If your cutting your own strip there are some tips that will allow you to cut it near the same quality as Rhys did. You need a supper sharp small knife to start with. I've used a small red handled knife purchased at Trotac...it has a serrated blade and stays sharp a long time. The blade should be stiff and thin. I catch my own mature herring in the fall when they ball up in Sooke. Make sure they are layed out flat before you freeze them, this will make cutting the final product much easier. Pat them dry before you put them in a freezer bag, as any frozen water on the herring will make scribing the shape more awkward. Only take a few herring out of the freezer at a time the night before you intend to use it. Wait a few minutes and scribe the shape down through the scales and skin while still frozen...this will prevent scale loss and the edges of the strip will be crisp not ragged. Do 3 to 4 pieces both sides. Once you finish cutting the scribe lines on the 4th one you can go back to the first one and take off the fillets. If you take to long the last ones will thaw enough that cuts will start to become ragged and rough looking. The better your knife the more frozen the bait can be while you cut it and the better the finished result will be. Sprinkle pickling salt over the strip and keep in a sealable container in the freezer until the morning. Rhys's knives were made from grinding down metal files into blades. If you ever paid him a visit he loved to show you how sharp those blades were...he could shave the hair clean off your forearm in one easy pass. Strip works good for springs, works even better for northern coho!