A Booke of fishing with Hooke & Line, and of all other instruments there­unto belonging.

Another of sundrie Engines and Trappes to take Polcats, Buzards, Rattes, Mice and all other kindes of Vermine & Beasts whatsoeuer, most profitable for all Warri­ners, and such as delight in this kinde of sport and pastime.

Made by L. M.

LONDON. Printed by Iohn Wolfe, and are to be solde by Edwarde White dwelling at the little North doore of Paules at the signe of the Gunne.

Firſt the knowledge …

First the knowledge of angling with the Hooke and Lyne.

HEre will I declare briefly vnto you, how to angle with the hooke & lyne, in what times best, and in what pla­ces of the water to take fish. First in standing pooles, ye shall angle where the water is somthing déepe. There is no great choise of any place where it is any thing déepe, either in poole or o­ther standing water: but in a riuer, ye shall angle best where it is déepe and cleare by the ground, being grauell or clay without any mudde or wéedes, and in whirling wa­ters, or in a couert, as vnder a hollow banke or rootes of trées, or long wéedes floting aboue on the water, all these places are troublesome: also it is good angling in déepe stiffe streames, or in falles of waters and weares, and in fludde gates, and mill pooles, and it is good whereas the water resteth by the banke, or where the streame runneth nigh thereabout, being déepe and cleare by the ground, or any o­ther place where ye may sée any fishhoue aboue in the wa­ter, or hath any other féeding place to resort, or on that side the water where the winde hath no great power.

What times best to angle.

HEre shall ye vnderstand what time of the day is best to angle, from the beginning of May, vnto the mo­neth of September fish will byte. The best angling to take fish, is earely in the morning from foure of the clock vntil it it be eight a clocke, other be méetly, but not so good as in the morning: also the euenings be indifferent good to angle, if it be some what calme withall, or els not good, the winde blowing from the South or West.

Also if it be a cold whistling winde in a darke lowring [Page 4] day, for the darke louring weather is much better to angle in: then in a cleare sunny day, and from the beginning of September vnto the end of Aprill, ye shall spare no time of the day to angle, and likewise many poole fish will byte best in the mid day about noone. If ye shall sée any time of the day, the Troute, or Grayling leape, ye may then angle to him a double worme, according to the same month, and if the water doth ebbe and flow, the fish in some place will byte best at the ebbe, and in some places at the floud, accor­ding to the places of rest, as behind pillers and arches of bridges, or such like suckering places in the most quiet water.

In what wether to angle in.

HEre ye shall vnderstand in what wether ye shall best angle as aforesaide in the darke louring day, when the winde bloweth southly from the South or West: in the Summer season when the sunne is very hoie, it is then naught to angle, but from September vnto Aprill, it is then good in a faire sunny day, the winde being then good: if it haue any part of the Orient or East, it is then naught to angle, for they will not byte, or when it is a great winde, snow, raine, or haile, or in a great tempest of thunder, or lightening, for it feareth them, or els in a swooly hote we­ther, all these times are not good to angle for to take fish.

Of twelue lets in taking fish.

YE shall here vnderstand there be twelue manner of impediments or lets which causeth a man to take no fish, without other cunning that may happe by casualtie. The first is if your harnesse or lynes be not fitly made▪ the second is, if your baites be not good nor fine: the third is, when that ye angle not in the byting time: the fourth is, if that your fish be fearefull of the sight of man: the fift is, if the water be very thicke, white or redde by any floud late [Page 5] falen: the sixt is, if the fish for colde doe not stirre abroade: the seuenth is, if the wether then be too hote: the eight is, if it be in rainy wether: the nynth is, if then haile or snow do fall: the tenth is, if it be in any tempest: the eleuenth is, if then it be a great winde: the twelfth is, if the winde blow from the East, for that is worst, and commonly neither winter nor summer the fish will then byte: the West and North windes be good, but the South winde best of all.

To take the Salmon.

THe Salmon is a gentle fish, but he is cumbrous to take: for commonly he is but in déepe places of great riuers, and commonly in the middest of the riuer: he is in season from March vnto Michaelmasse, and ye shall angle to him with a red worme, from the beginning to the en­ding, and with the bobbe worme that bréedeth in the dug­hill: also there is a soueraigne baite that bréedeth on the water docke: the Salmon byteth not at the ground, but at the flote or aboue: ye may also take him with the dubbe worme at such time when he leapeth, but it hath seldom séene, and ye shall take him in like manner as ye doe take the Trout, or Grayling, or the Dace.

For the Troute.

THe Troute is in season from March vnto Michael­masse, he vseth commonly a cleane grauely ground, and in a streame: ye may angle to him at all times with a ground lyne, lying or runniug, sauing in the leaping time, then with the dubbe flye, and earely in the morning with a running ground lyne, and further in the day with the flote lyne. Also yce may angle to him, in March with a Menowe hanged on your hooke by the nether parte without anye flote or plumbe, drawing it vppe and downe in the streame till ye féele him fast, but if ye angle to him with the flye, ye shall strike when he is a foote and [Page 6] more from your baite, for the commeth so fast ye may in the same time angle to him with a ground lyne, and bayted with a red worme, for that is a good sure baite, and is most vsed. Also in March, Aprill, May, September and Octo­ber take the Menow on your hooke: in December, Ianua­rie and Februarie drag with the bobworme at the ground: in Iune, Iuly and August, fish with made flyes on your hooke: on the vpper parte of the water, for that is a sure baite and is most vsed.

In Aprill take the red worme, and also of Iuneba, other­wise called seuen eyes, or the great canker worme that bréedeth in the barke of a great trée, and the red snaile. In May, take the stone flye or Caddis worme, and the bobbe worme vnder the Cowtorde: also ye may take the silke worme, and the baite that bréedeth on a Fearne leafe.

In Iune take the red worme and nippe of his head, and put it on your hooke, and a codworme before. In Iuly take the great red worme, and the codworme together. In Au­gust take the flesh flye, and the great red worme, and the fat of bacon, and binde it about your hooke. In Septem­ber take the red worme, and the menow. In October, take the same, for they are speciall good for the Troute in all times of the yeare, from April vnto September, the Trout leapeth, then angle to him with a dubbed or armed hooke according to the saide monethes, for hee is strong in the water.

For the Grayling.

THe Grayling, otherwise named Vmbre, ye may angle for him as ye doe for the Troute, and these are commonly his baites: in March and in Aprill ye shall take the red worme: in May yee shall take the gréene worme, and asurall grayled worme, and the Docke canker, and the worme on the hawthorne: in Iune, the baite that bréedeth betwéene the barke and the trée of the Oke: in Iuly, the baite that bréedeth on the Fearne leafe, and the great red worme, and nippe of his head, and put it on your hooke [Page 7] with the Codworme before: in August the red worme and the docke worme, and all the yeare after vse chiefly the red worme.

For the Barbyll.

THe Barbell is a subtill and a straunge fish to take, and very daintie to take his baite: these are commonly his baytes, in March and in Aprill ye shall angle to him with fresh chéese laide on a borde, and so cut it in small péeces square, the length of your hooke: then take a candle and burne it or smeare it on the end at the point of your hooke tillit looke yelow: then binde it on your hooke with Flet­chers silke, and make it rough like a welbede worme, and this is verie good for all somer season: but in May and Iune ye shall take the Hawthorne worme, and the great redde worme before: in Iuly the red worme for a chéefe baite, and the Hawthorne worme together, and also the worme that bréedeth in the water dog leafe, and the yong Hornet worme together: in Angust and for all the yeare, take the tallow of a shéepe and soft chéese of each alike, and grinde or scrape them well and small together, till it waxe fine and tough, then put a little wheate flower, and make it into little pellets, and this is a good baite to angle at the bottom, and sée that it doe sinke alone in the water, or els it is not good for this purpose.

The Carpe.

THe Carpe also is a straunge and daintie fish to take, his baites are not well knowne, for he hath not long béene in this realme. The first bringer of them into En­gland (as I haue béene credibly enformed) was maister Mascoll of Plumsted in Sussex, who also brought first the planting of the Pippin in England: but now many places are replenished with Carpes, both in poundes and riuers, and because not knowing well his chéefe baites in each mo­ueth, I will write the lesse of him, he is a straunge fish in [Page 8] the water, and very straunge to byte, but at certaine times to wit, at foure a clocke in the morning, and eight at night be his chiefe byting times, and he is so strong enarmed in the mouth, that no weake harnesse will hold him, and his byting is very tickle: but as touching his baytes, hauing small knowledge by experience, I am loth to write more then I know and haue prooued. But well I wote, the red worme and the Menow bee good baites for him in all times of the yeare, and in Iune with the cadys or water worme: in Iuly, and in August with the Maggot or gen­tyll, and with the coale worme, also with paste made with hony and wheate flower, but in Automne, with the redde worme is best, and also the Grashopper with his legs cut off, which he wil take in the morning, or the whites of hard egges stéeped in tarte ale, or the white snaile.

The Cheuyn.

THe Cheuyn is also a warie fish to take, and very feare­full: In March he will byte at the redde worme at the ground, for commonly he will byte at the ground and some­what déepe at all times of the yeare, in Aprill, the cadyee or ditch canker, and the canker that bréedeth in the barke of a trée, and the worme that bréedeth betwéene the barke and the Oke trée: also the red worme, and the young frogge his legges and féetè cut off, also the stone Cadyce flye, and the bobbe worme vnder the cowturd, likewise the redde snaile: in May, the baite that bréedeth on the Ozyar leafe, and the docke canker together put vpon your hooke, and the baite that bréedeth on the ferne leafe, also the eodde worme, and a baite that bréedeth on the hawthorne, and the worme that bréedeth on the oke leafe, and also the silke worme, and the coddeworme together: in Iune, take then the Crekets and the Dor flye, and also the red worme, the eade cut off, and a codde worme before, also the worme in the Oziar leafe, and young frogges, the féete cut off by the body or by the knée, also the baite on the hawthorne, and [Page 9] the codworme together, and the dunghill grubbe or worme and a great Grashopper: in Iuly, the Grashopper, and the humble Bée in the medow the waterest, also young wasps and white young Hornets taken in their combes, and the greate branded flye that bréedeth in pathes of medowes, and the flying Pysmyars, which be in the pismyar hilles: in August, take the Colewort worme, and the Gentyll or Magot vntill Michaclmasse, and in September, take then the red worme, and these baites when ye may get them, which is, Cheries, young Myse not haired, and the sow worme that bréedeth in postes of the house.

The Breame.

THe Breame is a noble fish counted and a daintie, he is good to take, he is a strong fish in the water, ye shall angle to him from March vnto August with the redde worme, and then with the Butterflye, and the gréene flye, and also with the baite that bréedeth among gréene réede, and a worme that bréedeth in the barke of a dead trée, and to take young Bremets, take the Gentils or Maggots, and from August all the yeare after yee shall take the red worme, and if ye angle for him in the riuer, ye shall then take of browne bread, for that is good, yet some doe vse in Aprill and May, the worme that bréedeth on the Elme and willow, and chewed bread is very good, and all other baites vsed for the Cheuyn, but specially young waspes.

The Tench.

THe Tench is a fish that féedeth at the bottom, and most parte of the yeare among the mudde, and most he stir­reth in the monethes of Iune and Iuly, and in other times of the yeare but little: the Tench is an euill byter, and very subtill to take with the angle, his common baites are these, for all the yeare they take browne bread tosted and smea­red [Page 10] with hony in likenesse of a buttered toste, also they take the great red worme, and for a chiefe baite, take the blacke bloud in the hart of a shéepe, and mixe it with flower and hony, and temper them all together something softer then pappe or paste, and annoint therewith your red worme on your hooke: it is very good both for this kinde of fish, and for other also, and they will byte thereat much the better at all times.

To take Pearch.

THe Pearch is a daintie fish and passing wholesome for a man, he is also a frée and gréedy byter: these are his baites, in March they take the red worme, in Aprill, the bobbe worme vnder the cowdung, in May, the hawthorne worme and the codworme, in Iune the baite that bréedeth in an olde hollow oke, and the great canker: in Iuly the baite that bréedeth on the Ozier leafe, and the great hobbe­worme that bréedeth in the dunghill, and the flyeboate worme that bréedeth on the wéede raggewort, and the cod­worme: in August, then take the red worme and the Mag­gots or gentils, and the Menow tyed by the lippe, and for all the yeare after, ye shall take the red worme, for that is best.

The Roche.

THe Roch is a wholesom fish and easie to take with the angle, for he is a ready byter: these are his baites: in March ye shall take the red worme, in Aprill, the bobbe worme vnder the cow dung, in May, the baite that brée­deth on the oke leafe and the flying Emmat, and the bobbe worme that bréedeth in the dunghill: in Iime the flying Ante, and the baite that bréedeth in the Ozier, and the codworme: in Iuly, the worme in the flagge roote, and ye shall take of house flyes, and the baite that bréedeth on the oke, and the worme that bréedeth in the small nutte, and also the gentils, till Michaelmasse, and after Michaelmasse take the fatte of Bacon. Another speciall baite, take faire [Page 11] wheate and séeth it like farmantie: then take it out of the water and drie it, then frie it with hony, and good store of saffron, and then put it on your hooke, and the fish will byte thereat maruellous fast But before ye angle, ye shall cast into the water a fewe crummes of bread, or take some trummes and fry them with some hony, and mixe it with saffron, and sée ye frie it not too much, for this is good and a chieft baite.

The Dace.

