Fishing is a popular sport even in our world of modern conveniences. It seems easy enough, conceptually, but in reality there is a lot technical knowledge involved. Even the simple fishing rod isn’t immune – there are, for example, over three hundred various kinds of Lamiglas fishing pole available. Lamiglas is really a specialty manufacturer with specific rods for specific breeds of fish.
To a layman, it may seem surprising, but given all of the different species of fish there are to be caught, it’s logical for a rod to be produced with performance characteristics that will best help the angler get his or her catch! Such a variety of rods also makes sense when you consider that there are tens of millions of recreational fishermen and women around the world.
And so each and every Lamiglas fishing pole is made by hand, individually, with good old-fashioned craftsmanship right alongside the most modern advances in materials science. That’s over three hundred fly, surf, fresh and salt water rods for steelhead, salmon, bass, and just about any other type of fish. Lamiglas fishing poles are popular with recreational anglers. At fishing tournaments, it is interesting to see all the various designs sported, each individually suited to all the different personal casting styles and fishing conditions possible!
This profusion of rods is most common to sport fishing, but their advanced technologies make them particularly appropriate for subsistence fishing, also known as artisan fishing, an ironic synonym that usually conveys connotations of upscale excess but which here in this context probably refers to the fact that such fishing, in order to be environmentally sustainable, takes the kind of care more commonly associated with the endeavors of conventional artisans and craftsmen.
Subsistence of artisan fishing is almost always less intensive and less stressful on fish populations than are modern industrial techniques, which fact is due in big part to its a lot more traditional methods and individual scales.