John Milford wrote: ↑Fri Nov 17, 2023 1:00 pmHas anyone ever come across any references to it's use in old angling books - or perhaps even tried it?
"A friend... told me a little while ago that when he lived at Stratford-on-Avon, there was an angler there who could catch quantities of roach with his scented paste ; he said he told him how to make it, and it was nothing but " oil of rhodium " that was mixed among the bread. My friend says he has been to and worked in several counties since then, and he could never do anything with it in any other river than the Avon ; in short, I don't believe in scented pastes, and I will leave the experiment of trying them to those who have more time on their hands than I have. Plain bread paste is good enough for me, when I feel inclined for a bit of paste fishing." - J. W. Martin, Float fishing and spinning in the Nottingham style
"Pastes (Scented) — — Onion, aniseed and oil of rhodium are sometimes used but are of extremely doubtful benefit. To wipe the slime from a caught fish over your paste is, however, effective. Whether this comes into the scented category I leave to the reader, with the assurance that it is much more effective than the three former scents." - E. Marshall-Hardy, Angling Ways
"Oil of rhodium, oil of heron’s foot, oil of worms, and other nostrums, were thought to have almost supernatural powers in the attraction of trout, as valerian has for Thomas cats. In this district we had an old fellow who could always take more fish than any one else during flood time. Some people said he used salmon roe, but there were others who firmly believed a few drops of oil of rhodium placed in the worm bag contributed to his success." - "Sprint", Fishing Gazette 1880
"Hook baits for carp are numerous, but a breadpaste, with a small admixture of boiled potato and sweetened with honey or powdered sugar, will answer the purpose. Let the paste be very well kneaded, doing so by working in a clean piece of linen or cotton, keeping the hands entirely from it for carp have a very keen scent, and experience tells us that a few drops of oil of rhodium is an extra attraction if worked in with the paste. The next best bait for a large carp is a small potato, three parts boiled. If you cannot procure small potatoes about the size of a full-grown Kentish cob-nut, then cut from a large one, trimming your baits with a knife to about that size and shape." - D. G. J., Fishing Gazette, 1906
It may have been an ingredient in the commercial paste baits "Stinking Gladwin" and "King's Natural Bait", both released in 1881.
"Keep out of sight. Trout has no eyebrows and can see up." - Forest and Stream 1904.
"Everything hexagonal is not marvellous." - John Bailey