Foreword
to Unlocking The Seacrets 1994
by Ron Calcutt
| In 1993 I
went along with Peter Pakula to observe one of the game fishing schools he
then conducted in Fiji. He had a mixed bunch of student fishermen aboard,
some who had everything to learn, and one who, to me seemed to have
nothing to learn. He was sharp, very experienced, and he knew the ins and
outs of fishing tackle as well as anybody I had ever fished with.
So why was he there? He'd never caught a marlin, even though
he'd tried desperately hard and put in enough trolling hours to have caught
half the marlin swimming about off the cast coast of Australia. He was there
specifically to learn how to catch We had a bad run on that trip, with the whole fishing area
totally shut down. Peter wasn't specially fussed about it. "Don't
worry," he told the angler. "You'll I don't know that he convinced either of us with that
statement, but I did have to admire his confidence. As it turned out, the angler went home, caught his
first "Happens all the time," says Peter with a
grin. We talk about that trip a lot these days, as we do quite a bit of writing
together and are both inclined to be analytical Peter told me that it was often the very good anglers who found it hardest to make the transition from whatever they were doing to becoming good marlin fishermen "Their fishing systems are so good, and so proven, they don't make the little adjustments they need to make to catch billfish", Pete says. The little adjustments. That's what it always gets down to - the little things. There is never one big, single answer to becoming good at any form of fishing. It's a trade you learn, and like any trade, you have to get every little step of the process right, or the end result is something that looks right, but doesn't work. This book is about little things. Lots and lots of little things. Some even trivial, but you can't overlook any of them. Catching big fish is a matter of putting a complex mosaic of knowledge to work. When you watch someone doing anything really well, the first thing you say is "He makes it look so easy", and it is. But it's only easy after you've done the hard work and learned all of the little secrets. It is a common fault with top fishermen that they will
pass on as much of their knowledge as they can without passing on the stuff that
makes all the difference. Probably one of the most focused people I know, Peter has the unique capacity to be driving his mind at one hundred miles an hour while his body is in relaxation mode. A lot of the special talent of that mind is in the pages that follow. I commend you to read this through cover to cover, then go back and take each page apart for the detail, and compare those details with the way you do things now. Adjust you fishing to accommodate those details, and you too may find yourself with enough captures to write a book, or at least a magazine article. Enjoy. Ron Calcutt
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