THe Dace is a gentle fish to take, and quicke at the vayte, hee biteth all the sommer me the toppe of the water, and they angle to him without the flote in March, his bayte is the red worme, in Aprill. the bobbe worme vn­der the cow torde, in May, the docke canker, and the bayte that is vnder the slowe thorne, and the worme on the oake leafe: in Iune, the codworme, and the bayte that breedeth on the Ozyer, and the white worme in the dunghill: in Iuly then take house flyes and the slyes that doe breede in pysmyre hilles: also the codde worme and gentilles or ma­gots, and those vse vntill Michaelmas, and if the water then becleare, ye shall take fish when other take none: and from that time foorth, take baytes for him as ye do for the Roch, for commonly of their bayts and byting be all alike.

The Bleke.

THe Bleke is a little fish in byting, and commonly hee bytes not nie the bottome, but aboue and in the middest of the water. His baytes from March to Michaelmas, are the same baytes which are written afore for the Roch. And also the Dace, sauing for all the sommer season, angle for him asmuch as you may with the house flie, & for the win­ter season, ye shall angle to him with Bakon flesh, and o­ther baytes made méete for his purpose, as hereafter yee shall more vnderstande thereof.

The Ruffe.

THe Ruffe is a holesome fish & good to byte, and ye shall angle to him with the same baytes, in all the moneths of the yeare, as I haue tolde you before of the Perch, for these two fishes are in eating and féeding all alike, sauing that the Ruffe is not so bigge as the Perch, for they are commonly alwayes lesse of growth, but the red worme is chiefe for them both.

The Flounder.

THe Flounder is also a holesome fish for sicke folkes, and he will be infresh waters and riuers, he is free in by­ting, but a subtill byter after his manner, in nibling long ere he take the bayte: and commonly when he sucketh his meate, he feedeth at the ground, and therefore ye must an­gle to him with alying ground line: and they vse for him but one manner or bayte which is the red worme, for that is the common and chiefest bayte for him, and all manner of fish.

The Googing.

THe Googing is a good and a holesome fish, he is a readie byter, and byteth commonly at the ground, & his bayts through out the yeare are these: the red worme for the chie­fest, also the codde worme and the gentell: and ye must an­gle to him with a flote or eorke, and let alwayes your bayt be within two fingers or an inch of the bottome or lesse, or else for to dragge on the grounde, for so it is best and most soonest to take them. He vseth in déepe places with cleane sand or grauell ground at the bottome, as at wayers, brid­ges, and miltayles.

The Menow.

THe Menow is a small fish and a bold byter, and byteth commonly at the bottome, as the Googine: it is ahole­fome fish to eate if he be gauld. For when he shineth in the [Page 13] water, he is then bitter, though his bodie be small: and he is a great rauening byter, and will haue the bayte before o­ther fish: ye shall angle to him with the same baytes as ye doe for the Gogin, sauing they must be small. And with a small hooke, or else ye shall often be deceiued by them: some angles to them with a line of two hookes or three, two to­gether and on other hooke aboue: they will be in all shalow places as in ditches, and such like.

The Yeele.

THe Yéele is a gréedie féede, and hee byteth alwayes at the bottome, ye shall see commonly holes in the bottom of the water, if ye put in your hooke there, yee shall soone haue him byte if he be there, and he will holde very harde a long time, ye must therefore holde your line stiffe, and hee will yéeld at length if ye plucke and striue with him hastely ye are like to loose him. And when he lyeth in a hole, it shall be best for to angle to him with your proch hooke, as is shewed after, but when you angle to the bottome for the Gogin, ye shall oft times take the Yeele when that he run­neth abroad, as often they will specially in the euening. The great red worme is the chiefest bayte for him, or a Menow, or any péece of gutte, or such like.

The Pyke.

THe Pyke is a common deuourer of most fish, where he commeth for to take him, ye shall doe thus. Take a cod­ling hooke, well armed with wyer, then take a small Roch or Gogin, or else a Frogge a liue, or a fresh Hearing, and put through your armed wyer with your hooke on the end, and let your hooke rest in the mouth of your bayte, and out at the tayle thereof, and downe by the ridge or side of the fresh Hearing, and then put your line thereto, and drawe it vp and downe the water or poole, and if he see it, hee will take it in haste, let him go with it a while, and then strike [Page 14] and holde, and so tyre him in the water. Seene doe put the hooke in at the checke of the bayte, and foorth at the tayle: but when ye will lay your lyne, then must ye put a plum­met of leade vpon your line, a yarde from your hooke, and a flote in the middest betwéene the leade and your bayte, that it sinke not to the bottome, for then the yéeles will eat your baite away. Ye may lay in your baites without flots and often ye may speede of pykes: and if you will sée a good sport in a pond where as there is store of Pykes, you shall put in a Goose, and put a frogge a liue on a hooke, and tye it with a strong pockthreed (to the Goose foote) a yeard long or more, and in short space ye shall see good snatching and tugging betwéene the Pyke and the goose. An other maner in taking the Pyke there is: ye shall take a liue Frogge, & put him on your hooke at the necke betwéene the skinne and the bodie on the backe part, and put a flote as is afore­saide, then cast it in a riuer or pound, where ye thinke the Pyke haunteth, and ye shall soone take him: and the best laying or angling for him, is towardes night. Also another maner is to take him: take the same baite aforesaide, and put it into a safetida, and then cast it in the water with a long line and a hooke, & ye shall not fayle of him soone after.

An other baite for him: Take Boares grease a safetida, neppe, so boile altogether, then take a Roch, or other small fish, and drie it in your bosome: and take and annoint him with the foresaide oyntment, and then put him on your hooke, and cast it into the water, and you shall spéede: also some doe vse to dragge for the Pyke with a bleke, Roch, or Gogin, in drawing it vp and downeithe water, sometimes aboue, and sometimes beneath, for so he will soonest come, if he see it, and some anglers do put the hooke in at his gill, and out at his mouth, and so drawes the bayte, as though he did flie from the Pyke, which is taken for the better way to make him more eger to take it.

The Loch, and the Millers thumbe.

THe Loch and the cull, or Millers thumbe, they are good and wholsome fish, they feede at the bottome, and lye [Page 15] most part in weedes, rootes, and holes in bankes, and to angle for them, ye must lay to the bottome, they do seldome byte at an hooke, but the red worme is their chiefest bayte that I do knowe for them, for their foode is commonly at the bottome, in sucking such as lies on the bottome of the water.

The manner of feeding and preseruing your quicke baites.

NOw I will tell you how you shall féepe and kéede your quicke baites, which is, you shal féede and kéepe them al in general, but euery maner by himself, with such things as they breede in, and vppon, and so long they be quick and newe, so long they are fine and good, but when they bee once dead, they are then nothing worth, out of these be ex­cepted thrée broodes or kindes, that is to wéete, of hornets, humble bées, and waspes, which ye shall bake them after the bread is drawen out of he ouen, and then dippe their heads in blood, and let them so dry, and also for the magots when they be bred, and waxe great with their natural fée­ding, yée shall continue and feede them, (surthermore) with sheepes tallowe, and with a cake made of flower, and ho­ny, which will cause them to be more greater, and when yée haue cleansed them in a blanket bagge with sand, kéepe it hotte vnder your gowne, or other warme thing two howers or three, then they wil be best to your purpose, and ready for to angle with, and for the frog, when yee angle with him, yee must cutte off his legges by the knées, and also the grasse-hopper, his legges and winges by the body, all other made baites I will here let passe, but vse them as yee thinke good.

Baites to last all the yeare.

HEre I will speake of certaine baites to last al the yeere. The first is made of beane flower, and leane fleshe of [Page 16] the hippes of a cony, or of a catte, with virgin waxe, and shéepes tallow, so beate them in a morter, and then tem­per them at the fire, with a litle clarified hony, and so make it vppe in small balles, and therewith yée may baite your hooke according to the quantity, and this is a good baite for all manner of fishe, that vseth the freshe waters.

Another.

Take the suet of a shéepe, and chéese, of each like quan­tity, and bray them together long in a morter, then take flowre and temper it therewith, and then delay it with hony, and so make balles thereof. and this is a special baite fo the barbell also.

Baites for fi [...]eat fishe.

THe baites for great fishe, yée shall kéepe in minde this rule, that is, whensouer yée doe take a great fishe, yee shall open the maw of him, and looke what yee finde there­in, make that your baite for that time, for that is alwaies best and most surest. There is many other making of baites, but for lacke of knowledge therein, I wil here passe them ouer, and some not so needefull as necessary as these aforesaide.

Of twelue kindes of made Flies to angle, for the trout, in Sommer with other fishe.

THere hath beene vsed twelue maner of flyes, made and sette vnto the hookes to angle withall, on the top of the water, the which Flies are to angle for the grailing and darce, and chiefest for the troute, and also for the chub, like as now ye shall here me tell and declare, each by him selfe, the counterfeiting of them.

First for the dunne Fly.

1 The dun Fly (in March) the body is made of dunne woolle, and the winges of the partridge feathers.

[Page 17] 2 Also there is another dunne Fly made, the body of blacke wooll, and the winges is made of the blacke drakes feathers, and of the feathers vnder the winges of his taile.

The stone Fly.

3 The stone Fly (in Aprill) the body is made of black wooll, made yellow vnder the winges, and vnder the tayl, and so made with the wings of the drake.

The ruddy Fly.

4 The ruddy Fly, in the beginning of May, is a good Fly to angle with aloft on the water, the body is made of redde wooll, lapt about with blacke silke, and the feathers of the winges of the drake, with the feathers of the red ca­pons taile, or hakell.

The yellow Fly.

5 The yellow Fly (in May) is good, the body made of yellow wooll, and the winges made of the redde cockes hackell or taile, and of the drake littid, or coulered yellow,

The blacke Fly.

6 The blacke Fly or lowper, (in May) the body is made of blacke wooll, and lapt about with the herle of the peacockes taile, the winges are made of the winges of a browne capon, with his blew feathers in the head.

The sad yellow Fly.

7 The sad yellow Fly (in Iune) the body is made of blacke wooll, with a yellow liste of either side, & the wings taken of the winges of the bozard, bound with blacke brac­ked hempe.

The More Fly.

8 The moorerish Fly is also good, made with the bo­dy of duskish wooll, and the winges made of the blackishe male of the drake.

The tawny Fly.

9 The tawny Fly is good at Sainct Willams day, or vnto midde Iune, the body is made of tawny wooll, and the winges made contrary, one against the other, made of the whitishe maile of the wilde drake.

The waspe Fly.

[Page 18] 10 The waspe Fly (in Iuly) the body is made of black wooll, and lapped about with yellowe thréede, & the wings are made of the feathers of the bozard.

The shell Fly.

11 The shell Fly is good at Saint Thomas day, or midde Iuly, the body is made of gréene wooll, and lapped about with the herell of the peacocks taile, and the winges made of the winges of a bozard.

The darke or drake Fly.

12. The darke drake Fly (in August) is good, the bo­dy is made of blacke wooll, and lapped about with blacke silke, his winges are made of the maile of the black drake, with a blacke head. Thus are they made vpon the hooke, lapt about with some corke like each Fly afore mentioned.

Here followeth how to couller your lines, to angle with.

NOw to learne how to couler your lines of heare accor­ding to the couler of each water and season, in this wise, first yée shall take the haire of a white horse taile, the longest and strongest yée can get, the rounder haire the better it is. Then yée shall deuide it sixe partes, and yée shall couler each part by him selfe, as yellow, gréene, brown tawny, russet, and the duske couler. And to make a good gréene, take a quart of small ale, and put it into a panne, and put thereto halfe a pound of Alum, and so put therein your haire, and let it boile softly halfe a hower, then take forth the haire and let it drie, Then take a pottel of wa­ter and put it in a panne, and put therein too hand full of Mary golds, or of wixen, and then pressè it with a tile stone and so let it boile softly halfe an hower, and when the scum is yellow, then put in your haire, with halfe a pounde of coperes beaten into fine pouder, and so let it boile the space of halfe a mile way, then take it downe, and let it kéele the space of fiue or sixe howers, and so take forth your hair and drie it, which wilbe the finest gréene for the water, also the [Page 19] more of coperas yée doe put in it, the gréener it wilbe, or ye may put in steed of it, of verdigrece.

Another kinde to make another gréene, as thus, ye shal put your haire vnto a wood fatte, of plunket couler and it wilbe a light couler, and to make it plunket couler, then ye shall séeth it in goldes or wixen, like as I haue afore­saide, vnto this couler ye shall not put coperas, nor verde­grece, for it will doe better without.

To make yellow haire.

FOr to make yellowe haire, ye shall séeth it with alum, as I haue afore shewed, and after that with goldes or wixen, without coperas or verdegrece. Also another yel­low ye shall make thus. Take a pottell of small ale and stampe there in thrée handfull of gréene walenut leaues, so put them together, and lay your haire therein, so long till yée haue it so déepe couler as you desire.

To make a russet.

FOr to make your haire russet, yee shall take a pinte of strong lie, and halfe a pound of soote, with a little of the iuice of walnut leaues, and a quantitie of alum, then boile them well altogether in a panne, then take it off, and when it is colde, put therein your haire, and so let it lie till it be a darke couler, so as ye will haue it.

To make a browne couler.

FOr to make your browue couler, ye shall take a pound of soote and séeth it in a quart of ale, and with so many of walnut leaues, as ye shall thinke good, and when they shall waxe blacke, take it off the fire, and put therein your haire, and so let it lie still therein till it be as browne as yée will haue it. Also another browne couler, take of strong ale, and soote, and temper them altogether, and therein [Page 20] put your haire, and let it remaine so the space of two daies and two nights, and it wilbe well.

To make a tawny haire.

FOr to make your haire a tawny couler, ye shall take a quantity of lime, with the like of water, and so put them together, and put your haire therein, and let it rest foure or fiue howers, then take it out, and put it in tannars ouse, for a day and it wilbe well.

