Going slightly off topic here but once ended up in the early hours of the morning watching a programme on Japan Today (ex shift worker).
It was about catching a fish called a Bitterling if I remember correctly and the idea was to catch one smaller than a Yen coin,It had sub titles but I became fascinated watching it.The guy looked to be fishing a small drainage channel with what looked like a small whip with micro floats and hooks.
He started to catch fish but moved swims because they were too big,around 25 to 30mm long.The new swim started to produce the "specimens" he was after and eventualy caught one of the required size,he then packed up a happy man.
The programme then switched to the making of the traditional gear which was used.Of course with Japan being Japan the gear was made by hand by a craftsman who had been taught from a young age how to do it by a master and was now passing on that knowledge to a new apprentice.
He was bemoaning the fact that the skills involved were now dying out.However,the prices he could charge were astronomical but "old school" bitterling anglers were prepared to pay it.If you are feeling flush Huanzhou have a whip hand built in Japan,after paying transport costs it would put those lads with their Torrixes and Chimeras to shame.
PS-although living in Yorkshire my mother had relatives in Oxford and we used to visit a couple of times a year.My uncle took me fishing on the Thames at Sandford lock.The first fish I caught were Gudgeon and Bleak.Happy days and the start of the obsession.