If you are signing up to the forums, Thank you. You will need to activate your account by clicking a link in an email from the forums.
Please make sure you check your Junk/Spam folder for the email and make sure you spell your email address correctly or you won't get the email.
Thanks again. Dismiss this with the [X] >>>>>>

A Christmas Angle

Share your Match Results or Fishing Stories Here.

Moderator: bill yards

User avatar
Simple
Site Admin
Site Admin
Posts: 12128
Joined: September 11th, 2006, 9:58 pm
Personal Text: flapjack nom nom
Location: Staffordshire
Contact:

A Christmas Angle

#1

Unread post by Simple »

A Christmas Angle
Report by Terry Comerford

The Float & Hook, tackle shop in Gripton, West Midlands, has been run by the Seema family for over 60 years, founded by grandad Albert, passed on to his son Robin and now in the hands of grandson Max.

Max Seema had inherited all of his granddads genes ‘old man’ grandad Seema was well known amongst local anglers for his meanness and spendthrift ways, his customers used to complain about rusty hooks, cracked floats and getting half a pint of sawdust in their pint of maggots.
At that time the dark dingy shop was lit by smoke spewing, oil lanterns, while in the winter there was just one old log stove to heat the entire building.

Max’s dad, Robin, only had the shop for short time when he upped and left his wife Annette and eight year old Max to run off to Rhyl with a 20 year old woman from Redditch called Crystal Bend, a lady with a sharp tongue and a mouth full of barbed comments.

Its now 2011 and 50 year old Max has run the shop for 20 years, times are hard, lots of his ex- regulars now fished commercial pools which had their own log cabin style, centrally heated, tackle shops and café’s and extra fridges for a cold beer, Max often turned his shops only fridge off in the winter to save money, the only time he had a chilled beer was when he placed a can or two in his keepnet during a match.

The window display at the shop was a source of much humorous banter, propped up in one corner was a green vinyl, rod holdall, the colours of which were burnt out and faded by the rays of the sun, one customer had been banned by Max for attaching a post it note to the holdall with 10s/6d written on it.
The dust covered, size 4 moon boots were still there, left by a rep on a ‘sale or return’ basis
Max had told him he’d never seen an angler with feet that small but as usual the tackle rep was desperate to drum up sales.
Hanging up on the window display board (yes it was one of those where the owner opened a little door and put his head through) were grubby looking packets of silicone tubing, a thermal hat, a weed cutter you screwed into a bankstick, some circular bait boxes, a few plastic packets of pre cooked hemp, a float fishing book by Billy Lane and a set of Newark needle floats, (sale or return again)
Also amongst the peeling and flaking window display paint there were numerous dead fly carcasses, you could see the whole transition of maggot, chrysalis and fly in the shop window, all it needed was a film crew from the BBC and David Attenborough!

Rod Catchit,  was a local youngster, eager to learn more about fishing and  he helped out in the shop on Saturdays, Rod quite fancied himself as an ace match angler as he had won three club contests and finished fifth in an open a couple of years ago.
He knew with Max being so tight there would be no wages involved but he turned up every Saturday anyway, it was as near as Rod got to being a ‘star’ and he bored the customers with his ‘in-depth’ knowledge of ‘everything’ he was so into himself he genuinely never realised the customers were taking the yellow stream when they said “I’ll give you a ring Rod” “ Here’s a tip Rod” one regular on seeing Rod out with his girlfriend asked him when he was getting spliced!
Max  took advantage of the young lads eagerness and worked him so hard giving him all the shops dirty jobs, he really should have been paying him something but as ever the miserly tackle dealer convinced the kid he was doing him a favour.

Christmas Eve.
8pm
Max didn’t usually stay over at the shop this late but some of the regulars told him the were having a ‘knock up’ on the local canal after Christmas,  so he was preparing bait as he had agreed to open at 7am, for an hour on Boxing Day, to sell them their bait supplies.
As always to save costs and make more profit, he had frozen the leftover casters and was now leaving the trays out on the shop floor to thaw, last weeks pinkies and squatts had also been chilled right down and would only be taken out on the morning of the match (if they turned during the match it was always the maggot farms fault)
Adding extra sand to the squatts was an old trick and Max did not have any regrets about taking buckets of sand from the kids play area at the nursery, on his way home each night.
The shop was dark and dimly lit, Max had only the tilley lamps on, as this months power meter readings showed a £10 increase which was unacceptable, even for a freezing December with snow on the ground

All of a sudden, a huge shadow appeared in front of Max and as the skinflint tackle dealer looked up amazingly the shadow begun to speak.