Also ye shall kéepe the first part of your haire white stil, for your lines to be reserued for the dubbid hooke, to fish for the troute, and grailing, and also to make small lines, to angle for the roche, and the darce, and such.

Lines fit for each water.

HEre ye shall know in what water to angle, & for which season of the yeare your coulered lines will best serue.

The gréene colered line will serue in all cleere waters, from Aprill vnto September.

The yellow line is good to angle in euery water which is cleare, frō September vnto Nouember, for it wilbe like the wéedes, & other withered grasse which is in the water.

The russet line is best to angle withall in winter, and serueth best all the winter, vnto the end of Aprill, as well in riuers, as standing pooles.

The browne coulered line to angle withall, serueth for any water that is blacke, or of dedish couler, be it in riuers or standing waters.

Anglers and fishers.

THe tawny coulered line to angle withal, serueth best for those waters that are heathy, or moorish couler. Thus much for your lines and cullers. practised according to the couler of waters, wishing that all anglers would not angle in vnseasonable times, as from midde March to mid May, for then is the chiefest spawning time, and increase of fishe. [Page 21] A great number there is in this realm which gouerns wa­ters that spares no time to kill, nor cares for no time to saue, but takes at all times, which maketh freshe fishe so deare, and so scant in riuers and runiung waters. There is so many tillars, but [...]ew that seekes to saue and preserue them, they will not suffer the fishe so long as the time to spawne, but troubles the waters with nets and weles both night and day, and many Gentlemen lets their waters (as it should appeare) without any exception of tunes in the spring, for they make all times alike, not so much as spa­ring the spawning time, as March, Aprill and May.

Thus much touching anglers, and all other fishermen, for these thrée moneths aforesaid, which I will speak more hereof in their places.

To order the red worme.

VVHen ye gather them, put them into a boxe or bag, with wet mosse vnder and aboue, & they wil store therein, then take and put them in parcely, fenell, marge­ram, if ye change them ech night & put them in new dung or earth, yee may so kéepe them good to angle sixe wéekes.

Here followeth how to make your hookes.

IF yée make your hookes of wier, it is the easier to cut the bord, with a hard stéele knife and bend it (when ye haue made the barbe and the point) with a paire of plyars, or with an instrument, with a bowed wier in the end, and when ye haue bowed him cut the shanke of what length ye thinke good, then batter him at the end, and smooth it with your file, and it done, then heate him red in the fire, and quenche him in colde water, and it wilbe hard againe, if it be a stéele néedle ye must holde ít in the fire, till it be red hot, or ouer a candel, and then let it coole of himselfe, and so it wilbe soft as wier, and to haue the knowledge of this in­struments, and also how much your hookes and lines, shal­be [Page 22] for euerie fish, here may ye see the figures of your instru­ments and hookes.

pike hooke, the proch.

NOw when ye haue made thus your hookes of al sorts, then must yee set them to your lines, according in greatnes and strength, for euery fishe in this wise. Ye shall take small red silke, for a great hooke double, but twiste it not, and for small hookes, let it be single, and therewith fret your hookes in doubling your lines end, and your silke or haire on the inside of your double line, then fret or whippe it so faire as yée shall sée good, then next your hooke at the bought put throw your silke or haire, in going round about the hooke thrée tunes, then plucke first your silke or haire hard downe, and then your line, so cut it off harde by the end of your hooke (in setting your line on the inside of your hooke, and so it is done.

Now must yee know your hookes, how to angle for euerie kinde of fishe.

I Will tell you with how many sufficient haires yee shall angle for euery kinde of fishe. For the Meno with a line of one haire, for the small or wexing roche, the bleke, the gagin, and the ruffe, with a line of two haires, for the darce and the great roche, with a line of three haire, for the perche, the flounder, and the small breme, with a line of foure haires, for the cheuin chubbe, the breme, the tenche, and the yéele, with a line of sixe haires, for the troute, the grailing, the barbyll, and the great cheuin, with a line of [Page 23] nine haires, for the great troute, with twelue haires, for the sawmon, with a line of fiftéene haires, and for the pike, a chalke line, and browne it with your browne couler a­foresaid, and armed with a wier, as hereafter shalbe séene, when I speake of the pike.

To know how to plumbe your line.

YOur lines must be plumbed with leade, finely & thin beate, and lapt close about your line next your hooke, and the next leade to your hooke must be from your hooke a foote long or else somewhat more: and euerie plummet ought to be of the quantitie according to his line in bignes. There be thrée maner of plummets and plumbings, which is for a groundline lying, and another for a groundline run­ning: and the third line is the flote line set vpon the ground line lying, with ten plummets ioyning altogether, run­ning vpon the ground with xx. or tenne small plummets: and for the flote or corke line, leade or plumbe him so hea­uie, that the least plucke of any fish may plucke it downe, and make the leades or plummets sincke: for them, make them round and smooth, small and close to the line at both endes, that they fasten not on wéedes in the water, which will be a let to your angling, and for the more vnderstan­ding how they vse them, here shall be the figures.

[figure]

There is also a line without corke to fish with, which they vse in some places in sommer to angle for the Darce, the Blcke, and the Trowt, which they vse to cast his line into the water, and still to drawe the line, so that he may [Page 24] alwayes haue a sight thereof, and neuer let the hooke and bayte sincke to the bottome of the water out of sight: but alwaies casting and drawing or moouing the bayte, and kéeping it tight, that as soone as the fish doe bite, he giueth a tutch, and so kéepes his line tight, & lets the fish tyre her selfe on the hooke, and then takes her vp gently, this is the chiefest way to haue both line hooke & fish: for in snatching and striking hard when the fish bites, you put your line in daunger, or tearing the mouth of the fish, and sometimes so loose him.

There is also an other kinde of angling for the Pyke, which is calde dragging, your hooke beeing armed with wyer for shéering, when you would dragge for the Pyke, you shall take a small Roch, or a Gogin, and with a néedle of wood made thinne and flatte: put it in at the gille, be­twixt the skinne and the bodie of the Roch, and so foorth at the taile, and drawe your armed wiar and hooke after, and place your hooke close vnder his gill, and so dragge for him as ye doe for the Darce. If it bee with a single hooke you shall put in your armed wiar at the mouth of the Roch or Gogin, and it will serue well enough, as ye may here sée by figure, there is to drag with a liue Frogge, and tie the double hooke vnder his necke and hippes.

The single hooke.

[figure]

The double hooke vnder the gill.

[figure]

The armed hooke

[figure]

Ye may if ye lust, place your double hooke at the mouth of your fish as is declared of the single hooke: but then must you haue the bigger bayte, that the double hooke may lye or ioine close to the head of the baite, and then it will doe well.

There is another kinde of hooke, calde a proching hooke, which is made without a barke, this kinde or manner of [Page 25] hookes are to put in a hole in the banke, or betwixt two bordes at a bridge or water, or betwixt two stones where they lie open, for there commonly lieth the great Yeles, and there put in your proch hooke a little way, and if there bee any yéeles, they will take it anon: which proch, is wier whipt on a packethreedes ende, and couered with a great worme, and therewith proch into the saide holes, as by ex­ample for the better vnderstanding, [...]o here may you see the figures.

The proch vnbaited.

The proch hooke with­out out the rodde.

The rod bayted with a worme.

As soone as ye féele she hath the baite, plucke away your rodde, for it doth nothing but guide your proch into ye holes, and then draw softly your packthreed line, and hold a while and he will yéelde, if you do plucke hastely, he will holde so stiffe, ye shall breake your line, or teare his mouth: there­fore holde hard still, and at length he will yeelde, and come foorth. And where ye shall see any hole in the buttome of a brooke or riuer, there is like to lie an yeele, put there in your proch, and he will soone byte if he be there. Thus much for the order of the proch hooke to take the Yeele.

The manner of laying of hookes.

THere is also a kind of laying of hookes armed for pikes, in pooles and riuers, ye shall b [...]yte them as ye bayte the hooke in dragging for the Pyke: and here is to be noted of two maner of layings of hookes, the one way is to the bot­tome [Page 26] of the water without corke, and the other is with the flote or corke, to cast in your bayted hooke without a corke, it will sinke to the bottome, and then the yéele will haue it as soone as the Pyke: and if he cannot swallow it, he will byte away the baite by little and little: therefore to lay from the bottome is best for the Pyke, ye shal cast your bayted hooke and line with a corke, of what depth ye lust, for so it will not sinke to the bottome.

Also to lay for the yéeles, ye shall baite your hookes with menowes, gogins, or loches, great wormes and such like. And to sticke pooles in the bankes, with lines at the endes so that your baites may lie on the bottome of the water, for there the yéele will soonest take it, but lay not nigh roots of trées or such, for they will wrappe them so, ye shall ne­uer come by them.

Also let your lines be of good great packthréeke, sticking the saide poles or pinnes of wood in the bankes, and your lines to be of two or thrée fatham, some more, some lesse: & for your proch hooke to baite him with the great worme, or the menowe is best, or with a Loch, or small Gogin, so if a great yéele come, he will swallowe it hole. Thus much for laying of hookes for the Pyke and Yéele.

Also to take yéeles in winter, some haue vsed to lay in pondes and running waters, faggots of hay, with a bough of Willow put in the middest, and bayted with some gar­bage of foule or beastes, bound with two bondes, and to plucke it vp (after it hath lame two or thrée daies) with hooke or corde, and you shall haue yéeles therein: when it is a lande do but crush it with your foote and the yéeles will come out if there be any. If ye lay it in the middest of a ri­uer, you may plucke it into your boate. Thus you may take many yéeles in winter.

Here is how to saue and preserue fish.

FOr so much as I haue afore shewed certaine waies and practises how to take fish in riuers, pooles, and stand­ing [Page 27] waters. I will here declare certaine waies how for to maintaine fish, and the chiefest waies to saue and preserue them in riuers, pooles, and standing waters, against such deuourers and rauerers as hath and will destroy them, as Herne, the Dobchicke, the Coote, the Cormorant, the Sea-pie, the Kings fisher and such like: as also the Otter, who is a common destroter of pondes and standing waters, and a great deuourer of and spoyler of riuers, brookes, and running waters, which shall be declared in their places.

The Herne.

And first, to take the Hearne, which destroyes much young fish or other, if they come nigh the shallowe places or bankes: the Hearne is fearefull and subtill for to take, therefore some do bayte a hooke, or proch hooke with a Me­now or other small fish, or with the gobbet of some Yeele, then make your line gréene, or like the water where she hauntes in a shallow place or other where she resorts, there put in your pinne in the earth of the shallow water, and lay your baite so that she may wade halfe a féete déepe vnto it, for else the Kite or Crow will soone haue it, for shee will soone swallow it and so be taken.

The Otter.

They take the Otter or water Wolfe, in a wele made and deuised for the nonce, as shall be shewed in his place, which wele is not made in all points like vnto other weles, where he will eate the fish and come foorth againe safe be­fore he be drowned. Therefore there is inuented among the fisher men, a wele for to take him made with a double teme or tonuell, and against the vtmost teme within is set an yeirne like a gredyeirne with foure hooles staying and sliding vpon two round stickes, which must be set vpright in the wele before the teme, to holde vp the yeirne: which two stickes must be fast bound to the wele, both aboue and beneath, then must ye haue a good stiffe rod, the one ende shall be set ouer the wele to hold vp the gredyeirne or grate, and the other ende of the rodde, must reach ouer the inner teme, and a small oziar tied at that end of the rodde, which [Page 28] small Oziar must be made with a round knot, and so put downe vpon the ende of the nethermost Oziar in the midst of the inner teme, but a very litle way put on that when the Otter is within the first teme, he comes to the second where the fish is, and there he puts off the Oziar, and the rodde flirtes vp, and the gredyerne falles and stoppes the vtmost teme where he came in, and as soone as he heares it fall, he will turne backe, without touching any fish, gnawing at the gredyerne where hee came in, and so is drowned.

And when ye haue a wele of fish robbed with the Ot­ter, or your layer, of weles with fish spoyled and robbed with the Otter, there lay your Otter Wele, well bayted with fish, and so ye shall soone take him. Which Otter Wele must be made of good round Ozyars of the Hasell rodde or gore rodde, for those are the best. These Otter Weles are made at Twyford, by sides Reading. There be two of the Gootheriches which liues much by making of such, and other weles. Also the Otter wele is made at Dorney, by Windsor, of one called Twiner. If your O­tter wele be olde, and not strong, and if the Otter chaunce to breake it and scape, ye shall hardly take him of a long time after, for he is very subtill to be caught againe in such a wele. There be that hath prouided many wayes ere they could take him. Thus much heere for the setting of the Otter Wele, and here shall follow the saide Otter Wele, with his proportion how to be made and set, the more ca­sier to make them where as they haue not béene séene be­fore. To knowe if an Otter do haunt riuer or ponde, you must watch the waters in the night, then shall you heare him plunging and chasing the fish all night by ests and bankes [...]des, so watch or else your fish may be kilde and you know not how nor when.

Here followeth the Otter Wele.

[Page 29] The fashion of the Otter wele, with two handels aboue the better to lay him, he must be thrée quarters and more, betwixt teme, and teme in length.

