? This is what I'm talking about when I speak of fishing etiquette. When I'm out on the river, and I'm sure most people would agree, I want to relax, enjoy nature, and if I can mange it, catch a few fish. I don't need to give a fishing lesson to anyone. And, as far as I'm concerned, no one needs to give one to me. If I see you on the river and you catch a nice fish, good for you. I might give you a thumb's up or something, but that's all the information we need to exchange.
I've never understood why people think that if a fish is caught out of a spot, that's the only place on a given stretch of water that contains fish. And the spot or area that they're fishing doesn't! That's the only explanation as to why these two guys muscled up on me like a bully on the smaller kids in the schoolyard. They had to think that they had a better chance of catching a fish where I had just caught a fish than where they were originally fishing. And just to clear the air, this is not the case. It's a fallacy, and this kind of behavior needs to stop.
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