Fishing in India—Hereditary trades—The boatmen and fishermen
of India—Their villages—Nets—Modes of fishing—Curiosities relating
thereto—Catching an alligator with a hook—Exciting capture—
Crocodiles—Shooting an alligator—Death of the man-eater.
Nor only in the wild jungles, on the undulating plains, and
among the withered brown stubbles, does animal life abound in India; but the
rivers, lakes, and creeks teem with fish of every conceivable size, shape,
and colour. The varieties are legion. From the huge black porpoise, tumbling
through the turgid stream of the Ganges, to the bright, sparkling, silvery
shoals of delicate chillooahs or poteeahs, which
one sees darting in and out among the rice stubbles in every paddy field
during the rains. Here a huge
bhowarree (pike),
or ravenous coira, comes
to the surface with a splash; there a raho, the
Indian salmon, with its round sucker-like mouth, rises slowly to the
surface, sucks in a fly and disappears as slowly as it rose; or a pachgutchea, a
long sharp-nosed fish, darts rapidly by; a shoal of mullet with their heads
out of the water swim athwart the stream, and fiir down in the cool depths
of the tank or lake, a thousand different varieties disport themselves among
the mazy labyrinths of the broad-leaved weeds.
During the middle and about the end of the rains, is the best
time for fishing; the whole country is then a perfect network of streams.
Every rice field is a shallow lake, with countless thousands of tiny fish
darting here and there among the rice stalks. Every ditch teems with fish,
and every hollow in every field is a well-stocked aquarium.
Pound the edge of every lake or tank in the early morning, or
when the fierce heat of the day begins to get tempered by the approaching
shades of evening, one sees numbers of boys and men of the poorer classes,
each with a couple of rough bamboo rods stuck in the ground in front of him,
watching his primitive float with the greatest eagerness, and whipping out
at intervals some luckless fish of about three or four ounces in weight with
a tremendous haul, fit for the capture of a forty-pounder. They get a coarse
sort of hook in the bazaar, rig up a roughly-twisted line, tie on a small
piece of hollow reed for a float, and with a lively earth-worm for a bait,
they can generally manage in a very short time to secure enough fish for a
meal.
With a short light rod, a good silk line, and an English hook
attached to fine gut, I have enjoyed many a good hour's sport at Parewah. I
used to have a cane chair sent down to the bank of the stream, a punkah, or
hand fan, plenty of cooling drinks, and two coolie boys in attendance to
remove the fish, renew baits, and keep the punkah in constant swing. There I
used to sit enjoying my cigar, and pulling in little fish at the rate
sometimes of a couple a minute.
I
remember hooking a turtle once, and a terrible job it was to land him. My
light rod bent
like a willow, but the tackle was good, and after ten minutes' hard work I
got the turtle to the side, where my boys soon secured him. He weighed
thirteen pounds. Sometimes you get among a colony of freshwater crabs. They
are little brown brutes, and strip your hooks of the bait as fast as you
fling them in. There is nothing for it in such a case but to shift your
station. Many of the bottom fish—the ghurai, the saourie, the
hornet (eel),
and others—make no effort to escape the hook. You see them resting at the
bottom, and drop the bait at their very nose. On the whole, the hand fishing
is uninteresting, hut it serves to while away an odd hour when hunting and
shooting are hardly practicable.
Particular occupations in India are restricted to particular
castes. All trades are hereditary. For example, a tatmah, or
weaver, is always a weaver. He cannot become a blacksmith or carpenter. He
has no choice. He must follow the hereditary trade. The peculiar system of
land-tenure in India, which secures as far as possible a bit of land for
every one, tends to perpetuate this hereditary selection of trades, by
enabling every cultivator to be so far independent of his handicraft, thus
restricting competition. There may he twenty lobars, or
blacksmiths, in a village, but they do not all follow their calling. They
till their lands, and are de
facto petty
farmers. They know the rudiments of their handicraft, but the actual
blacksmith's work is done by the hereditary smith of the village, whose sun
in turn will succeed him when he dies, or if he leave no son, his fellow
caste men will put in a successor.
Nearly every villager during the rains may be found on the
banks of the stream or lake, angling in an amateur sort of way, but the
fishermen of the Behar par
excellence are
the mullahs;
they are also called Gonhree,
Been, or Muchooah. In
Bengal they are called Nilcaree, and
in some parts Baeharee, from
the Persian word for a boat. In the same way muchooah is
derived from much, a
fish, and mullah means
boatman, strictly speaking, rather than fisherman. All boatmen and fishermen
belong to this caste, and their -villages can be recognised at once by the
instruments of their calling lying all around.