[figure]

This figure vnder shewes the setting of the gredyerne, before the teme of the wele, and when he falles, to rest on two stiffe oziars on the lower part of the sayde teme, as ye make see aboue: but when ye shall set for tyle the saide gredyerne, it must be pluckt vppe aboue the mouth of the

[figure]

Teme, which temes mouth, all the oziars must be cut euen by the wreth, saue those two that must holde vp the gred­yerne beneath as ye may sée. Which mouth of the teme, must be betwixt vi. and vii. inches déepe, so that a good pre­tie dogge may creepe to [...] [...]oo little, the Otter will then gnaw the wele, also the [...] must fall easily [Page 30] on the two stirkes that stay him, and she gredierne to be broder then the mouth of the teme, which gredierne must be put in the wele when the wele is a making, because it can not be put in when it is made, except ye make it with playing ioyntes on the middle vane to folde, but on the one side of the gredierne, and so ye may set him in, and take him out when the wele is made, or when you will at any time. They doe vse to make him without any ioynts, but plaine and all flat barres, setting to foure round hoopes, of yeirne on the foure corners of the gredierne: which gredierne is made with fiue flat barres, and so vsed, waying about two pound weight, because it may fall the sooner.

For the Water-ratte.

THe Water-rat is a hurtfull vermin to kill fish, especi­ally Creuis, Loches, Culles, and Trowtes lying in holes of the banke. They will soone destroy much other fish and spaune in shallow riuers and brookes, to kill them it is hard to doe: but where as ye shall sée their path on bankes sides, there set a deadfall, for they do range abroad a nights like other Rats, and will be where as is corne milles, and fulling milles, to eate corne, and gnaw clothes, and liues much like to other Rattes, and will pill oziar barkes and such like. Also to take them in weles is hard, except the weles lie shallow, and nigh the toppe of the water by the banke: so a small Otter wele made for the nonce bayted, may possible deceiue them. They cannot tarrie long vn­der water, wherefore they will not hunt déepe, nor robbe weles if they lie déepe, for they commonly take fish nigh the toppe of the water. But some men doe thinke a verie good way to take them, that is: to pinne square bordes a­gainst the holes where they haunt, which bordes must haue a great hole in the middest, and set iust against her comming in or out, fast pinde to the bankes: then make a latch and set it on the out side of the borde, tyld as yon tyle the Foxe latch, as ye shall sée in his place: which hole in the [Page 31] borde on the nether part, ye shall set thrée or foure prickes of wyar to holde any thing that comes out or in. This pra­ctise may easely be made.

To lay poysoned baites, as péeces of chéese, flesh or such, and to straw the powder of Orsenike thereon, to be layde in ests, where other things come not. I knowe not what good it will doe, for whereas ye touch any thing with your bare hande, they will not lightly come at it. Thus much for taking the water Rattes or Otter.

To preserue spawne in spawning time.

A Chiefe way to saue spawne of fish, in March, Aprill, and May, is thus, ye shall make fagots of wheate, or rie strawe, all whole straw not bruised, or of réede, binde these faggots together with thrée bondes, and all about thereon sticke of young branches of willowe. Then cast them in the water among wéedes, or by the bankes, and put in each faggot two good long stakes, driuen fast to the ground, and let your fagots lie couered in the water halfe a yeard or more. So the fish will come a shed their spawne thereon, and then it will quicken therein, so that no other fish can come to destroy or eate it, and as they waxe quicke they will come foorth and saue themselues. Thus much for the preseruing of spawne in the spring and spawning time.: this is a good practise to preserue the spawne of all scaled fish. These fagots ye may make and lay in all riuers, poundes, or standing waters. Your sagots had néede to be a yeard and a halfe long, and bound with three bandes not hard, two bandes a foote from the endes, and an other bande in the middest, and lay them as I haue afore decla­red. Also some doe vse to hedge in corners in riuers, and pondes with willow, and thereon fish doe cast their spawne and so bréedes.

The manner of way to take Sea-pies.

[figure]

The Sea-pie is a foule that vseth the seas, and bréedes much in Ilands in the sea, and liues most by fish & wormes, and where as they vse in fresh riuers, they destroy much fish, young frie, and such as swimmes nigh the toppe of the water, and will be in shallow places of the water: and there they haunt to take and féede on them. Therefore the fisher men haue inuented a way howe to take them, which is: ye shall lyme two small Oziars, and binde the ends that are next the bayte, almost crosse wise. Then take an other short sticke, and binde the one end vnto your ends of crosse twigges as ye may sée afore, and put that short sticke through the fish or bayte. Then lay it on some wa­ter leafe, rushes, or such like in the midst of the riuer, and as soone as they shall sée it, they will take and flie away with it in their bylles, and soone they shall be lymed there­with.

The other way of laying these lymed twigges is, ye shall put a small short sticke in the bayte, as yee may sée a fore. And at the hinder ende tye a thréed an intch long, and to that thréed tie your lymed twigges, and when she takes and flies away with it, she cannot flie farre but she will be lyined, for the twigs will turne and touch her wings, and then she will fall. Thus ye may take many Sea-pies, both in sommer and winter, and the like way ye may take both Crowes and other Pyes, to take the Kyte therewith, [Page 33] he will hardly be lyined, because he takes the bayte in his féete, and the other takes it in their billes. Thus much here for the taking of the Sea-pie.

Here shall follow the knowledge how to re­plenish your fish pondes.

FOr to saue and maintaine in mayers, pooles, and stan­ding waters, for such as haue not riuers, it shall be good to saue, kéepe, and maintaine all such fish as may be nou­rished and bred in fresh waters: as Pyke, Breame, Tench, Prch, Troute, Darce, Roch, & such like, and the Carpe for one of the best, which hath not béene here in Englande but of fewe yeares past. The Trout will not like but in running and swift waters, and hard grauell at the bottom. The slymie fish is the Tench, the Seacod, and the Yéele, and yet they are cōmended for a good féeding meat for man, but many will disdaine the fresh yéele, and estéeme it as a flaggie and slymie meate, saying: he will gender with the water snake, which thing possible may be, but the yéele of the fresh riuer is tryed a good and holsome meate, you shall haue also the Lampre, and the Lamporne, which are called venemous fish of the Sea, but when they haue scraped and clensed them in the fresh running waters. Notwithstand­ing, they are then good and holesome meat. The excre­ments of standing pooles are frogges, which in many pla­ces being well drest, they eate like fish, and is calde a kinde of fish, and doe taste as well as a young poullet, for I tasted my part of many.

It is a good thing to haue plentie of fresh water fish, in riuers and pooles, and standing waters: and a great plea­sure for man sometimes to take with his angle a dish of fish in those waters whereas fish is plentie and well preserued, not to vse any other engins, but with the hooke: and by such meanes as the lawes of this realme doth permit and allow, not to vse fire, handguns, crossebowes, oyles, oint­ments, pouders, and pellets made to cast in the waters to [Page 34] stonny and poyson the fish, nor yet to vse all sortes of nets, and such as are deuourers of fish, as bow nets, casting nets, small trammels, shoue nets, and draught nets: which are destroyers of fish before they are growen to any bignesse. These are not méete to be vsed but of certaine Gentlemen in their seuerall waters, I would wish no running waters should be let to any fisher man, without order what mesh, what nets, he or they shall vse to fish with, and in what moneths of the yeare to refraine fishing, vpon paine to for­faite his lease and all such engins.

Also it shall be good for all Gentlemen and others, ha­uing the gouernment of any riuers, brookes, or standing pooles, to replenish them with all such kinde of fish as may there be preserued or bred, aswell of straying as others. There is a kinde of fish in Holand, in the fennes besides Peterborrow, which they call a poult, they be like in ma­king and greatnesse to the Whiting, but of the cullour of the Loch: they come foorth of the fenne brookes, into the riuers nigh there about, as in Wansworth riuer there are many of them. They stirre not all the sommer, but in win­ter when it is most coldest weather. There they are taken at Milles in Welles, and at wayers likewise. They are a pleasant meate, and some do thinke they would be aswell in other riuers & running waters, as Huntington, Ware, and such like, if those waters were replenished with them, as they may be with small charge. They haue such plentie in the fenne brookes, they féede their hogges with them. If other riuers were stored with them, it would be good for a common wealth, as the Carpe wich came of late yeares into England. Thus much for the fenne pult.

Of clensing your pondes from weedes.

IF you will haue profite of your fish, in your pondes and pooles, ye must haue a care alwayes to clense them from thrée yeare to thrée yeare, in taking away all wéedes, ru­shes, and flagges, for they doe greatly stuffe and trouble [Page 35] the fish, and makes them to be more slymie, and of a wor­ser taste. Likewise ye must sée alwayes for Otters and Water-rats, haunting your pondes and pooles: yee shall best know if there be any in the night season, for then they hunt abroad for fish: then séeke to take them by such means as afore mentioned, which else they will soone destroy all your fish. Also it is not good to suffer any to shute with guns nie your ponds or riuers, for it feares and astonish the fish greatly, and worst of all in spawning tune, and many will die [...]ereof: ye may watch the haunt of the Ot­ter and Ratte, and strike them if yee can with the trowte speare, which is a very good thing to kill them, if it be well done, for so many haue béene kilde.

Here shall be shewed a care of lauing your pondes in sauing the water where it is scant for to saue your fish aliue.

IN lauing your pondes and pooles, the greatest care is (if there be any scant of water) to kéepe and bestow it so, that the water which is cast foorth, may remaine nie the sides of your pondes and pooles, that ye may recouer it soone againe to saue the rest of your fish, while ye clense forth the wéedes and mudde, which will let the water to come quick­ly to the scoopes. Therefore it shall be best to clense the sides and bankes first of all: in hauing all such tooles readie, as shall be néedefull thereunto: as mattockes, spades, shoules, scauelts, scoopes, and such like: to dispatch it as quickly as ye can. And when the water is lower then the Rat-hole in the bankes, ye may set such engins afore their holes to kill them at their comming out as aforesaide, for they will lye alwaies in the holes aboue the water, to smother them in their holes ye shall hardly doe, if ye then let them scape, they will soone conuay them selues away in the night or before night, and will runne very swift. Thus much for lauing your pondes.

There is also a care alwayes to maintaine your pits and stuis with fish.

HOw your pits and stuis should bee vsed to kéepe fish in, your stues and pits ought to bee oft renued and helpt with great and small fish from time to time, and refreshed often with small fish among: for if ye doe alwaies take, and none put to, your store shall soone decrease. It shall be good also to put carefully your fish therein, both small and great, and sée that none be hurt if ye may, to put [...] Tench with them it shall do well. And it shall be very good husbandrie, to pricke and set about the handes, of willow, sallo, or al­der, which will be good to defend the heate in sommer, from your fish, and to auoide the colde in winter: but the falling of leaues will increase mudde greatly, and also stinch your pondes.

How to nourish your fish in pooles, mayers, and standing waters.

IT is most certaine, the fish which is in riuers, and run­ning waters, are at more libertie then those which are closed in pondes and pits: for those in running waters, the water bringeth to them alwaies some what to féede on, and there also the small fish doe nourish the great, but the fish inclosed can get no such thing. Therefore it shalbe good to cast vnto them of small fish, and of guts and garbage of fish and of beasts, and figges cut small, and nut curnels broosed, or broosed wheate, wormes, graines of bruinges, white bread, all sortes of salt fishes cut and hackt in small péeces, and such like. If your fish nourish and fat not with these, ye must féede them with the frettes or gubbins of market fish of the fishmongers: if yet they be leane, it shewes plaine they were taken from the seas, which fish are raueners, or they haue come from riuers nigh the seas, but the fish in pondes are restraint from those liberties. Therefore continually they must be fedde.

Of the taking of fish diuerse wayes.

THere is diuerse maner of wayes in taking fish, in some places according to the Countrie, and the na­ture of great waters is one, and of riuers and pooles, is an other where they inhabite: so likewise is the diuersitie of the fish. Also in fishing, some manner of fishing is in the Seas, an other manner is in swéete waters, an other ma­ner for great fish, an other maner for yéeles, other wayes for Roches and small fish, an other way for the Carpe, and such like. Now séeing there is so many diuersities in taking fish, it willl be hard to expresse and long to write. Where­fore here I leaue that knowledge to those that vse to fish, and sell in markets. In speaking here in generall of the commodities for the father and his famelie, in taking of fish for the common wealth, whereof the principall maner is, with nets, weiles, lines, and hookes. Thus I haue shewed of replenishing your pondes to haue plentie of fish, and clensing your pondes from wéedes, and a care for your emtie pondes, and how to maintaine your pits and stues with fish. Also to nourish the fish in your standing waters, and declaring of diuers waies in taking of fish. Thus much taken of Stephanus in French.

Pour Amorcer, or gather Tortues.

TAke Salarmoniacke eight drams, of Scalion Onions one dram, the fat of veale ten drams. So beate them to­gether, and being made in pellets like beanes, cast them by their haunt to the Tortues, and they will come themselues to the smell thereof, and so ye may take them.

To make it drie.

TAke the lées of strong wine mixt with oyle, and put it in a place where ye know it will drie, let it so re­maine till it waxe blacke, and they will come to the place, [Page 38] where the oile shall be put, and so ye may take them. Ye may take also Salarmoniack thirtéene drams, and the but­ter of goates milke eight drams, beate altogether, and make small soft pellets thereof, and therewith rubbe what graine, or small lynséede not broken, but dride: and they will féede there all about, and will not depart, and straite way ye may so take them.

To take Loches or small fish.

TAke the branne of wheate meale, two pound, of lenten pease, halfe a pound, mixe them together, and beate them with a sufficient quantitie of brine, and put thereto halfe a pound of sessame. Then shall ye part it in péeces, and throw them here and there: for as soone as ye haue thrown it in the water, all the small fish will come vnto it, and re­maine in one place, although they be 300. paces off. Also ye may take the bloud of an Oxe, Goate, Shéepe or of a Hogge, with the dung that is in the small guts of them. Also of time, peniryall, léekes, sauerie, margerum, garlick, with the lées of good wine, of each in like, with the grease or marow of the saide beastes, so much as ye séeme good: beate them a part, and then mixe them a like together, and so make small pellets thereof, and cast it where ye will haue the fish to come an houre before ye cast in your lines: or else take the bloud of a blacke Goate, the lées of good wine, of barley meale, all in like portion: beate them all together with the lites of a Goate, and then cut them in small péeces and make pellets thereof, and so vse them as aboue sayde.

