The Vade-mecum of Fly-fishing for Trout: Beings a Complete Practical Treatise on that Branch of the Art of Angling; with Plain and Copious Instructions for the Manufacture of Artificial FliesLongman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, 1851 - 186 sider |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-5 av 28
Side 20
... kind of game they are likely to capture . Ordinary river trout seldom exceed two pounds , and a fish of half that size will be considered large when it is stated that the general weight is not above six or eight ounces . It may ...
... kind of game they are likely to capture . Ordinary river trout seldom exceed two pounds , and a fish of half that size will be considered large when it is stated that the general weight is not above six or eight ounces . It may ...
Side 28
... gravel . The bottom of clear running water is the best adapted for the purpose , and this is the kind of ground which the trout instinctively " " choose for their operations . Four or five weeks are 28 SPAWNING OF TROUT .
... gravel . The bottom of clear running water is the best adapted for the purpose , and this is the kind of ground which the trout instinctively " " choose for their operations . Four or five weeks are 28 SPAWNING OF TROUT .
Side 32
... kind male salmon , and causing it to come in contact with the last ova deposited . He then covered them in beneath the gravel , and in due time they produced fish . The oya he had covered in without impregnation produced nothing . He ...
... kind male salmon , and causing it to come in contact with the last ova deposited . He then covered them in beneath the gravel , and in due time they produced fish . The oya he had covered in without impregnation produced nothing . He ...
Side 43
... kind , not even excepting those of its own species - in a word , it devours indiscriminately , and with equal avidity , ' every minute thing that swimmeth in the waters . " Nor is it always satisfied with tit - bits and morsels , for ...
... kind , not even excepting those of its own species - in a word , it devours indiscriminately , and with equal avidity , ' every minute thing that swimmeth in the waters . " Nor is it always satisfied with tit - bits and morsels , for ...
Side 45
... cow - dung fly , the hazel fly , the ant fly , and many other well known species . The flies which are most commonly imitated by " routine anglers " belong to two families of the aquatic kind , one of which is called by ENTOMOLOGY . 45.
... cow - dung fly , the hazel fly , the ant fly , and many other well known species . The flies which are most commonly imitated by " routine anglers " belong to two families of the aquatic kind , one of which is called by ENTOMOLOGY . 45.
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
The Vade-mecum of Fly-fishing for Trout: Beings a Complete Practical ... George Philip Rigney Pulman Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1851 |
The Vade-mecum of Fly-fishing for Trout: Beings a Complete Practical ... George Philip Rigney Pulman Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1851 |
The Vade-mecum of Fly-fishing for Trout: Beings a Complete Practical ... George Philip Rigney Pulman Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1851 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Andrew Young angler angling appear artificial flies Axminster bank beautiful bend blue dun blue fur body brown fur called chapter cock's hackle collar colour common trout dark delightful dressed dropper Eton College fastened favourable favourite feather fish floss silk fly rivers fly-fishing fly-maker fore-finger and thumb gillaroo gold twist grannam habits half hitch hare's flax hook imitation instructions Kendal kind knot larvæ Legs lie flat light blue Limerick lovely banks materials natural fly natural insect naturalists never opinion parr Peacock's herl peculiar perhaps practice prey pupa red hen's hackle red palmer Redditch reel remarks ribbed with gold ribbed with yellow river salmon Salmonida sand fly season selection shank silver twist species spinner sport starling stem stickles stream surface thickly throw tion tying-silk Walton Whisks wind wing wing-feather Woodcock wound yards yellow silk thread