Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - What is Lua?

What is Lua?

Luya is a form of fishing, whose name comes from Lure's transliteration, that is, bait fishing, which is a way to lure large and fierce fish to attack by imitating various swimming postures of small and weak creatures. Luya fishing pays attention to skills, such as throwing rod and manipulating bait, which need to be mastered. Luya's target species are fierce and aggressive species, such as snakehead, snakehead, pouting and so on.

Luyaxiang is the most environmentally friendly for Taiwan fishing and traditional fishing. The biggest difference between Luya and Taiwanese fishing is that fishermen need to take the initiative to find fish, but also need to exercise all over the body and pay attention to a verb. Unlike Taiwan Province, fishing is quiet, waiting for the fish to bite.

There is a proverb in China: "Big fish eat small fish, small fish eat shrimp". Reed bud fishing uses the laws of the natural food chain to design many grotesque reed bud fishing, which attracts fish to attack through sound, light and color. It has become one of the pleasures of DIY reed bud fishing for reed bud fishing players, and more and more anglers have joined reed bud fishing.

In reed bud fishing, the most noteworthy spirit is: three steps-catching-taking pictures-flying. It mainly emphasizes the release, and those who are too small and too big choose to release, and taking pictures is the length of the record, constantly challenging a self-breakthrough snapshot record, because Luya also has the spirit of constantly breaking through.

This is in line with the purpose of the Custine Fishing Hall of Fame. The Fishing Hall of Fame is a fishing record platform for domestic fishermen, encouraging them not to seek the biggest, but to seek the best spirit. At the same time, they are also encouraged to ask for it properly, let the small stay big, and uphold the spirit of letting go of Luya.