Chalkstream and Moorland: Thoughts on Trout-fishingSmith, Elder & Company, 1911 - 251 pages |
From inside the book
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... LOCH - FISHING IN SCOTLAND AND IRELAND · . 167 XII . HILL - LOCHS WHERE THE SMALL TROUT DO NOT RISE FREELY • 186 XIII . THE SENSE ORGANS OF TROUT 195 XIV . SEA - TROUT FISHING IN LOW WATER AND IN LOCHS 218 XV . HOPE IN TROUT - FISHING ...
... LOCH - FISHING IN SCOTLAND AND IRELAND · . 167 XII . HILL - LOCHS WHERE THE SMALL TROUT DO NOT RISE FREELY • 186 XIII . THE SENSE ORGANS OF TROUT 195 XIV . SEA - TROUT FISHING IN LOW WATER AND IN LOCHS 218 XV . HOPE IN TROUT - FISHING ...
Page 16
... lochs . They only know about dry - fly fishing by repute as a wonderful art practised in the South . Some may affect to despise it , and others frankly confess ( as Mr. Thackeray did when he wrote about the Whigs ) that they are not dry ...
... lochs . They only know about dry - fly fishing by repute as a wonderful art practised in the South . Some may affect to despise it , and others frankly confess ( as Mr. Thackeray did when he wrote about the Whigs ) that they are not dry ...
Page 49
... loch - fishing is not stiff enough to pick a long line off the water and dry the fly . The line should be greased to make it float , and may well be heavier than the ordinary trout line . It is a good plan to keep two reels and two ...
... loch - fishing is not stiff enough to pick a long line off the water and dry the fly . The line should be greased to make it float , and may well be heavier than the ordinary trout line . It is a good plan to keep two reels and two ...
Page 68
... loch - fly , and oiled it thoroughly so that it floated well . When fish rose , as one occasionally did , there was no difficulty in approaching within a rod's length . Stout gut passed over them unnoticed . It was an odd change from ...
... loch - fly , and oiled it thoroughly so that it floated well . When fish rose , as one occasionally did , there was no difficulty in approaching within a rod's length . Stout gut passed over them unnoticed . It was an odd change from ...
Page 77
... loch or burn with two trout is a disappointment . But it is otherwise in Hampshire or Hertfordshire . This is partly owing to the difficulty of catching them but chiefly to the size of the trout . A brace of fish will retrieve the ...
... loch or burn with two trout is a disappointment . But it is otherwise in Hampshire or Hertfordshire . This is partly owing to the difficulty of catching them but chiefly to the size of the trout . A brace of fish will retrieve the ...
Other editions - View all
Chalkstream and Moorland, Thoughts on Trout-Fishing Harold John Hastings Russell No preview available - 2008 |
Chalkstream and Moorland Thoughts on Trout-Fishing Harold John Hastings Russell No preview available - 2010 |
Common terms and phrases
alder angler angling artificial fly ASHDOWN FOREST bank big fish big trout black ditch blank day bottom brace brown burn catch caught chalkstream chance Charles Cotton clear clouds colour dash discover doubt dry-fly fishing duns edge excitement Exmoor feeding fish feeling fish rose fisherman flat flies floating fly flows fly-fishing grass hatch Hertfordshire hooked hope insect internal ear Itchen Kennet killed landed larvæ lateral line little trout Loch Drollsay loch-fishing loch-flies look lough mayfly meadows mill-pool morning natural never nose olfactory pit patterns peaty pleasure pond pool pound rain reeds reel rising fish river round rushes salmon sea-pools sea-trout sedges seemed sense shallow side sight smell sometimes splash sport spot stones stream stretch success surface Test Test valley thing throw trout rise trout-fishing watch water-meadows weather weeds wet-fly wind yards
Popular passages
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Page 13 - Paley was ardently attached to this amusement; so much so, that when the Bishop of Durham inquired of him, when one of his most important works would be finished, he said, with great simplicity and good humour, " My Lord, I shall work steadily at it when the fly-fishing season is over," as if this were ab*siness of his life.
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Page 12 - Well, Jack, what's the matter with you'?' Sailor. 'Lost my right arm, your honour.' Nelson paused, looked down at his own empty sleeve, then at the sailor, and said playfully, 'Well, Jack, then you and I are spoiled for fishermen — cheer up, my brave fellow.
Page 33 - Let a dry fly be substituted for the wet one, the line switched a few times through the air to throw off its superabundant moisture, a judicious cast made just above the rising fish, and the fly allowed to float towards and over them, and the chances are ten to one that it will be seized as readily as a living insect. This dry fly, we must remark, should be an imitation of the natural fly on which the fish are feeding...
Page 34 - VADE-MECUM OF FLY-FISHING FOR TROUT : being a complete Practical Treatise on that Branch of the Art of Angling ; with plain and copious Instructions for the Manufacture of Artificial Flies. ByG. PR PULMAN, Author of "The Book of the Axe.*' Third Edition, re-written and greatly enlarged ; with several Woodcuts.
Page 14 - I trust you will confess the time bestowed upon angling has not been thrown away. The most important principle perhaps in life is to have a pursuit — a useful one if possible, and at all events an innocent one.
Page 94 - When you have got hold of a good fish, which is not very tractable, if you are married, gentle reader, think of your wife, who, like the fish, is united to you by very tender ties, which can only end with her death, or her going into weeds. If you are single, the loss of the fish, when you thought the prize your own, may remind you of some more serious disappointment.