Perched high on some bank overlooking tbe stream or lake, you
see innumerable festoons of nets hanging out to dry on tall bamboo poles, or
hanging like lace curtains of very coarse texture from the roofs and eaves
of the huts. Hauled up on the beach are a whole fleet of boats of different
sizes, from the- small dugout, which
will hold only one man, to the huge dinghy, in
which the big nets and a dozen men can be stowed with ease. Great heaps of
shells of the freshwater mussel, show the source of great supplies of bait;
while overhead, a great hovering army of kites and vultures are constantly
circling round, eagerly watching for the slightest scrap of offal from the
nets. When the rains have fairly set in, and the fishermen have got their
rice fields all planted out, they are at liberty to follow their hereditary
avocation. A day is fixed for a drag, and the big nets are overhauled and
got in readiness. The head mullah, a
wary, grizzled old veteran, gives the orders. The big drag-net is bundled
into the boat, which is quickly pushed off into the stream, and at a certain
distance from shore the net is cast from the boat. Being weighted at the
lower end, it rapidly sinks, and, buoyed on the upper side with pieces of
cork, it makes a perpendicular wall in the water. Several long bamboo poles
are now run through the ropes along the upper side of the net, to prevent
the net being dragged under water altogether by the weight of the fish in a
great haul. The little boats, a crowd of which are in attendance, now dart
out, surrounding the net on all sides, and the boatmen beating their oars on
the sides of the boats, create such a clatter as to frighten the fish into
the circumference of the big net. This is now being dragged slowly to shore
by strong and willing arms. The women and children watch eagerly on the
bank. At length the glittering haul is pulled up high and dry on the beach,
the fish are divided among the men, the women fill their baskets, and away
they hie to the nearest bazaar, or if it be not bazaar or
market day, they hawk the fish through the nearest villages, like our
fish-wives at home.
There is another common mode of fishing adopted in narrow
lakes and small stream*, which are let out to the fishermen by the Zemindars
or landholders. A barricade made of light reeds, all matted together by
string, is stuck into the stream, and a portion of the water is fenced in,
generally in a circular form. The reed fence being quite flexible is
gradually moved in, narrowing the circle. As the circle narrows, the
agitation inside is indescribable; fish jumping in all directions—a moving
mass of glittering scales and fins. The larger ones try to leap the barrier,
and are caught by the attendant mullahs, who
pounce on them with swift dexterity. Eagles and kites dart and swoop down,
bearing off a captive fish in their talons. The reed fence is doubled back
on itself, and gradually pushed on till the whole of the fish inside are
jammed together in a moving mass. The weeds and dirt are then removed, and
the fish put into baskets and carried off to market.
Others, again, use circular casting nets, which they throw
with very great dexterity. Gathering the net into a bunch they rest it on
the shoulder, then with a circular sweep round the head, they fling it far
out. Being loaded, it sinks down rapidly in the water. A string is attached
to the centre of the net, and the fisherman hauls it in with whatever prey
he may be lucky enough to secure.
As the waters recede during October, after the rains have
ended, each runlet and purling stream becomes a scene of slaughter on a most
reckless and improvident scale. The innumerable shoals of spawn and small
fish that have been feeding in the rice fields, warned by some instinct,
seek the lakes and main streams. As they try to get their way back, however,
they find at each outlet in each ditch and field a deadly wicker trap, in
the shape of a square basket with a T-shaped opening leading into it,
through which the stream makes its way. After entering this basket there is
no egress except through the narrow opening, and they are trapped thus in
countless thousands. Others of the natives in mere wantonness put a shelf of
reeds or rushes in the bed of the stream, with an upward slope. As the water
rushes along, the little fish are left high and dry- on this shelf or
screen, and the 'water runs off below. In this way scarcely a fish escapes,
and as millions are too small to be eaten, it is a most serious waste. The
attention of Government has been directed to the subject, and steps may be
taken to stop such a reckless and wholesale destruction of a valuable food
supply.
In some parts of Purneah and Bhangulpore I have seen a most
ingenious method adopted by the mullahs. A
gang of four or five enter the stream and travel slowly downwards, stirring
up the mud at the bottom with their feet. The fish, ascending the stream to
escape the mud, get entangled in the weeds. The fishermen feel them with
their feet amongst the weeds, and immediately pounce on them with their
hands. Each man has a gila or
earthen pot attached by a string to his waist and floating behind him in the
water. I have seen four men fill their earthen pots in less than an hour by
this ingenious but primitive mode of fishing. Some of them can use their
feet almost as well for grasping purposes as their hands.
