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tripledigitken
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Zane Grey's Tales of Fishes
some selected vintage photos pre 1919..............
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bufeo
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Fascinating photos. Thanks for posting them.
Allen R
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Skipjack Joe
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Great images, Ken. I know what the originals look like and you have a very fine scanner.
Each of those images reminds me of the story behind it.
Perhaps the most interesting is how he and RC developed the sport of fishing for bonefish. I believe they initially crossed the flats in freshwater
canoes. Then they went through a period when the only sign of the bonefish was bait missing from the hook. The first fish was hooked by accident when
he took a chance and struck when the line barely slackened. Bit by bit they figured it out. The tides and fish movement.
The picture of Captain Dan and the bluefin tuna was another favorite. The sea around catalina was alive with bluefin that day. He had never seen
anything like it. Alas there was no wind and he couldn't fly the kite with the bait over the tuna. It kept crashing into the water. Finally a small
breeze came up and they were in business, 250+lb tuna busting all around. He finally did hook one, the one in the picture, but felt he missed a great
opportunity that day on some toads. He said big schools like that never showed up agains. Blamed it on the japanese.
The book was written shortly after WWI. He keeps refering to the germans as the 'huns' in the book. I could never figure that out. Krauts, I
understand.
[Edited on 5-11-2012 by Skipjack Joe]
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bufeo
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Skipjack, I believe that you can go back to The Kaiser (i.e. Kaiser Wilhelm II) for that beginning. At some point during the Boxer Rebellion (China,
1900) the Kaiser issued a warning that no prisoners would be taken and and used Attila as a model. ZG picked up on that for a number of reasons.
Allen R
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tripledigitken
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Quote: | Originally posted by Skipjack Joe
Great images, Ken. I know what the originals look like and you have a very fine scanner.
[Edited on 5-11-2012 by Skipjack Joe] |
Igor,
Actually my scanner/printer combo is a budget Canon which does a decent job. These turned out pretty flat so I "Photoshopped" them using Adobe Camera
Raw by adding contrast, clarity and some toning to bring back some detail.
Ken
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watizname
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Cool stuff. I have a spilt bamboo rod that my dad gave me, that looks like the "broomstick" that is bent in one of the photos. Keep it in a special
place by my desk.
I yam what I yam and that\'s all what I yam.
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tripledigitken
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Quote: | Originally posted by watizname
Cool stuff. I have a spilt bamboo rod that my dad gave me, that looks like the "broomstick" that is bent in one of the photos. Keep it in a special
place by my desk. |
watizname,
Their idea of light tackle in 1919 was a little different than our world.
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Marc
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OH GOD! I was born to late!
[Edited on 5-15-2012 by Marc]
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Skipjack Joe
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Apparently some writers felt that Zane Grey was fabricating some of his stories.
One writes:
"If you went out with a mosquito net to catch a mess of minnows your story would read like Roman gladiators seining the Tigris for whales"
and later:
"You say 'the hard, diving fight of a tuna liberates the brute instincts of a man'. Well, Zane, it also liberates the qualities of a liar!"
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Marc
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Quote: | Originally posted by Skipjack Joe
Apparently some writers felt that Zane Grey was fabricating some of his stories.
One writes:
"If you went out with a mosquito net to catch a mess of minnows your story would read like Roman gladiators seining the Tigris for whales"
and later:
"You say 'the hard, diving fight of a tuna liberates the brute instincts of a man'. Well, Zane, it also liberates the qualities of a liar!"
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Well...he did write FICTION!
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Skipjack Joe
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The novels he made most of his money (Riders of the Purple Sage) were fiction.
But the books he wrote about his fishing adventures were non-fiction. There were several of them. There was one that centered around the South Seas
marlin fishing and New Zealand trout. His appetite for big fish grew as did his wealth. By the 30's he had his own yacht. He was trying to break all
fish records. I think he owned 9 of them at one time. He was the first to catch a marlin over 1000 lbs.
I believe there was another book that contained mostly stories of steelhead on the Rogue and Umpqua. He loved the Rogue.
My favorite, though, remained "Tales of Fishes".