Another way.

TAke halfe a pound of garlick, of burnt sessame as much, of pouliot, of organie, of time, great margerum, of sa­uerie, of wild stauisacre, of ech two and thirtie drams, of barley meale, one pound, of wheate as much, and of the barke of a Frankinsence trée thirtéen drams, worke all to­gether with branne, and cast it to the fish, and they will assemble thereabout.

To take Perch.

THe Perch is not so easily taken with hooke, nets, or bownet, but rather with proper baites made and vsed in a troubled water: therefore ye must make baites with the liuer of a Goate, and the snaile, or take the yellow but­ter flie which flyeth: of Goates whay, called fromage de cheureau of each foure drams, opopauicis two drams, hogges bloud foure drams, galbony foure drams, beate all well together, and sprincle it all ouer with pure wine, and make thereof small pellets, or as ye make perfumes, and drie them in the shade.

To take the Samon as well in the Riuer, as in the Sea.

TAke eight drams of Cockes stones, and the curnels of pine apple trée burnt, sixtéene drams: beate all together a like, till it be in maner of a meale. Another. Take the séedes of wilde Rue, eight drams: the fat of a veale, eyght drams: of Sessame, thirtéene drams, beate all together, and make small loaues thereof, and vse them as the other before mentioned. Thus much more taken from Stepha­nus in French.

To take much fish by a light in the night.

YE shall distill in a lembeck of glasse, a quantitie of glo­wormes that shineth in the night, with a soft fire, and put the distilled water into a thin viall of glasse, and there­unto put foure ounces of quicksiluer, that must be purged or past thorough leather, or Kidde skinne. Then stoppe the glasse that no water enter, and tie it in the midst of your bow net for breaking, and so cast it in the water, and the fish will soone come vnto the light, and couet to enter into the net, and so ye shall take many. And some doth suppose if ye doe but take a certaine of those glo-wormes, and put [Page 40] them in a thinne viole or glasse, and then stoppe it close, and tie it in the net, they will shine as well and giue as much light. But then I doubt they will not long be aliue with­out meate, except ye put herbes vnto them in the day and let them féede, and vse them in the night as before. So yée may reserue them for your purpose (I thinke) a long time.

To take Yeeles in the winter in haye or strawe bottles.

YE shall make long fagots of hay, wrapt about willow boughes, which ye shall put in the midst of your bottle or faggot of hay, and then sinke it in the déepe by the banke, and so let it lie two or thrée dayes, and tie a wythe or rope thereunto that ye may soone plucke it vp on land or boate: and so ye shall take yéeles therein good store, in a colde weather very good. And if ye baite or lay in your fa­gotte guttes or garbedge of a beast, yee shall be the more certaine to haue them in a small time.

How to breede and increase yeeles in riuers, pondes, and standing waters.

THe common saying among fisher men is, if ye wil haue in your pits and pondes (being of a swéete water) great plentie of Yéeles in few yeares, ye shall digge two round or square turfes, or so many as ye will haue, and cut them on a swéete ground, & a short grasse, a foote or more round or square turfes, whereon the dewe shewes most in the morning before the sunne doe rise. Then take them vp and clappe the gréene sides together one vpon another, and pin them fast together with prickes of wood. Then carrie and lay them softly in what pit or pond ye list, and ye shall sée experience. This is to be done in the moneth of May, by the dew then on the ground, and at no other time else of the yeare to be good.

The Gase for to catch Menowes.

[figure]

THis Gase, is a round net of small mesh, with a hoope of yeirne, or great wier halfe an intch about, and to let sinke in a ditch, or brooke which is not déepe, and so holde it a while by thrée strings like a ballans, with a loope in the toppe, and therein to put through a staffe or poale, and yée shall haue within a while so many Menowes which will come and gase at it, as will couer it: ye must hang a small plommet in the middest, to make it sinke. And also the roundes must be flat oyster shelles tyde to, and the squares must be scarlet or red cloth sowed on: your hoope and net, may be thrée quarters and a halfe of a yeard broad from side to side. Thus much for the Gase.

How to bobbe for yeeles.

THere is also a taking of yéeles with great wormes drawen through on a long thréede one by an other, and then feulded vp thrée fingers déepe, and then tyde aboue all [Page 42] together, and a bigge string tide thereunto, and fastened bnto a short poale, which ye shall holde in your hand. This is vsed to bobbe at the comming of a floud water, and at the ebbing water of any water that ebbes and flowes. Al­so it is vsed after a great raine in brookes and running wa­ters, ye must let your bobbe touch the bottome, and so vp with it softly againe, and so vse it still, and ye shall féele when any yéele doe bite: then pluck it vp not very fast, for then he will forsake the worme he hath hold of, and as soone as he féeles the ayre, he will léese his holde, therefore yée must haue a vessell on the water alwaies readie, that hée may fall therein. Thus much for the bobbing for yéeles.

The yeele speare to take yeeles.

[figure]

The Otter Speare.

THe Yéele speare is made with fiue thinne barres, cut in the sides with téeth, to holde that yéele that is within them, and made with thicker and rounder plates aboue to­ward the socket, which socket must be made strong, and therein put your poale or staffe, which they vse in mudde, riuers, and brookes, to take a dish of yéeles at pleasure: but it is euill to vse the yéele speare whereas there is Teech, or Carpe, for they will commonly lie in the mudde when the water is beaten or troubled, and thereby they may soone be striken and die thereof.

The Otter speare is vsed when a man hunteth the Ot­ter [Page 43] in riuers or brookes, when as a man shall chance to sée him vent aboue the water, then to throw the speare at him, which speare hath a line tide at the ende, and a small boxe fastened at the end of the line, that when yee haue stricken him, ye shall the sooner perceiue him where he diueth in the riuer. Or if ye chaunce to finde him lying out of the wa­ter, there to strike him, and let him go into the water, and so kill him.

To breede Millars-thumbes and Loches, in shallow brookes or riuers.

[figure]

THe fishes called Loches, and the other called Millars-thumbes or Culles, they alwayes féede in the bottome of brookes, and riuers. They are fish holesome to be eaten of féeble persons hauing an ague, or other sicknesse. These fish delight to be in sandie grauell in riuers and brookes, and they are very easie to be taken with small trauell, in remo­uing the stones where they lie vnder, for they cannot swim fast away. Therefore in certaine shallow riuers & brookes, they do vse to bréede, and saue them ye may in laying round heapes of pebble stones or flint, in shallow places of the saide riuers and brookes, halfe a foote déepe of water or lesse. [Page 44] Like as there is a shallow riuer running from Baream­stede to Chestum, and so to Chaue: also by Croyden and other places, wherein they might bréede of the saide fish great store, if they were so giuen. The like riuer runnes in Hampeshiere by sides Altum, increasing by diuerse springes, and runnes shallow in many placed, and by a cer­taine parish there called the Parson thereof hath tolde me, he hath had so many of the saide Culles and Lo­ches, to his tithe wéekely, that they haue founde him suffi­cient to eate Fridayes and Saterdayes, whereof he was called the Parson of Culles. This order of stones are laide hollow in shallow places lesse then halfe a foote déepe of wa­ter. Which fish among the saide heapes of stones doth there lie safe, and so bréedes: and there they are saued from the water Rats, and all other foules, which otherwise would still deuour them. These store of fish, men might haue in diuerse such like riuers in this Realm, if they would take the like paine, to lay such heapes of stones as is aboue set downe: which sheweth the maner of laying them round in the bottome, the circuit of two yeardes about, or as yée shall sée cause. Thus much I thought good to shew for the maintenance and bréeding of Culles and Loches. Also it is euident in other Countries, the great care they haue in preseruing their fish, especially in the spring: as in France, no fisher men or other, shall lay any engins in riuers or brookes in the night, as flewes, stalles, buckes, kéepes, weles, and such like, from mid March, to mid May: for then the fish doeth shed their spawne among wéedes and bushes, nor shall not beate the waters or brookes with any plonging poales, nor yet the fisher men to fish at no time, with any net vnder foure inches mash, because they shall not kill the small fish before they are well growen, vppon paine of forfaite and losse of all such engins. There is also prohibited, that no fish shall be taken and solde in markets, which are out of their season: as the Lampre and Lam­pornes, which are venemous in the Sea before they be scoured in fresh water, and not in season from mid March [Page 45] to mid September, for they will (being out of season) looke russet and speckled vpon their bellies. Also Oysters and Muskles, are not good from mid March, to mid September: and likewise Salmons and Trowtes, are in season from mid March to mid September, and after waxe out of sea­son. Smelts not in season from mid March to mid Septem­ber or after. Cockles and such are not kindly but in the monethes of March, Aprill, and May: all the rest of the yeare not holesome to be eaten or solde. Moreouer Darce, Roch, Perch and such like, are not kindly to be kilde from mid March, to the end of May: for in these times they doe cast their spawne, and then they will be rough and broken, scaled and pilde for a while, after they haue so cast their spawne. And being then out of season, they are not so hole­some nor yet good of liking. All these afore mentioned with all other which are out of season, are forbid to be taken and solde in markets, or otherwise priuely eaten, vpon the like penaltie afore mentioned. I would to God it were so here with vs in England, and to haue more preseruers, and lesse spoylers of fish out of season and in season: then we should haue more plentie then we haue through this Realme. Also I would wish that all stoppe nets, and drags with casting nets, were banished in all common riuers through this Realme for thrée moneths: as in March, Aprill, and May, wherein they take fish out of season as well as others, with great spoyles of spawne, both of great and small fish, for they vse such nets with small mesh, that kils all fish afore they come to any growth and good seruice for the common wealth. Who so euer doe preuent such, they shall doe good to the common wealth. And water Bayles which are ap­pointed to sée soo such nets in riuers, and running streames (which is thought) they neglect their duties, for they let the fisher men vse what nets they list, as the voyce goes: and Gentlemen which owes the waters lets them also a­lone, and the fisher men they say they pay such rents, they must take what they can, so herein are none y cares for the preseruing of the common wealth: whereby fish cannot in­crease, [Page 47] nor yet suffer to growe. So I leaue, wishing that carefull men were put in office, and such as fauours the common wealth, and all other put out that séekes for their owne profite onely. Then should wee haue within fewe yeares, much plentie of all riuer fish, and also a great spa­ring to flesh, if they would vse fish as they were woont on Frydayes, Saterdayes, and fasting dayes commanded by our Prince, and so truely kept of all people, from time to time.

The breeding of Creuis.

[figure]

THe fresh water Creuis, commonly liues and lyes in bankes and holes in riuers and brookes, and they are a holesome fish for all sickne and weake persons. They will east their spawne in the spring about the moneth of May, and will shed it on stones, & wéedes in the bottome, where­of most is eaten vp with yéeles and water rats, as some do suppose. Therefore it were not vnméete to make fagots of hole strawe to saue the spawne as aforesaide. Also they will soone be driuen with flouds downe the streame, in few yeares they will greatly increase, if they be not taken with mens handes, and kild with Rats for they will lie in holes and vnder stones, and wéedes, and so are soone taken: for they cannot flie fast away, If they be taken in May, it will be a great spoyle of their increase, for commonly then they doe shed their spawne. The Water rat is also a great [Page 46] deuourer of them lying in holes: and whereas many rats are, they cannot lightly prosper or increase there. Thus much for the fresh water Creauis. Yée may store any brooke or riuer with the Creuis, but especially he loues the sandie and grauely running waters.

The Kinges fisher.

THere is a bird which is a great destroyer of all young fry and small fish, and he is called the Kinges fisher: he is about the bignesse of a Larke, and doth commonly bréede in bankes, sides of riues and brookes, in the spring of the yeare: his feathers are gréene and blewe, and he will al­wayes haunt about the sides of riuers and brookes, where­as small fish is, and as soone as he hath caught a fish, he will straight way [...] to the next bough, and there will sit on a twigge and eate the fish, and so fetch an other. Thus he li­ueth by the deuouring of all sortes of small frie, such as he may take and carrie away. For to take this birde, they vse to marke where his haunt is, and there they set downe a bush or branch, and they put a limed twigge vnder the saide bush or branch: for so soone as he hath taken a fish, he will flie to the next bush and light on that vnder twigge ly­med, and so they take him. Also they say this bird, being dead, if he be hanged vp by the bill with a thréed in your house where no winde bloweth, his brest will alway hang against the winde, whereby ye may knowe perfectly in what qnarter the winde is at all times, both night and day. Thus much of the bird called the Kings fisher.

The Cormarant.

THe Cormarant is also a great destroyer of fish, hee v­seth the fresh waters, and will diue vnder the water, and will take and eate fish of thrée & foure yeares growth. How to take or destroy them I know not well, otherwise then to destroy their nests in bréeding time, whereas they [Page 48] bréede in Ilands, and rockes by the sea: some may be de­stroyed in riuers and pooles, with crossebow, or handgun, other wayes I haue not knowen or heard of, not with lime lines except it be in the night, and then they will pike them soone cleane againe.

The Dobchicke.

THe Dobchicke is likewise a water fowle, and they will be alwayes commonly on riuers and pooles, and they are nigh as great as the Teales, and are of cullour blacke, and they will commonly diue vnder the water to take young fish, as I haue séene in riuers & brookes. Howe for to take them, the fisher men some doe vse to lay on the water long lines of small thréede knit full of little corkes, a handfull a sunder on the line, and cut foure square like bigge dice, and so limed and fold on aracle, as I shall shewe here­after: and where they sée them haunt, they will spread the saide line afore them on the water, and then with their boats, driue them to the sayd line, and so many are taken. Thus much for taking the Dobchickes.

