BY RYAN EVANS ryan.evans@tnl.co.nz - Taranaki | Wednesday, 28 November 2007
A Taranaki fishing guru is now fishing the celestial rivers and oceans.
Noel Jack Baty died in New Plymouth on Monday, aged 91.
Born in Christchurch in 1915, he attended St Andrew's College before joining the Royal New Zealand Air Force in 1933.
He married Australian woman Gladys Staples in 1939, before serving in New Zealand and Fiji as a pilot during World War II.
On leaving the RNZAF in 1946, he moved to New Plymouth, and became manager of the Fun Ho! toy factory before training as a primary school teacher.
He taught at Welbourn and Woodleigh primary schools, and was principal of Lepperton primary school for eight years before retiring in 1976.
Fishing was Mr Baty's passion from an early age.
Growing up during the Depression, he would go fishing or hunting to provide food for his mother and four sisters.
He enjoyed trout and boat fishing as well as surfcasting, representing New Zealand in the 1962 World Surfcasting Championships.
For more than 40 years, he wrote fishing columns for The Daily News, The Taranaki Herald, NZ Rod & Rifle and the NZ Fishing News, among others. He also hosted a popular radio show and in 1993 published a book, Hooked On Fishing.
Mr Baty was a foundation member, life member and patron of the Taranaki Surfcasting Club, served on numerous other fishing bodies, and was national president of the New Zealand Angling and Casting Association.
His sons, Max and Spencer, described him as a practical joker, who never did things by half.
They said his life's work was devoted to his wife, who had suffered from polio early in her childhood.
She and Mr Baty spent the final years of their life in the Coronation Lodge Rest Home. Mrs Baty died in 2004.
Mr Baty is survived by his two sons, seven grandchildren, and nine great-grandchildren.
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