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SPORT ON THE ICE

FISH SKATING THRILLS HUNTERS WITH LONG SPEARS CANADIAN WINTER PASTIME One of the most thrilling thrilling winter sports in Canada, in which old and young join, is known as fish skating. In certain districts of British Columbia, where the eze-up is not accompanied by snow, tne lakes become so transparent that they resemble gargantuan window panes, through which fish, visible to a depth of 20ft., can be followed for miles by skaters. The spears carried are from 15ft. to 25ft. in length, and are often the means of saving the lives of skaters who crash through the ice. At the age of 71 years, Duncan McKinlay, son of a former Hudson Bay Company factor, is still an ardent fishskater. Before a fish can be speared, It must be skated to a standstill. Some favour skating hard on the fish’s tail, and ‘winding” it, in a short and continued burst of speed; in this, the wild horse hunters are most adept. Accustomed to heading off the mob in the ranges, they can anticipate the movements of fish, and kep it travelling in the direction of shallow water near the shore. Others prefer skating to one side, at some distance from the fish, after it is “spotted,” and in this way preventing it from reaching deep water before it is played out. When a char has just finished a meal of trout or squaw-fish, it is much easier to skate down; a hungry char is much more agile than one which has gorged itself on a couple of pounds of whitefish. Char range from Sib. to 401 b. in weight. Driven to desperation, a fish will raise a screen of mud from the bottom. Yet, when buried thus, it, is often an easy mark for the skater’s spear. Holes are cut in the ice when the fish are tiring. Skaters may cut half-a-dozen holes before a fish is speared. To skate down a char requires a fair amount of skill, but to capture a rainbow trout one has to be as expert at dodging as a cow-horse or a polo pony. The proportion of char to rainbow taken is fourteen to one. The sport is actively followed by aspiring ice hockey players. When snow obliterates the fish, the skaters return to their normal winter occupation of sleper cutting, trapping or hunting down wild horses, which are sold for fox feed in Vancouver.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WC19360314.2.106

Bibliographic details

Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 79, Issue 63, 14 March 1936, Page 13

Word Count
404

SPORT ON THE ICE Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 79, Issue 63, 14 March 1936, Page 13

SPORT ON THE ICE Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 79, Issue 63, 14 March 1936, Page 13