[figure]

This ra [...]le, turnes round of the middle staffe, and as ye sée the thréede limed with small corkes, that is fold thereon, [Page 49] so long as ye will haue it of length to lie on the water, and each corke to be but foure fingers a sunder, or lesse, shall suffice.

The More-coore or bauld Coote kils fish also.

THe More henne or bauld coote, liues likewise on wa­ters, and they also eate fish if they can take them. To kill or take these, I know no other way, but with lime, or with the gunne, or such like to kill them.

The making of a water lime, a verie good and a perfect way.

YE shall first wash your birdlime in running water, that no knots be found therein, nor yet motes, but pike them out as cleane as ye can in the washing. Then take and boyle it in a pot or skillet, and in the boyling put in a little rosome, with some fresh grease, or goose grease, and so let it boyle softly a pretie space in storing it stil. Then take off the same lime, and put it to a weat testorne in wa­ter, if it come with the lime, it is good, if not, boyle it lon­ger vntill ye sée that proofe. Also in stéede of rosom, ye may take white turpentine, for that is better. And this kinde of water lime, will holde both in water and frostie wether.

The Ospray.

THe Ospray is a bird like a Hawke, nie as bigge as the Tarcell of a goshawke, he liueth by fish, and is a great destroyer of fish: for I haue séene him take fish in the middest of a great ponde, they say he hath one foote like a Ducke, and the other like a Hawke, and as he flies nie o­uer the water, the fish will come vp vnto him. Howe to take him I know no other way but to watch where hee prayes to eate his fish, for he will flie to some trée there a­boutes, and there to kill him with the handgunne, which I haue séene in Hampshire. Thus much for the Ospray.

The tempering of bird-lime, and it will serue also well in water.

TAke a pound of bird lime, cleanse and wash it in run­ning water verie cleare that no knots be left therein. Then beate out the water and drie it againe. Then put thereto two spoonefuls of sharpe vineger, and so much goose grease as will make it subtill to runne: and put therto halfe a spoonefull of lampe oyle, and a litle Venice Turpentine. Then boyle all these together in an earthen leaden panne, and sturre it alwayes, and let it but bubble and play softly. Then take it off the fire, and so reserue it and vse it at your pleasure, warme it when you will haue the vse thereof.

Lime made of Misteltoo.

DYoscorides sayth, they do gather the berries in Autom­ne, in the full of the Moone, (for then they are of most force) and then they broose them, and so let them lie for a space and rotte, and then they wash them in running wa­ter, till they be cleane like other lime, and therewith they doe take birdes, as with other birde lime, made of Holly barkes.

A pretie way to take a Pye.

YE shall lime a small thréede, a foote long or more, and then tie one end about a péece of flesh so bigge as shée may flie away withall: and at the other end of the thréed, tie a shooe buckle, and lay the flesh on a post, and let the thréede hang downe, and when she flies away with it, the thréede with the buckle will wrappe about her, and then she will fall, so ye may take them.

FINIS
A Booke of Engines a …

A Booke of Engines and traps to take Polcats, Buzardes, Rattes, Mice and all other kindes of Vermine and beasts what­soeuer, most profitable for all Warri­ners, and such as delight in this kinde of sport and pastime.

[figure]

LONDON. Printed by Iohn Wolfe, and are to be solde by Edwarde White dwelling at the little North doore of Paules at the signe of the Gunne. 1590.

A hutch to take Polcats, as also other Vermin.

[figure]

THis manner of Engine is called of War­riners, a hutch, and it is made of bordes, foure square, to be remoued or to stande still, with two falling bordes at the endes: which two bordes must fall into two ry­gals on both sides of the endes for flipping [...]. Also there is two la [...]hes and strings tide to the fal­ling bordes on the endes to holde them vp, crossing vppon two pillers which are made fast on the vpper borde of the hutch, with a line made fast on the backe side comming o­uer the endes of the saide lathes downe to the bridge on the fore side. Which bridge is tyde within to the backe side or borde of the hutch an inch from the bottome borde. Some [Page 54] doe make them with another piller in stéede of the backe string, but this is as good a way, ye may chuse which way ye will haue it.

A latch trappe for the water Ratte, to be made of borde with a hole pinde against the Ratte­hole in the banke of brookes, pooles, or riuers.

[figure]

THe latch must be set no wider but two inches and a halfe hie, so that they must créepe thorow when [...] comes in or out: it may be set within the water, and ab [...] the water, where commonly they lie about all day, and come out toward night.

This is called the dead-fall for Polcats, or other Vermine.

[figure]

THis engine is called a dead fall, it is made with a square péece of timber or such like, waying about halfe a hun­dreth poundes or more, with a hole boared in the midst of the vpper side thereof, and therein a hooked crooke set fast. Also there is foure forked stakes which must be set fast in the ground, and laying thereon two cudgils a crosse, on which cudgils, ye shall lay a long staffe or poale to hold vp the dead fall by the crooch: vnder which crooch ye shall put a short cudgell, with a line made fast thereunto, which line reacheth downe to the bridge beneath: which bridge ye shall make within fiue or sixe inces broad, like those that are made for the foresaide hutch.

Also on both sides of this fall, ye may set it with borde, pale, or such like: either ye may hedge it with close rods, and to make it ten inches hie or more. The foure spreading corners, are made to shewe the lowe hedges, that no ver­mine shall passe so easily by, but come thorow the fall, and [Page 56] the passage must be made no wider then the fall is broade. Some Warreners do make no tay of the bridge behinde, but sets it loose against a pinne before the clicket, and so it stayes vpon the fall.

The latch or Foxe trap.

[figure]

THis Engine is called a Latch or Foxe trappe, it is made with a thicke péece of wood of two inches in the bottome, and so made taper wise vpwarde. There is also two other square péeces set on the endes of the bottome péece, and made with two regals for the latch to rise and fall in, as ye may sée by example: in turning on a pinne in the lower rigall at the hinder ende. Which latch with the clogge, must be made with his edge downeward, as the o­ther is vpward: then shall ye haue betwéene the latch, and the lidger, a small round sticke, tyde at the hinder end with a string, and passing thorow the foremost rigall, and at the ende thereof must be two or thrée small holes or nickes made for the pinne that must holde vp the latch with the clogge, and so soone as that sticke or bridge is put downe, the latch with the clogge falles, ye must bush aboue the latch, for any thing leaping ouer, whereas ye sée it poude­red. Your latch may be made halfe a yeard & more wide.

This latch is to set against a banke or other hill side.

[figure]

THis engine or latch, is called a dogge latch, almost like the other afore, but that his two pillers or postes are set fast in the ground, and there must be also a hole made within the latch on the inside of the banke or hill side, where the latch must be set: and therein yee may baite it with what baite ye will, for a dogge or other Vermine. Also vpon the vpper side of the latch, there is notches made one by an other all ouer. Then is there a barre in the toppe which runnes vpon a pinne, and runnes into euery notch, and holdes downe the latch, so that the sayde latch cannot rise, what soeuer be within it will holde him fast there, be it dogge, or other vermine: there is also a weight hanging at the end of the latch, to make it fall more quickly.

The latch trappe.

[figure]

THis engine is called a latch or brake trappe, it is made with foure thicke bordes or péeces of timber, in length thrée quarters of a yeard or lesse, ye may make them as ye shall thinke good, eyther to sit still in the earth, or often to be remoued. But if ye will make them to remooue, then must the vpper fallers be more heauier made. These foure péeces must be pind at both ends, and the two vpper bordes or fallers, must lie within the two neather, as ye may sée by example. Then is there within those neather bordes, a long bridge, which must be tide at the neather ende of the catch with a string, and that bridge hath foure holes at the other ende, for a pinne to put therein to beare and holde vp the two fallers. Which pinne is put into one of those holes of the saide bridge, and the other ende of the pinne, stayes vnder the great square pinne that is betwéene the fallers, and the string that is tide to that pinne, is tide aboue to a trounchin, which trounchin lyeth on two forked stakes, set [Page 59] in the ground, as ye may sée by example by the neather part of the trappe. Also the neather parts are rebated on the out side, and made edge wise vpward, and hedged on both sides as ye may sée. And to fall toward the hedge is best.

The foote trappe.

[figure]

THis engines is called Foxe trappe or foote trappe, be­cause it taketh all by the foote. It is made with a thicke borde or planke, of nine or ten inches broad. And common­ly a yeard and a halfe long, with a hole made in the middle, nearer the one end, then the other. Also the planke hath iiij. holes, at each end two, to stake downe fast the planke to the earth, that it be not pluckt vp: then there is a poale set, or trée bowed downe to the end of the planke, and to the end thereof is tide a strong line, which line must come vnder the ende of the planke, and drawne out at the foote hole, with a short strong clicket of wood tide thereunto with a short string, which clicket must be set against the nar­row place of the foote hole, and the other ende in the nicke [Page 60] on the falling board, which must stay against a short flat pinne of wood, which must be set vnder the planke where­as ye sée two swmall prickes, to holde vp the falling board: and to that also is tide a strong lingell or other line, which line is layd round about the hole of the foote bord or fall, on the planke, and couered all ouer with dust, sande, or earth, for feare of suspition. This trappe may be set against Fore holes, or other muce, with hedges on both sides the planke that he shall passe no other way, but on the borde. Also your falling bord must be broder vnder, then your hole.

The Wolfes trappe.

The square borded, and the poale, & pin in the top therof.

The whole trap with couer, platter, poale, and baite.

[figure]

THis Engine is called a Wolfe trappe or pitte. It is a large hole digged sixe foote square, and two yeards com­monly and a halfe wide from side to side, and borded all round, both bottome and sides vp to the toppe, with a poale set fast in the middest thereof, almost as hie as the toppe of the pitte. Then is there a pinne of yrne put through the middest of a large platter of wood or such like, and that pin set fast in the toppe of the sayde poale: and there vpon it is layde and made fast, some beastes liuer, or such like: or else [Page 61] a goose or ducke, which is tide fast thereon. Then towards night they make a traine vnto the trappe, and they couer the saide pitte with hurdles, bordes, or such like, round a­bout (sauing a space) and they lay of gréene turfes thereon, so that when the Wolfe, or Fore, doe come and finde the baite, they can not reach it, without they tread on the plat­ter, which plarter is set ticklish thereon, and as soone as he treads on the side, it tilts downe, and rise vp againe, and the Wolfe or other falles downe into the pitte: and if other doe come, they are serued the like. Thus much for the Wolfe trappe. For the Fore, if he annoy them, they will lay a péece of a shéepes liuer new, at his hole, and put there­in closoly of the pouder of rats-bane, which will so kill him. Also the pouder of Aconitum called in Latin, in English Wolfes bane, the pouder put or strowed on flesh will kill them. Touch them not with your bare handes, for they will finde it and forsake it.

The kragge hooke.

[figure]

THis Engine I call a dragge hooke, because it is made like a dragge, it is made of yeirne or great wiar, and [Page 62] turnes on the Weuell, like the weuell of a loggar, or like on a gray-hound coller. The husbandmen in France, will hang them on branches, of diuerse trées about their groundes, to take the Foxe, Wolfe, or dogge if he take it, but chiefely for the Foxe: they vse to hang them so hie from the ground, that a Foxe must leape at it, before hee can catch it. Which hookes are baired and couered with liuers of beastes, or other flesh, and when he catches the hooke in his mouth, he cannot deliuer himselfe thereof, but hangs and turnes about with the hooke in his mouth on the weuel and line: and hereunto they make traines with some gar­bage against night, as they commonly doe to other engins, and by this engin, they doe destroy many of their Foxes, which otherwise would deuour many of their Lambes, and poultrie. For men that dwelles me the sea side where rockes are, there the Foxe will be, there it shall do well to set vppe iebbets and hang your dragges thereon, and so shall ye destroy your Foxes in short time.

The Hare pipe.

[figure]

THis Engine is called a Hare pipe, because it is made hollow, they are commonly made for the hare, of pipes of Elder, of sixe or seuen inches long, and for the Foxes and dogges, they are made of yrne plate, nie ten or eleuen inches long, with two sharpe pikes in the mouth thereof, and the more they plucke and drawe, the more it strikes in and peirce the flesh of the beast. And also for the Foxe or o­ther such, it shall be good to arme the string or line with red wiar fer wéering. Which line, the one end is put in at a hole made in the pipe side, as ye may sée, and so drawne [Page 63] double out at the mouth of the same. The other end comes through the pipe, and is tide vnto some pinne set fast in the ground, or to some bough. They are commonly set in mu­ses where they passe through: but for the Foxe, they pitch the hare pipe in some places, at the mouth of his hole, when he is hunted or other wise, or in musis where he hauntes to meus houses in killing their lambes, pigges, or other poultrie. Then sée that ye stoppe all other passages there aboutes, so shall ye be sure to saue your poultre, or else to take him. Ye may make traines at your pipe hole, as is afore mentioned of the other.

The whippe or spring trappe.

[figure]

THis Engine, is called the whip, or spring, it is set thus: there is a string tyde vnto the end of some poale set fast in the ground, or to some trée: vnto the said string is made fast a small short sticke, with a nicke in the lower end ther­of, made thinne on the vpper side: then the poale is bowed [Page 64] downe with it, vnto an other sticke set fast in the grounde with a nicke also, and thinne edge vnder. Then shall yée ioyne both the nickes together, as ye may sée by example, as tickle as ye can. Then open the end of your string, set it in some muse, or where ye thinke good. And when anie Foxe or other thing doe plucke the saide vpper string a side, then the nicke slippes by, and the poale starts and so holdes him vp, as ye may easely sée by example. Thus much for the spring trappe. There is yearely kilde with Foxes in this Realme as many do iudge, of lambes tenne thousand, of poultrie twentie thousand, of Rabbets and Conies nie fortie thousand couple: besides young Faunes in many Parkes and Forests.