[Edited on 5-17-2012 by Skipjack Joe]
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Phil S
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Anyone know the title of Zane Greys fishing experiences on the Rogue & Umpqua? I have 68 of his "novels" in hardback. I'd like to add this one
of the Rogue & Umpqua fishing experiences. My father used to talk of meeting Zane at "Steamboat" on the North Umpqua many times when my dad would
"run up to Steamboat on his 'Indian' for a day of fly fishing & then return home to Roseburg by dark." Many trips he would tell of finding Zane
Grey fishing his favorite 'steelhead hole'...........Poke around your old libraries & see what you might find. Thanks.
[Edited on 5-17-2012 by Phil S]
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tripledigitken
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Quote: | Originally posted by Phil S
Anyone know the title of Zane Greys fishing experiences on the Rogue & Umpqua? I have 68 of his "novels" in hardback. I'd like to add this one
of the Rogue & Umpqua fishing experiences. My father used to talk of meeting Zane at "Steamboat" on the North Umpqua many times when my dad would
"run up to Steamboat on his 'Indian' for a day of fly fishing & then return home to Roseburg by dark." Many trips he would tell of finding Zane
Grey fishing his favorite 'steelhead hole'...........Poke around your old libraries & see what you might find. Thanks.
[Edited on 5-17-2012 by Phil S] |
Phil,
Though I haven't read it, I think this might be what you're after.
Tales of Fresh Water Fishing
a brief description...........
"In Tales of Freshwater Fishing, Grey recounts sixteen individual fresh-water fishing adventures from 1906 through 1926, including fishing for black
bass on the Delaware River; steel-head at Deer Creek in Washington; king salmon in British Columbia and at mouth of Klamath River in California; trout
in Crater Lake and Klamath Lake, Oregon; and steel-head in Rogue River, Oregon. Also included are freshwater fishing adventures on the Lacakwaxen
Creek, Mast Hope Brook, Tyree, Pelican Bay, Rocky Riffle, Down River, and Winkle Bar. These tales are illustrated with 100 black and white
photographs, mostly taken by Zane Grey himself. "
Ken
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Skipjack Joe
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It's likely this book.
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Phil S
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Ken & Joe. Thanks. I'll take a check on Amazon to see if that might be 'lurking' out there somewhere.
Nopolo Phil
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baitcast
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Just ran into this,my favorite master fishing story teller of all time,what was great was he could always back up a story with a picture to help quite
his critics of course he had many but anyone successful has the same problem.
Of Swordfish and Tuna was probably my favorite,living where I grew up in trout country and having a father who said" son if it ain't a
trout its just not worth your time or your effort"
Having a huge swordfish hooked up from 10:30 am to 11:30 Pm and not finishing the job fired my imagination how could there be such a
fish?
Had two of his books but my X managed to lose both when we split up,she knew what they ment to me starting to ramble so must close.
Rob
Anyone can catch fish in a boat but only \"El Pescador Grande\" can get them from the beach.
I hope when my time comes the old man will let me bring my rod and the water will be warm and clear.
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Skipjack Joe
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Quote: | Originally posted by baitcast
Had two of his books but my X managed to lose both when we split up,she knew what they ment to me starting to ramble so must close.
Rob |
For some reason that reminded me of Richard Burton, the famous explorer of Africa's interior.
He had the finest collection of pornographic art in the world at the time. Pieces from all over the planet. India, Japan, you name it. He spent a
lifetime collecting them. His wife burned it all posthumously because it was 'sinful'.
-----------------------
Some compare it to the burning of the library in Alexandria.
Aw, all right, I made that up.
[Edited on 5-29-2012 by Skipjack Joe]
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Cypress
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What the heck! Anybody got some more of those old fish pictures? They sure are neat! Thanks!
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Skipjack Joe
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I'm getting my scanner delivered in an hour. Stay tuned for more Zane Grey.
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baitcast
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Igor that
is just to funny
Rob
Anyone can catch fish in a boat but only \"El Pescador Grande\" can get them from the beach.
I hope when my time comes the old man will let me bring my rod and the water will be warm and clear.
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