Tuesday 28 February 2012

Excalibur - A Rest For The Lucky Strike

A quest, a quest to find it forked
within a native tree
A noble quest indeed to find
A rest for my Lucy

Let me hark back to a post I made before Christmas. I have felt uncomfortable using modern rod rests for my cane rods for a while, it just doesn't seem right. A wooden fork just seemed the natural partner for 'Lucy', my Lucky Strike.
 I have searched ancient woodland that once belonged to kings, hedgerows and the periphery of every water fished, in search of the perfect forked limb. I've always believed that 'the one' will be given up to me freely, so, upon seeing many perfect forked branches actually growing, they have been overlooked. To remove them forcibly, almost an act of sacrilege.
 I've become obsessed, looking at every native (for it must be so) tree and shrub in a different light, searching for my very own Excalibur.
I happened to be angling at my beloved river Ouzel the other day, I had a wonderful day, it was perfect in every way. By the end of the session I was relaxed and content and I slowly packed up, having fed the remainder of my bait to the swans.
 I turned, and there, just feet from where I'd sat, lay a pile branches, willow branches. One of them was looking at me, it was indeed 'the one'...and so I walked to it,  and held it aloft triumphantly, my quest was over,

Behold........Excalibur!





6 comments:

  1. A work of art. Take it along to a commercial and see those eyes a rolling in their sockets as the unenlightened pass you by. What do they know? You'll be needing a creel next, and an old black umbrella too!

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  2. You know it Jeff...I am really enjoying fishing with vintage tackle, it's been great fun. I think there's a definite place for it in my angling world..I do, however, believe it may soon be time for the carbon to come back out for a while. Though I am toying with the idea of trying to catch a Wels on cane!!

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  3. I like it! Reminds me of when I was a kid I went in search of a stick to make a throwing arrow. All though a little big I chopped a perfectly straight stem down and made it my own. I couldn't believe how straight it was to be honest it was as if someone had made it that way. Anyway, later that day I found out why it was so straight. My grandad had been nurturing that stem for the last three years preparing it for a new hand made walking stick. Whoops!

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  4. very nice workmanship Mr Gurn...as always.

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  5. A worthy quest Sir Gurn, can I suggest acorn bobbins?

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  6. lovely piece of tradtional kit gurn. much more in tune with your tackle than the nasty metal ones. youve made a cracker. well done. BSC

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