The double trappe to take Rattes or Mice.

[figure]

THis Engine or trap, it is almost made with a square borde in the bottome, and also aboue, and aqout fiue inches in height with a thicke borde in the middest, as yée may sée pointed with fiue nayles, and nayled fast to the [Page 65] vpper and neather borde, in parting the trappes. There is also two falles naylde with leathers on the vpper borde, which is holde vp and tilde with a string, which string hath a clicket or wedge, and is stayde on a short péece of woode, and so tilde with hooked wiar, which wiar goeth thorowe a bigge hole, and stayes on the vpper bord by a crosse wiar, and on the lower end of the crooked wiar the baite is put on within the trappe, at the further ende of the trappe: and there against ye may sée certaine wiars set from the vpper borde to the neather borde, to tice the Rats there to séeke to goe out. Which is thought yearely they destroy thorow England fortie quarters of corne.

A trappe or fall for Buzardes, and Kytes, with a hurdell.

[figure]

THis Engine is called a fall or trappe to take Buzardes and Kytes, which is after this sort, ye shall set a hur­dell on the ground where ye thinke good. Which hurdell is holden vp before with a crooked sticke, and that crooked [Page 66] sticke holden vp with a forked stick put vnder him, which forked sticke must stand loose on the ground, without the neather bridge or forked sticke. Also in setting vp the nea­ther end of the crooked stick that holdes vp the hurdell, must be made small and slightly put into the clift of the forked bridge and sticke: which forked sticke is made fast, and tide with two thréedes to the ground, vnder the backe of the hurdell, as ye may easely perceiue: and when yee doe tile or set it vp, it shall be good with the crooked stickes end, to let the bridge stande a handfull hie from the ground, and put therein the ende of your crooked sticke as tickle as yée can, that when any thing comes to take the baite and treades it downe, the hurdell falles suddenly on them.

The Basket fall.

[figure]

THis Engine is called the Basket fall to take Kytes and Buzardes, it is set and tylde in all thinges like vnto the hurdle before, with all thinges thereunto belonging. [Page 67] This Basket is commonly made nye thrée fatham about in the skirtes, and so hie that a man may well stande vp­right within him, The Warriners do commonly in some places vse (in Rabbet time) to set him in plaines, in war­rens, and in parkes, wheras Connies are bred, and so they take the Kyte and the Buzard, in this Basket.

The Iay trappe to set about corne fields, or orchards.

[figure]

THis Engine is called a Iay trappe: it is made with a poale of seuen or eight inches abount, and seuen or eight foote long or hie, set fast in the ground about your wheat, or other fruite. There is made in the saide poale two holes, one beneath and the other aboue: in the nea­ther most hole, there is a spring wand set fast therein, and bowed vnto the hole aboue, which hole ye shall put tho­rowe a string, tide fast to the ende of the spring wand, with a knot thereon, to stay it that it shall not slippe backe a­gaine. [Page 68] Also on the fore side of the hole, ye must put a blunt pinne of wood with a round ende of seuen or eight inches long, set loosely in by the knot to stay the string: which pinne yee shall sée clouen in the middest, and in that cleft they vse to put a cherie, or wheat eare, for a baite. Then shall yée spread finely, and lay the string about on the saide short pinne, and your string to haue a running noose. Also the trappe of your stake must be made sharpe that no foule shall light thereon. And when any lights on the short pinne to catch the baite, it falles downe, and the string thereon takes them by the legges. Thus ye may set many such about your grounds, ye may make these trappes on boughes in trées to take them at all times of the yeare if ye list.

The bow trappe for Rats or other Vermine.

[figure]

The hole to tie the string of the bridge. The clicket▪ The lidde. The hole to tye the string. The hole to put through the string on the side. The pin for the string. The hole to carrie it by.

THis engine or trappe with the bow, is made like a boxe, of a whole péece of wood, with the lidde opening & shut­ting aboue, and this side is vnbent, she wing the left side and the lidde, and clicket, taken out: with holes and the string for to set him, as more plainly shall be shewed bent and set.

The bowe trappe set.

[figure]

The lidde. The hole to tic the string. The hole to carry it.

THis is side shewes him bent, with the holes and pinnes how to bende him: as the pinne on the lidde is to holde the string bent. And also the pinne set aboue the clicket, is [Page 71] to order the string comming from the hole of the bridge vn­to the clicket, which must stay vp the bridge crost and bay­ted, when he is set. The pikes are set to holde fast when he is put dowe.

The Dragin trappe for Mice or Rattes.

[figure]

THis engine or trappe is made of wood like the stocke of a Bell, with two holes at the endes, and therein is put thorow haire or corde double, and the lidde put betwéene, and so wreath the haire one way towarde the lidde vppon the vnder hoope, with sharpe wyars set round on the vpper lidde, and a long bridge vnder, falling within the neather hoope with a staffe set fast aboue on the stocke, to tie the string and clicket, which must holde vp the lidde: the vpper trappe lyes with the mouth towarde you, and the lower with the side towardes you.

The fall for Rats or other vermine.

[figure]

THis engine is called the Ratte trappe or fall, which is made with a thicke bottome borde, and two thinner bordes on both sides, and there is two staues set fast tho­rowe the bottome borde, then the fall must be a thicke bord and heauie withall, and at the endes thereof must your staues goe thorow easely to fall and rise, which two staues haue holes aboue, which staues must also goe thorowe the long bridge aboue, and at the holes ye must put in two pins to holde vp the sayde bridge. Then must ye set fast another staffe in the middest of the fall, with a latch in the toppe thereof loose set to fall vp and downe: which latch must haue a string, which string commeth downe to the bridge be­neath, with a small clicket fastened thereunto: and the bridge is fastened beneath on the backeside or borde, an inch from the bottome borde, and so it is done. Yée may make them to take water Rats in setting them in the water, in the sides of your ponds and riuers, and bayted with carion, but then ye must set rowes of short nayles vnder the fall planke, and those will stay either ratte or other fish, if they goe through it, and put downe the bridge.

The boxe trappe.

[figure]

THis engine or trappe, is to take mice, or rattes, which is made of a thin borde of two inches and a halfe broad, and eight inches long, with a round bole cut thorowe the borde in the one end, and a boxe ioynde and glued therein, which boxe must haue a hole aboue, and therein yee must put your crooked wyar that must holde the batte within the boxe, and stayed aboue on the saide boxe with a crosse wier. Then shall ye sée the falling wyar tylde vp with a string or thréed, and fastened vnto a long clicket, which is staid with a crooked wiar, that holdes the baite within: the sayde clic­ket to be made of bone, for that is better then wood except it be hard The seochin in the middest of the boxe, is as it were, made for the baite. The foure sharpe wiars beneath the boxe, are to holde the mouse or ratte when the wyar falles. The barre crosse by the boxe, is to stay the wyar, it shall not fall out, or fall too low. And the end of the falling wyar is fastened with two crosse bars, and riueted through the board, and the end of the falling wyar also, so it is done.

The spring trappe for Mice.

[figure]

THis engine or trappe, is to take mice, it is made with a borde of two inches thicke, and in the one ende, yée must boore so bigge holes as a mouse may easely créep ther­in, so many as ye shall thinke good. Then must ye boore a­gainst euery of the sayd holes, foure small hole with a pier­cer through the sayd borde. And all those holes next the end, ye shall put in strong thréeds on the vpper holes of the bord, so they may be set on the ende of the spring, and lie rounde in each great hole nie the brinke. Then must ye put a smal thréede through the borde double, and tie him on the spring stiffe, to holde downe the spring: and those strings next the end, must beare no tight, but lie slacke, and as they gnawe a sunder the other thréed to come to the baite, that takes them by the belly, or necke: and euer as your inner thréedes are bit a sunder, ye may soone put or drawe them through with a small wyar againe. Also the other endes of the springs must be fast set in holes, boared with a small wimble. Ye may make the like to take Rattes, if ye make the holes square and bigger.

The dragin trappe with a great wyar.

[figure]

THis engine or trappe, is to take Mice and Rats, it is made of two thinne bordes: the neather borde is made round at the one end, and broad at the other end, like a swallow tayle. Then is there an other bord set on edge in the middest thereof, which borde hath a great wyar bowed and nayled thereon, as ye may sée: and the rounde bowght thereof must lie close on the round ende of the nea­ther borde. Then is there two short square bordes nayled and spreading toward the great wyar. Also yee sée at the toppe of the vpright borde, a long mortis, wherein the wi­ar that must holde the clicket and baite, must goe thorowe and there staye on another wyar, and the like is holden vp with the vpper ende thereof: which clicket, doe stay on the toppe of the middle or vpright borde, and so tyde thereat with a thréede which holdes vp the great wyar, when that ye will set or tyle him: also the neather borde is set rounde with sharpe wyars to holde mouce or ratte, and they must [Page] stande all within the bowght of the great wyar, and it is done. This shewes with the side towardes you, or the halfe thereof.

The Samson poste for Rattes.

[figure]

THis engine is called the Samson poste, it is stayde vp on thrée péeces, and one beares the burden of all, with the helpe of the other two péeces, and made as ye may sée, with notches one to stay vppon the other. These thrée stickes which ye sée, the broadest is called the bridge, and that is made broade and thinne and long withall, to reach vnder the planke or borde a good way, and bayted at the end thereof. The next is the crosse barre which stayes vp the planke or borde, set in a nicke in the end of the bridge. The third is the piller or poste set almost vpright, which stayes the bridge for falling to the ground, which bridge must alwayes stand from the ground an inch or more, that he may the sooner fall when he is touched. Also yee may [Page] make them in length as ye shall sée cause for the bredth of your bordes or plankes, which must be somewhat heauie alwayes.

A Mill to take Mice.

[figure]

THis engine or Mill, is made of ij. thin bords, and thicker in the midst, then at the ends. The one halfe of the bredth is set in & ioyned within the other halfe, and boared with a per­cer thorough the midst, and there is put thorow a great wyar, or a smal pinne of wood, as yée may sée, and that pinne is put into a thicke bord of four inch bord, which borde lyeth on some ta­ble or other borde from the ground halfe a yeard, or as yée shall thinke good: and set some panne or pot with water vnder your mill, and baite your mill on both sides of each leafe with some butter, mixt with otmele and sugar, and set all other things away, and so shall ye drowne thréescore or more perhaps in a night, as I haue séene done, if there be store. Ye shall make your mill to turne very easely, that the least weight thereon shall turne it. Also set your Mill an inch from your square borde that the pinne is in, and baite your borde with some otmeale, to tice them to the [Page] mill. Thus may yée soone destroy them, if your house bée troubled with them neuer so much.

The square mouce trappe.
The mouce trap with a dish & a filboll.

[figure]

THis engine or square mouce trappe, is made of two bordes, with a hole boared thorough them both at the lower end, and a pinne set set fast in the hole of the neather borde, and comes thorow the vpper borde: which vpper borde riseth and falleth thereon. Then is there a string tide at the sayde pinne with a long bridge, and a pinne on the vpper bord afore with a short string and a clicket tide ther­vnto, to stay vp the vpper borde, and so it is done. This is a slight way, and soone made for mice.

The other trappe, is with a dish or bowle, tylde vp with a silboll, such as they make to fill puddings, which is made with a thinne stice of wood or such like, with a tayle of thrée inches long, and thereon is the baite tyed. The filboule his bowght is commonly one inch and more hie, to holde vppe the dish, that the mouce touch not the dish before she come [Page] to the baite. Then when she stirs the baite, the dish fals ouer the filboll, and the filboll within, and the mouse also. Then ye may set a vessell of water, and let the mouse fall therein. And thus it is vsed, and also quickly made.

To take the Buzard with three twigs limed.

[figure]

THis engine is to take the Buzard in the spring of the yeare, as in March and Aprill, which is made thus: with thrée small roddes growing on the end of some bough, or thrée small twigs set on the end of a pretie bigge sticke, and of a shastment long. Ye must so place them that two twigges must lie alwayes on the ground, and the other stand or lie ouer. The sticke must haue a hole board in the end as ye may sée, and therein to fasten the mouse taile, or a thréede with a liue mouse tide vnto it. Also the twigs must be finely layde with lyme, and in a morning layde on the ground, whereas ye shall sée any Buzard nie, and as soone as ye are departed, if she spie the mouse, ye shall sée her come vnto it, and so taken, which is a verie good way to [Page] take them in the spring, but at other times not so good. Also the Buzard may well be taken in March and Aprill with setting thrée limerods, and bayfed in a plaine with the li­uer of a conny or such like.

The Moull trappe.

[figure]

TO set this Moull trappe, where any Moull hath cast, ye shall first place two trestles ouer her casting, then tread it downe with your foote softly, so long and so broad as your fall is, or more. Then lay a poale crosse ouer your tresles, and there on hang your trappe ouer the trench. Then set a short stake with the bridge therein, against the midst of your fall, as ye may sée by the figure: and set your stake so that the bridge end may lie and touch the earth all ouer in the trench crosse. For when the Moull doth cast, shée wil put vp that end of the bridge which do crosse the trench, and the other end will fall on the clicket, and so the trappe falles, and the long nayles set at both endes of the fall, kils her, which way soeuer she comes or goes. Your fall must be two foote long, and foure inches broad, and foure inches thicke, for the heauier the better it is. If it be too light, yée [Page] may remedie it as ye thinke good. Also yée may set your long nayles in a thencher or thinne borde, and nayle that to your fall at both endes, and let the next nayles on both sides be foure inches from the bridge. Thus much for the moull trappe, ye may thus kill them in gardens, woodes, high-wayes, or where yee shall thinke good without anie watching of them.