Another mode of capture is by a small net. A flat piece of
netting is spread over a hoop, to which four or five pieces of bamboo are
attached, rising up and meeting in the centre, so as to form a sort of
miniature skeleton tent-like frame over the net. The hoop with the net
stretched tight across is then pressed down flat on the bottom of the tank
or stream. If any fish are beneath, their efforts to escape agitate the net.
The motion is communicated to the fisherman by a string from the centre of
the net which is rolled round the fisherman's thumb. "When the jerking of
his thumb announces a captive fish, he puts down his left hand and secures
his victim. The Bauturs,
Nepaulm, and
other jungle tribes, also often use the bow and arrow as a means of securing
fish.
Seated on the branch of some overhanging tree, while his keen
eye scans the depths below, he watches for a large fish, and as it passes,
he lets fly his arrow with unerring aim,
and impales the luckless victim. Some tribes fish at night, by torchlight,
spearing the fish who are attracted by the light. In Nepaul the bark of the Hill
Sirces is
often used to poison a stream or piece of water. Pounded up and thrown in,
it seems to have some uncommon effect on the fish After-water has been
treated in this way, the fish, seemingly quite stupefied, rise to the
surface, on which they float in great numbers, and allow themselves to be
caught. The strangest part of it is that they are perfectly innocuous as
food, notwithstanding this treatment.
Fish forms a very favourite article of diet with both
Mussulmans and Hindoos. Many of the latter take a vow to touch no flesh of
any kind. They are called Kuntlucs or
Baghuts, but
a Baghut is
more of an ascetic than a Kunthee. However,
the Kunthee is
glad of a fish dinner when he can get it. They are restricted to no
particular sect or caste, but all who have taken the vow wear a peculiar
necklace, made generally of sandal-wood beads or nccm beads round their
throats. Hence the name, from kunth, meaning
the throat.
The right to fish in any particular piece of water is let out
by the proprietor on whose land the water lies, or through which it flows.
The letting is generally done by auction yearly. The fishing is called a shilkur, from shal, a
net. It is generally taken by some rich Bunneah (grain
seller) or village banker, who sublets it in turn to the fishermen.
in some of the tanks which are not so let, and where the
native proprietor preserves the fish, first-class sport can be had. A common
native poaching dodge is this : if some oil cake be thrown into the water a
few hours previous to your fishing, or better still, balls made of roasted
linseed meal, mixed with bruised leaves of the 'sweet basil,' or
toolsee plant,
the fish assemble in hundreds round the spot, and devour the bait greedily.
"With a good eighteen-foot rod, fish of from twelve to twenty pounds are not
uncommonly caught, and will give good play too. Fishing in the plains of
India, is, however, rather tame sport at the best of times.
You have heard of the famous maliseer—some
of them over eighty or a hundred pounds weight? "We have none of these in
Behar, but the huge porpoise gives splendid rifle or caibine practice as lie
rolls through the turgid streams. They are difficult to hit, but I have seen
several killed with ball; and the oil extracted from their bodies is a
splendid dressing for harness. But the most exciting fishing I have ever
seen was—what do you think?—Alligator fishing! Yes, the formidable scaly
monster, with his square snout and terrible jaws, his ponderous body covered
with armour, and his serrated tail, with which he could break the leg of a
bullock, or smash an outrigger as easily as a whale could smash a jolly
boat.
I must try to describe one day's alligator fishing.
"When I was down in Bhaugulpore, I went out frequently
fishing in the various tanks and streams near my factory. My friend Pat, who
is a keen sportsman and very fond of angling, wrote to me one day when he
and his brother "Willie were going out to the Teljuga, asking me to join
their party. The Teljuga is the boundary stream between Tirhoot and
Bhaugulpore, and its sluggish, muddy waters teem with alligators—the regular
square-nosed mugger, the
terrible man-eater. The nakar or
long-nosed species may be seen in countless numbers in any of the large
streams, stretched out on the banks basking in the noonday sun. Going down
the Koosee particularly, you come across hundreds sometimes lying on one
bank. As the. boat nears them, they slide noiselessly and slowly into the
stream. A large excrescence forms on the tip of the long snout, like a huge
sponge; and this is often all that is seen on the surface of the water as
the huge brute, swims about waiting for his prey. These nakars, or
long-nosed specimens, never attack human beings—at least such cases are very
very rare—but live almost entirely on fish.