“Max Seema I am the ghost of Christmas past and have been sent here to show you the error of your ways and show you how your mean and miserly behaviour has affected all those around you in years gone by and possibly in years to come.
Look into this groundbait bucket and what I will show you will bring you to your Sensas”
Max Seema looked into the large green bucket the contents of which began to swirl, no he wasn’t mixing a method mix with a drill, he was looking back into the past

The ghost began to explain in detail the images that were beginning to appear “ Here’s the clubs xmas canal match last year when you scooped that dead perch out of the water and placed into your net, winning the fur & feather and the hamper prize from Lidl, how could you do it?”
Max replied “Yes I know it was bad but I really wanted that hamper basket as my wicker creel was falling apart”
“And here, you tied your mate Ollie Vette’s hooklinks with PVA melt string instead of braid knowing he would not have a hook attached to his rig for days on end while he was fishing for the carp with the silly name”
“And finally here how could you sprinkle you poor young assistants Rod Catchit’s maggots with that new wonder bait liquid knowing full well he wouldn’t catch anything as it was just another daft product backed up with huge amounts of advertising revenue? “Shame on you Max Seema”
The ghostly shadow disappeared like a club angler in the pub after the match when it’s his round.

Shaking his head and rubbing his eyes Max decided he must be dreaming and poured himself a coffee from his 10 year old, tartan patterned, thermos flask and decided to continue with jobs that needed doing in the shop, so he began filling up empty line spools with cheap line from a bulk spool he had bought off the internet “they’ll never realise” he said

Just then the tackle shop went colder than normal (-10) and another huge ghostly apparition appeared, this one looked a bit like that angler who won Fish-0-Mania but with a slightly smaller grin,  “ Max Seema, look into your flask cup and you will see images of Christmas present, yes while you are here making plans to rip even more money off your customers they are out there determined to have a good time they might not have much but they know that Christmas time is for sharing and being friendly and generous to all men and women as you have to be politically correct”

“Look, here’s some of your customers that you have swindled they are trying to make the best of Christmas today, Ernie Muchmoney the veteran soldier who you charged £500 for that old rod with the defect, you told him that was why they called them split cane rods and here is your German customer the carp angler Herr Rigg you sold him all those instructional videos for £11-99each  that you had bought from the pound shop and finally your young assistant Rod Catchit, who has very little money to buy his parents a present because you refuse to pay him wages, he may even have to go a few weeks without buying a float because of your mean and stingy attitude”
The spirit disappeared like a top angler at an open after he had just drawn the flyer.

Max was thinking what both of the ghostly spirits had told him about the consequences of his ways but continued to bulk out the groundbait bins by adding more maize meal flour.

The curtains that had been bought from the closing down sale at Woolworths blew up in the air and a strong pungent wind roared through the tackle shop, at first Max thought it was one of his regulars Sid Marks, also known as methane man but no it was yet another ghostly apparition (never see one then three come together)


“I am the ghost of Christmas future, Max Seema, mend your ways or you will surely sink” said the ghostly spirit, trying to make an angling related pun.

“You, Max Seema, should tow the line (there we go again) and not (ha) continue with your mean and miserly ways which some would say you enjoy in a twisted (hee hee) sort of way, therefore look into the pouch of this dust covered bait apron and I will show you what is to come, the strain of which can not be overstated (groan) on those really nice people (did you spot that one?) that you take for granted, your crimes against them are so bad you would not even be let out on bail (now that’s a pun)

The pouch of the bait apron was deep, full of cobwebs and dust, it had never held the two pints of maggots it had been made for, river anglers are now a dying breed like French polishers, telephone repair men and 30 goals a season Premier League strikers.

Suddenly in the dark depths of the bait apron, Max Seema saw himself walking through a graveyard followed by the huge figure of the Christmas future ghost, he looked at each stone in turn and mumbled the inscriptions out loud to himself as he read them “1980-2012, Ollie Vette, for the bulk of his life an angler, here he is now lying two thirds down, stopped by a number 4…………bus.

Then a huge stone Max read the inscription out loud “Sargeant Major Ernie Muchmoney tragically killed by a broken cane rod” “oh dear” said Max, then Max added “ Sargeant Major Ernie loved his tench fishing, as soon as he hit the bite he used to stand up straight and shout, a tench on!”

Max then saw a grave with no headstone, just a paving slab with an inscription which simply read, money’s too tight to mention. (No it didn’t that’s a feeble music pun!)

It read “Rod Catchit” Max Seema recoiled in horror on seeing the dates, born Jan 1990-died December 26th 2011 “Spirit, that’s in two days time on Boxing Day, what on earth happened to young ROD? Max Seema snapped.

The ghostly apparition roared with anger “Max Seema is your memory that bad, the super-duper bait liquid you secretly poured onto young Rod’s maggots got onto his fingers and as he ate his sandwiches it triggered the same feeding responses in him that it was supposed to in the fish and the poor lad ate and ate for two months non stop, he got to 37 stone walked under the promenade walkway at Blackpool and was instantly crushed as the structure collapsed on top of him………..just 21 years old, killed by pier pressure”
The ghost of Christmas future disappeared like a pinkie in a bowl of groundbait.

Christmas Day.
Max, knew it wasn’t a dream, all those things he had been shown were true all right but was he going to mend his ways?.......... NO
Max Seema didn’t mind being shot at and was content to have Christmas day all on his own, he was a loopy individual with incredible abrasive properties, a real individual, who realised he didn’t need anyone’s backing, which seems an excellent line to end on………..

Tight Lines (He certainly is)

(First published on FishingMagic.com)
Post Reply