The following trappe.

[figure]

THis engine is called, the following trappe for Mice, it is made with two square bordes, the bottome and the fall borde, with edge bordes of an inch hie, round about the neather borde, and set with two wing bordes of each side one, with a crosse lath ouer the middest to tye the string of the clicket. Which string comes downe to the bridge, plast with a crosse bridge, and then is there wreathed corde, or haire, vnder the lath aboue, and in that wreath, is put the following staffe, which as soone as the lidde doe fall, that following staffe holdes it downe, and the falling borde is nayled with two leathers, as yée may sée, to the lower [Page] borde: and also the bridge is tide vnder vnto the lower bord with a string. Thus much for the vnderstanding of the following trappe.

The griping trappe made all of yrne, the lowest barre, and the ring or hoope, with two clickets, and a turning pinne, which ring is set fast to the sides of the lowest barre,

[figure]

MOre vnto it is, a plate round in the middest, with fiue holes cut out, and a sharpe yrne pinne in the middest, which plate hath a spring on both sides vnder the edge of the plate, and they stirre not of ioyntes vp and downe, as the other doth, but standes fast in touching the crosse pinne vnder the plate.

Here is more with two springs vntylde on both sides, in holding together the two hoopes with nayles.

[figure]

NOw when the two springes are opened abroade and holde downe, here it is to be shewed as hee standeth tyled with the two springes, downe flat to the long barre on both sides, which springes are made of good stéele, and as soone as the clickets which holde them downe vnder the plate when both the outward clickets be stirde. The two springes shuts them suddenly together and there is in the two shutting hoopes sharpe pinnes of yrne set one contrary to the other, with holes made for those pinnes to goe tho­rough and shut close together, that it will holde any thing, if it be but a rush or straw, so close they shut together. The two hoopes on both sides outward are made bigger and bigger vpwarde, to holde more close when they come toge­ther, as ye may perceiue by the hoopes within the springs, on both sides. Then there is at the ends of the long barres two square holes, which holes are made to pinne the long barre fast to the ground, when yee set or tyle him in any [Page] place at your pleasure. His clickets may so be made, that if any Otter, Foxe, or other, doe but tread thereon he shall be soone taken. This ye must bnide a péece of meate in the middest, and put it on the pricke, and so binde it fast, and in pulling the baite, the clickets will slippe and the springes will rise, and so it will take him. Thus much for this kind of trappe shall be sufficient to vnderstand the order thereof.

The square boxe trappe.

[figure]

THis trappe is to take mice with any small square boxe, which boxe ye shall set an ende, and make the couer so he may fall of his owne accorde. Then tyle him vp with a small sticke with a nicke, and set it in the middest to holde vp the couer. Then put chéese on the toppe of the sticke within the boxe. So when shée bites the baite, the sticke shakes, and the lidde falles downe, and so the mouce remaynes in the boxe. Thus ye may take many mice with small charge, and soone done.

A spring for a Buzard or Dunkite.

[figure]

THis engine is called a whippe spring, made and set to take Buzardes and kites, and commonly set by a bush side, it may also be set in a plaine, the spring must be of some growing poale, or some rodde set fast in the ground where ye thinke best. There is also two stakes set halfe a yeard a sunder fast in the ground, and that stake with a crooke, must stand towardes the looce of the spring, and tild with a clicket, which clicket aboue must stay vnder the crooke: and the neather end there of must stand in the nicke of the end of the bridge, which hath a hooke at the other end about the other stake, which bridge must stand thrée inches from the ground, and thereon spread your line as ye sée, with a shooe buckle to slide soone. Then baite your bush side made some what hollow that she can come no way to the batte but ouer the bridge: which baite may be a Conies head, or some eats flesh. Thus much for the spring.

The hoope nette for the Buzard, set against some bush in a plaine or open place.

[figure]

THis engine called the hoope nette, is made thus: yée must haue a good bigge rodde of two inches about, and bow him round, so that he be a yeard hie in the middest. Then tie his two endes with a small packthréed, within thrée quarters and a halfe quarter, which bowed rodde yée shall put on a péece of some hay net, of an ell long, and the other side of the net, on the ground line. Then set two pins fast in the ground, tyde with packthréede to the two lower endes of the bowed rodde, which must turne easie, and not flie vp. Then set before your bridge, with hoolie and pinne as ye may sée, with a bowed sticke, and a clicket at the o­ther ende, which clicket is tide with a string reaching to the side of the hoope, and the other part vnto the spring rod, which rodde must lie on the ground, that when the bridge is put downe, it pluckes the hoope ouer the Buzarde and [Page]

[figure]

[Page]

[figure]

[Page] [Page] so holdes it still do one, which hoope must be set vp right a­gainst some bush, and couered with some light fearne. And this is an excellent way in winter to take them.

The order for setting and drawing the chaffe nette, for Crowes and Sparrowes, as hereafter shall be declared.

YE shall first make your trenches for your nette, and staues, according to the length of each thereof, and your sayd trenches and staues, to be without the ends of your net. First piune downe the backe line of your nette in the trench, with foure small hooked pinnes, so done, then measure thrée yeardes from the further end of your net, and there knocke downe a stake, and tie your draging line ther­at. But set your stake so that your line, and net may fall straight when he is drawen: then knocke downe in the two vppen endes of your staffe trenches, two hooked pins to holde your two staues, as ye may sée in their places. Then measure from the néere end of your backe line, fiue yeardes towarde your hande, and there knocke downe an­other stake, and fasten your pull thereat, and drawe your line through it, and pull your line so farre as ye will drawe your net, and there you must knocke down an other strong stake with a hole thorow a foote aboue the ground, & there tie your drawing line to a short sticke to drawe by when ye will, and tie your line so tight it may come stiffe in ben­ding your net. Then bent it, and put your line in the notch of your surther staffe, and fasten it to the hooked pin in the trench, till ye haue bent the other staffe in the néere trench. Then gather vp your net, and lay it vnder your line in the trench, so done: couer your net and staues, with some short strawe or chaffe, and couer your drawing line with fearne or such like. Then baite your shrape nie the backe line, with offall corne, or chaffe mixt with oates, séedes or such like: and let it so remaine thrée or foure daies, if ye will, without laying your nette, so they will be the [Page 89] bolder to come when your net is layde, and the more number will knowe, and not seave the nette. Also your staues for the Sparrowe net commonly must be twelue handfuls long, or nigh foure foote: and the casting staues for your Rooke net, may well be a handfull longer. The length betwéene your staues and trenches for your Spar­rowe net must be two and twentie foote, or according to the length of your net. And so for your Rooke net. Your backe line may be a small line, but your drawing line had néede be strong, and somewhat bigger than a halpeny hal­tar, to way downe the net. Some doe vse to lay stones, and cloddes by, (if he drawe alone) to lay them on the out sides of the nette, while hee takes or killes the Crowes. Wherefore if these nets were vsed in each parish thorough England, according to the statute: there would not be the tenth Crowe aliue, which is now in this Realme, with in these fewe yeares, and as some doe iudge, the Crowes and birdes doe eate and spoyle as much graine yearely, as would goe nigh to finde all the people and cattell of the gre­test shiere in England for one yeare. For it is thought they deuour & spoyle yéerely in and for each parish in this Realm of this graine, viij. bushels. There is counted two & fiftie thousande parishes, so then there is two and fiftie quarters of graine destroyed yearely by Crowes and such like, be­sides a number of other pultrie about mens houses deuou­red by Crowes and Kytes, and chiefely it is thought, tho­rough the negligence of slouthfull husbandes, which yearely toyles and labours to sowe corne, and regardes not after the sauing of the same, or yet to wage or giue to other (ac­cording to the statute) that would in winter and other times be glad to take paine to take & destroy them. Thus I haue declared touching the destruction of corne by crows and such like, and the profite and gaine that would come thereby, in vsing the saide nettes in each parish thorough the Realme which nets may well be vsed all the winter, and also from March till Midsommer or somewhat after. Ye may also baite your shrape, with flesh, or some carrion, [Page 90] and so ye may take Kytes, flesh Crowes, Rauens, and such like, when ye sée cause. The laying your nette is easle, but to make him cast well, is all in the setting the tayle pinne, and placing the pully stake, in drawing your vpper line. Also in Iuly and August ye may well vse the lime bush, and the call for Sparrowes.

A baite to kill Rattes and Mice.

TAke of Argentum sublimatum, of regall, and of Arse­nicke, of each a dram, with twentie figges of the fattest, one ounce of hasell nuts rleane pilde and beaten, twelue walnuts pild, and halfe a pound of wheaten meale, also a pound and two ounees of hogges grease, with a little hony beaten and kneaded with the foresaide simples. First beat all into fine pouders, and then mire them all together, so done, then make them into little pellets, and lay them in your house where ye shall thinke good, for the Rattes to re­ceiue, and set water by them. Taken out of Dutch. Or you may take swéete creame mixt with sugar, and laid in shelts and strowe the fine pouder of Arsenicke thereon.

Another compound for Rattes.

TAke swéeté creame, and mixe it well with sugar, then take the crummes of white bread, with small péeces, and put therein, and make it somewhat thicke. Then make it séeth, and stirre it still till it be as thicke as pappe, then take it off the fire, and put therein of scraped chéese, and stirre it all well together: so doue, take the fine pou­der of regall, and pouder of Arsenicke, and put it therein, and stirre it well all together: so ye may lay it on shelts, or tyle stones, where ye shall thinke best: yet some herein, will but strow the saide pouders thereon, when they haue layde it, and it will serue so very well, or make the herbe Pedelion in pouder, and lay it on your meate, which herbe is the field clof.

An other way for the same.

TAke of faire colde water, and mixe it with fine wheate flower, and then worke it well all together, & sée there be no lumpes of flowar vnbroken, then boyle it softly, and stirre it alwayes for burning: and when it waxeth thicke put in sugar, then take it from the fire, and mixe it with a little clarified hony, and being thicke like pappe, put there­in as much as ye shall sée good, of the fine pouder of Arse­nicke, and then beate and stirre it all well together, and so when it is colde, ye may lay it where ye shall thinke good.

A baite for Mice.

TAke swéete butter, otmeale, and the pappe of a roasted apple, with a quantitie of wheate flower, and sugar. Then worke these all together, and put therein of the pou­der of Argentum sublimatum, so worke it well together like a paste, and so make it into small pellots, and laye it where ye thinke good.

Another to kill Mice. [...]. Dioscorides.

TAke the pouder of white Elleborie, otherwise called née­sing pouder, and mixe it with barley meale. Then put to honny, and make a paste thereof, then bake it, or séeth it, or frie it, and it will kill those Mice that eates ther­of.

An other for Mice.

TAke of barley meale a quantitie, and mixe therewith clarified hony: then put thereto a quantitie of the pou­der finely beaten of Antimoneum, which is like vnto red glasse, also put therein a littel clarified shéepes suet, then beate and worke them all together, and make it in paste, and vse it as the other afore rehearsed, ye may put of sugar [Page 92] therein if ye list: and here is to be noted, that when yée shall lay these baytes aforesayde in your houses, yee must then kéepe all other things from your Rattes and Mice, or else ye shall not haue your purpose of them sulfilled, which may be layde for Pies and Crowes.

An other for Rats, Mice, Woolfes, or Foxes.

TAke the roote of an herbe called in Latine, Aconi [...]um: in English, Wolfes bane: and make it into a fine powder, then stowe of that powder on flesh, or other thing what ye will, and it shall kill them soone after they haue taken it.

To take Rauens, Pyes, and Crowes.

YE shall take of Nux vomica, so called, which ye shall buy at the Apothecaries, they are gathered in the sea, and are as broad as a péece of foure pence, and a quarter of an inch thicke or more. Those which are the whitest with­in, are counted for the best, when ye will ocupie any, doe grate, or cut one small in thinne slices, then beate it into powder if ye can, the finer it is the better, and the sooner will make the Crowes or Pyes to fall. Put of the sayde powder into a péece of flesh, and so lay it abroad, and yée shall soone sée Pie, or Crowe or Rauen take it. Then must ye watch hun a while after, and ye shall perceiue him to fall downe, then must ye follow to take him. But if yée let him remaine one quarter of an houre, he will recouer againe, for this nux vomica it doth but make them drunk, and dyzie for a time. The Kyte I haue not séene taken, for he will cast it vp againe.

The spring net for Buzard or other kind of foule.

THis spring net or hoope net, is to take the Buzarde on the plaine, or to take Crowes, Pyes, or other small birdes with their naturall baites, as the worme for the Blackbird, & the Nytingale: it may be made with a hoope of wood, or of yrne, or stéele wyar, ye must bring the endes [Page 93] together fortie as ye shall thinke good. Then lap those ends with horse haire, or packth [...]éed, so oft about the ends as ye sée good: then put a piune of yrne, or of wood, betwéene the

[figure]

saide haire or line. Then turne & twist the haire as ye do for a mouce trappe, so stiffe as ye shall sée cause, so knocke that yrne pin into the ground where ye will set your net. Then take a small string that must be tide in the midst of ye hoope, which string must haue a knot at the end, so put it vnder the wreath of haire, and thorow a hole in a pinne of wood set in the ground before the yrne pin, and let the knot of the same string, rest in the sayd hole. Then fill the said hole with an other short pinne of wood made blunt, putting it slight into the hole, to stay the knot of the string that kéepes downe the net, and on that short pinne, make a hole, or slit, & put a thorne with a baite theron: and when any thing do touch the baite, the short pinne will soone fall, and the string slips through the hole, and so the net turnes suddenly vpon the fowle. Thus much for ordering this kinde of net.

This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal. The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission.