424 AMERICAN FISHES. 
Germany, Finland and the lower reaches of the Thames and other Eng- 
lish rivers. Somewhat gregarious in habits, it occurs in schools about 
bridge piers and mills, or in deep holes with hard bottoms, or in mid- 
summer lies near the surface in shady places. It was at this season that 
Walton taught his scholars to catch Chubs. 
“ Look you here, sir, do you see?” said Piscator, “ there lie upon the 
top of the water, in this very hole, twenty Chubs. Ill catch only one, and 
that shall be the biggest of them all, and that I will do so, I’ll hold you 
twenty to one, and you shall see it done.” 
Piscator was a skillful angler, for, notwithstanding the fact that he con- 
sidered the Chub “the fearfullest of fishes,’’ he landed his choice. And 
then, when it was cooked, Venator, who had called the Chub ‘the worst 
fish that swims, confessed that ’twas as good meat as he had ever 
tasted,’’ and forthwith became the master’s scholar.* 
The food of Sgualius is miscellaneous, like that of the Carp, and in- 
cludes among other things frogs, mice and even rats. Cunning anglers 
tempt its appetite with red cherries, strawberries and raspberries. 
The spawning time is in April, May and June, when the back of the 
male becomes covered with a fine white granulation. The eggs number 
100,000 or more, and are deposited in gravel or weeds in shallow water. 
Its shyness, its strength and its size make it a favorite among anglers, 
and there are many who make its pursuit a specialty. 
‘The Chub of all fish in his silver Trent 
Invites the angler to the tournament.” 
Trench in his ‘Northern Memoirs.” 
In England its popularity seems to be increasing. Pennell protests 
against the old fashion of painting the Chub as a sort of water donkey, 
and Wheeldon speaks of it when in condition as an exceptionally hand- 
some fish, while Senior writes thus in its favor: 
‘<Fly-fishing for Chub answers best in the hot summer months, and 
along the willow and alder-lined reaches payable sport is obtained. It is 
a great boon for the man, in the big city pent, to be able to get away from 
business, and by an afternoon train arrive at any portion of the Thames 
below Oxford in time to have three or four of the best hours’ fly-fishing 
which the day affords. The Chub is not fastidious in its choice of flies. 
So long as the lure is large and hairy ; so long as it bears some passing 
resemblance to a caterpillar or beetle or large-winged moth, the anglers’ 
chances of big fish are good.t’’ 
* Dame Juliana Berners said that ‘‘ the chevyn is a stately fysshe, and his heed is a deynty morsell.’’ 
+ William Senior (** Red-spinner’’) Angling in Great Britain, p. 48. 
