Fishing with Jim

Friday, August 15, 2008

Showing courtesy and conservation, even when no one is watching!

In today's society, we have come to a place very unfamiliar to me in my worldly travels. I don't know when it happened or how it happened but something definitely changed in our society. We started locking our doors, breaking our promises, not showing courtesy, showing disrespect, bad-mouthing, and whining about almost everything. I'm not saying we all do it but just take one day in your week and try and remember when someone did something nice for you. Did that last driver motion you in front of him in the grid-lock traffic or did he show you his middle finger? At the bank, did the person in front of you let you go ahead because they didn't have their deposit slip already prepared like you? Does the lady let you buy the loaf of bread and a gallon of milk you have in your hands before she empties two shopping carts onto the conveyor belt in front of you? When I go home (the south), I marvel at total strangers waving to me on back roads. I appreciate it when in a foreign country, the locals will try and help you when you look lost. When you lose something here, why even bother to look in the lost and found? In Japan, your lost item would be left right where you lost it! In plain view of hundreds, so you could return and reclaim it. Our society has changed and I am not sure why.

When I am fishing a stream, nothing spells inconsiderate better than finding beer cans and food wrappers strewn across the banks. Better still, you are fishing your favorite spot and someone else comes up and starts fishing close enough to concern you about your return lane while casting! The Federation of Fly Fishers (FFF), Trout Unlimited (TU) and Project Healing Waters Fly Fishing (PHWFF) not only teaches you about fly fishing but also encourages courtesy and manners in doing so. Fish are a natural resource and even though they replenish themselves (despite humans messing with their environment), they should be viewed as precious and we should strive to protect them and their environment.

I have done a few stream reclamation projects and have been amazed at what we will throw into the water without a second thought. I have also been more amazed at what the stream looks like and the fish population in them a few years later. If we all do our part, however small, it will help us to preserve these natural resources for our enjoyment, our children and their children's enjoyment. So, show your courtesy and conservation, even when there is no one watching.

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