Brent – In your post when you stated
“…Kind of makes your mind wander, about there trips. And what they packed on a fall hunting adventure. You know they had a lot of midday time on there hands. An a trout filled stream or creek. Will really, allow a guy to unwind.”
Brent & John – We all daydream about this old tackle and how it was used buy these old bowmen.
In the written accounts and photographs from the era, we may be able to discover if Nels used a fly rod on any hunting trips.
John – I already checked the scrapbooks with photographs of Nels with pike and with trout. Unfortunately these photographs do not show your fly rod. The only fishing rig is an unusual one that I do not even recognize, but I'm not a fishing rod collector. Nels is pictured with warmer clothing than you would expect to need during Michigan’s November Archery Deer Seasons that began in 1937. Nels had his own well-documented distinctive wool hunting garb, and I have never seen photographs of him in that garb with fish or fishing tackle.
Although Nels was an avid fisherman, I don’t recall any recorded account of him fishing while hunting deer. As I am sure you know, Nels was one of the most serious and successful deer hunters of the era. Nels killed a deer in each of the first three years and took 7 deer in the first 10 years. Over the next week or two, I will re-read everything written by and about Nels during the era and will let you know if I uncover any evidence that he took fishing gear with him while hunting deer.
It is well documented that Fred did some fishing on some out of state trips, but don’t recall any accounts of fishing tackle being along on November deer season in Michigan.
Heck, I don’t even know dates of the fishing seasons in Michigan in the 1930s and 1940s… John you are right there in Michigan, you can probably find that out pretty easy.