I remember seeing one catch a paddy-bird on one occasion near
the junction of the Koosee with the Ganges. My boat was fastened to the
shore near a slimy creek that came oozing into the river from some dense
jungle near. I was washing my hands and face on the bank, and the boatmen
were fishing with a small hand-net, for our breakfast. Numbers of attenuated
melancholy-looking paddy-birds were stalking solemnly and stiltedly along
the bank, also fishing for theirs. I
noticed one who was particularly greedy, with his long legs half immersed in
the water, constantly darting out his long bill and bringing up a hapless
struggling fish. All of a sudden a long snout and the ugly serrated ridgy
back of a nakar was
shot like lightning at the hapless bird, and right before our eyes the poor
paddy was crunched up. As a rule, however, alligators confine themselves to
a fish diet, and are glad of any refuse or dead animal that may float their
way. But with the mugger,
the loach, or
square-nosed variety, "all is fish that comes to his net." His soul delights
in young dog or live pork. A fat duck comes not amiss; and impelled by
hunger he hesitates not to attack man. Once regaled with the flavour of
human flesh, he takes up his stand near some ferry, or bathing ghaut, where
many hapless women and children often fall victims to his unholy appetite,
before his career is cut short.
I remember shooting one ghastly old scaly villain in a tank
near Eyseree. He had made this tank his home, and with that fatalism which
is so characteristic- of the Hindoo, the usual ablutions and bathings went
on as if no such monster existed. Several women having been carried off,
however, at short intervals, the villagers asked me to try and rid them of
their foe. I took a ride down to the tank one Friday morning, and found the
banks a scene of great excitement. A woman had been carried off some hours
before as she was filling her water jar, and the monster was now reposing at
the bottom of the tank digesting his horrible meal. The tank was covered
with crimson water-lilies in full bloom, their broad brown and green leaves
showing off the crimson beauty of the open flower. At the north corner some
wild rose bushes drooped over the water, casting a dense matted shade. Here
was the haunt of the mugger. He
had excavated a gloomy-looking hole, into which lie retired when gorged with
prey. My first care was to cut away some of these bushes, and then, finding
he was not at home, we drove some bamboo stakes through the bank to prevent
him getting into his Maun, which
is what the natives term the den or hole. I then sat down under a goolar tree
to wait for his appearance. The goolar is
a species of fig, and the leaves are much relished by cattle and goats.
Gradually the village boys and young men went oft' to their ploughing, or
grass cutting for the cows' evening meal A woman came down occasionally to
fill her water-pot in evident fear and trembling. A swarm of
minus (the
Indian starling) hopped and twittered round my feet. The cooing of a pair of
amatory pigeons overhead nearly lulled rne to slumber. A flock of green
parrots came swiftly circling overhead, making for the fig-tree at the south
end of the tank. An occasional raho lazily
rose among the water-lilies, and disappeared with an indolent flap of his
tail. The brilliant kingfisher, resplendent in crimson and emerald, sat on
the withered branch of a prostrate mango-tree close by, pluming his feathers
and doubtless meditating on the canity of life. Suddenly, close by the
massive post which marks the centre of every Hindoo tank, a huge scaly snout
slowly and almost imperceptibly rose to the surface, then a broad, flat,
forbidding forehead, topped by two grey fishy eyes with warty-looking
callosities for eyebrows. Just then an eager urchin who had been squatted by
me for hours pointed to the brute. It was enough. Down sank the loathsome
creature, and we had to resume our attitude of expectation and patient
waiting. Another hour passed slowly. It was the middle of the afternoon, and
very hot. I had sent my toledar off
for a "peg" to the factory, and was beginning to get very drowsy, when,
right in the same spot, the repulsive head again rose slowly to the surface.
I had my trusty No. 12 to my shoulder on the instant, glanced carefully
along the barrels, bat just then only the eyes of the brute were visible. A
moment of intense excitement followed, and then, emboldened by the extreme
stillness, he showed his whole head above the surface. I pulled the trigger,
and a Meade shell crashed through the monster's skull, scattering his brains
in the water and actually sending one splinter of the skull to the opposite
edge of the tank, where my little Hindoo boy picked it up and brought it to
me.
There was a mighty agitation in the water; the water-lilies
rocked to and fro, and the broad leaves glittered with the water drops
thrown on them; then all was still. Hearing the report of my gun, the
natives came flocking to the spot, and, telling them their enemy was slain,
I departed, leaving instructions to let me know when the body came to the
surface. It did so three days later. Getting some chumars and domes (two
of the lowest castes, as none of the higher castes will touch a dead body
under pain of losing caste), we hauled the putrid carcase to shore, and on
cutting it open, found the glass armlets and brass ornaments of no less than
five women and the silver ornaments of three children, all in a lump in the
brute's stomach. Its skull was completely smashed and shattered to pieces by
my shot. Its teeth were crusted with tartar, and worn almost to the very
stumps. It measured nineteen feet.
But during this digression my friends I'at and Willie have
been waiting on the banks of the "Teljuga." I reached their tents late at
night, found them both in high spirits after a good day's execution among
the ducks and teal, and preparations being made for catching an alligator
next day. Up early in the morning, we beat some grass close by the stream,
and roused out an enormous boar that gave us a three mile spin and a good
fight, after Pat had given him first spear. After breakfast w got our tackle
ready.
This was a large iron hook with a strong shank, to winch was
attached a stout iron ring. To this ring a long thick rope was fastened, and
I noticed for several yards the strands were all loose and detached, and
only knotted at intervals. I asked Tat the reason of this curious
arrangement, and was told that if we were lucky enough to secure a
mugger, the
loose strands would entangle themselves amongst his formidable teeth,
whereas were the rope in one strand only he might bite it through; the
knottings at intervals were to give greater strength to the line. We now got
our bait ready. On this occasion it was a live tame duck. Passing the bend
of the hook round its neck, and the shank under its right wing, we tied the
hook in this position with thread. "We then made a small raft of the soft
pith of the plantain-tree, tied the duck to the raft and committed it to the
stream. Holding the rope as clear of the water as we could, the poor
quacking duck floated slowly down the muddy current, making an occasional
vain effort to get free. We saw at a distance an ugly snout rise to the
surface for an instant and then noiselessly disappear.
"There's one! " says Pat in a whisper.
"Be sure and not strike too soon," says Willie.
"Look out there, you lazy rascals!" This in Hindostanee to
the grooms and servants who were with us.
Again the black mass rises to the surface, but this time
nearer to the fated duck. As if aware of its peril it now struggles and
quacks most vociferously. Nearer and nearer each time the black snout rises,
and then each time silently disappears beneath the turgid muddy stream. Now
it appears again; this time there are two, and there is another at a
distance attracted by the quacking of the duck. We on the bank cower down
and go as noiselessly as we can. Sometimes the rope dips on the water, and
the huge snout and staring eyes immediately disappear. At length it rises
within a few yards of the duck ; then there is a mighty rush, two huge jaws
open and shut with a snap like factory shears, and amid a whirl of foam and
water and surging mud the poor duck and the hideous reptile disappear, and
but for the eddying swirl and dense volumes of mud that rise from the
bottom, nothing gives evidence of the tragedy that has been enacted. The
other two disappointed monsters swim to and fro still further disturbing the
muddy current.
"Give him lots of time to swallow," yells Pat, now fairly mad
with excitement.
The grooms and grass-cutters howl and dance. Willie and I dig
each other in the ribs; and all generally act in an excited and insane way.
Pat now puts the rope over his shoulder, we all take hold,
and with a "one, two, three!" we make a simultaneous rush from the bank, and
as the rope suddenly tightens with a pull and strain that nearly jerks us
all on our backs, we feel that we have hooked the monster, and our
excitement reaches its culminating point.
What a commotion now in the black depths of the muddy stream!
The water, lashed by his powerful tail, surges and dashes m eddying whirls.
He rises and darts backwards and forwards, snapping his horrible jaws,
moving his head from side to side, his eyes glaring with fury. We hold
stoutly on to the rope, although our wrists are strained and our arms ache.
At length he begins to feel our steady pull, and inch by inch, struggling
demoniacally, he nears the bank. When once he reaches it, however, the
united efforts of twice our number would fail to bring him farther. Bleeding
and foaming at the mouth, his horrid teeth glistening amid the frothy,
blood-flecked foam, he plants his strong curved fore-legs against the
shelving bank, and tugs and strains at the rope with devilish force and
fury. It is no use—the rope has been tested, and answers bravely to the
strain; and now with a long boar spear, Pat cautiously descends the bank,
and gives him a deadly thrust under the fore arm. With a last fiendish glare
of hate and defiance, he springs forward ; we haul in the rope, Pat nimbly
jumps back, and a pistol shot through the eye settles the monster for ever.
This was the first alligator I ever saw hooked ; he measured sixteen and a
half feet exactly, but words can give no idea of half the excitement that
attended the capture. |