The Fly-Fisher's Companion: A Fundamental Guide to Tackle, Casting, Presentation, Aquatic Insects, and the Flies that Imitate Them

The Fly-Fisher's Companion: A Fundamental Guide to Tackle, Casting, Presentation, Aquatic Insects, and the Flies that Imitate Them

by Darrel Martin
The Fly-Fisher's Companion: A Fundamental Guide to Tackle, Casting, Presentation, Aquatic Insects, and the Flies that Imitate Them

The Fly-Fisher's Companion: A Fundamental Guide to Tackle, Casting, Presentation, Aquatic Insects, and the Flies that Imitate Them

by Darrel Martin

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Overview

This book grew from the author's desire to consolidate the many teachings that he uses in his popular fly-fishing classes. It is a textbook that includes concise and selective commentary on tackle, casting, tactics, flies and fly tying, and other related topics. The word "companion" derives from “one with whom we share our bread.” After more than fifty years of fly fishing, the author would like to sit at the streamside and share these observations with readers. Here is the knowledge and understanding that he wished he had when he began fly fishing.
While the handmade steel hooks, horsehair lines, and carefully crafted wooden loop-rods have long given way to nylon and fluorocarbon leaders, multipiece graphite rods, and synthetic lines, the fundamentals of the craft have remained basically the same. In The Fly-Fisher’s Companion, the author carefully goes through all the basics, all within the context of modern fly-fishing situations.
This companion may serve as a foundation or a supplement for fly-fishing instruction. It may also be a reminder or reference for the more experienced angler. As a retired educator, the author recognizes that instructors present material in different ways. Instructors may wish to select only those topics that fit their syllabus while omitting others. Over the years, these instructions and commentary have produced a host of competent fly fishers. We all learn by image, word, and action. Since the sepia days of Walton and Cotton, fly fishing has been an enthralling sport. And, as this companion hopefully makes clear, there is more to fishing than fish. There is an infinite amount of pleasure in learning a skill and doing it well.

Skyhorse Publishing is proud to publish a broad range of books for fishermen. Our books for anglers include titles that focus on fly fishing, bait fishing, fly-casting, spin casting, deep sea fishing, and surf fishing. Our books offer both practical advice on tackle, techniques, knots, and more, as well as lyrical prose on fishing for bass, trout, salmon, crappie, baitfish, catfish, and more. While not every title we publish becomes a New York Times bestseller or a national bestseller, we are committed to publishing books on subjects that are sometimes overlooked by other publishers and to authors whose work might not otherwise find a home.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781629149523
Publisher: Skyhorse
Publication date: 11/18/2014
Sold by: SIMON & SCHUSTER
Format: eBook
Pages: 480
File size: 20 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Darrel Martin:
Darrel Martin is a professor of Old and Middle English and is an avid fly fisher as well. He resides in Tacoma, Washington.

Read an Excerpt

Three Sample Entries from THE FLY FISHER'S ILLUSTRATED DICTIONARY:

Isabella (colored): A color of fly tying material; "Dubbing of an absolute Black mix'd with 8 or 10 Hairs Isabella coloured Mohair . . ." (Chetham, 1700). Also appears in The Compleat Angler. "A kind of whitish yellow, or, as some say, buff colour a little soiled." (Altieri's dictionary, quoted by Cotton). Cotton gives the following story: "The Archduke Albertus, who had married the Infanta Isabella, daughter of Philip the Second, King of Spain, with whom he had the Low Countries in dowry, in the year 1602, having determined to lay siege to Ostend . . . his pious princess, who attended him in that expedition, made a vow, that till it was taken she would never change her cloathes. Contrary to expectation, as the story says, it was three years before the place was reduced, in which time her Highness's linen had acquired the above mentioned hue." (The Compleat Angler, Part II, Chapter VII, Charles Cotton).

Loop-Rod: Term popularized by David Webster's The Angler and the Loop-Rod (1885). ". . . a two-handed spliced rod, measuring from 13 feet 6 inches to 13 feet 8 inches. It consists of three pieces. The butt is made of ash, the middle piece of hickory, and top of lancewood. When greater lightness is desired, limetree may be used for the butt: what the rod gains in this respect, however, is lost in durability. Attached to the extremity of the top piece is a strong loop of twisted horse-hair, through which is passed the loop of the hair-line used in casting." The loop-rod, sans reel, was thus characterized by the horse-hair loop at the tip. The horse-hair casting line was about 18 to 20feet long, tapering from 36 to 45 hairs at the butt to five or six hairs at total line length (from the line loop to tail fly) of 34 to 37 feet. Nine flies, on two-inch looped droppers, were attached to the gut-line.

Unguentum Piscatorum Mirabile: (angling): An ointment that "prodigiously causes Fish to bite" according to James Chatham's The Angler's Vade Mecum (1700). "Of Man's Fat, Cats Fat, Herons Fat, and of the best Affa-foetida ["a Gummy Juice of Laser, Laserpitium, or Sylphyon"], of each two Drams, Cummin seed finely powdered two Scruples, and of Camphor, Galbanum and Venice Turpentine, of each one Dram, Civet grains two, make according to Art, all into an indifferent thin Oyntment, with the Chymical Oyls of Lavender, Annise and Cammomil, of each an equal quantity." Chetham, a late contemporary of Walton, augmented his splendid patterns with various abhorrent ointments. Man's fat was procured from London chyrurgeons (surgeons) specializing in anatomy, and heron's fat from poulterers. Chetham "forbore (for some Reasons) to insert" the ointment in his first edition. Apparently, it was extremely difficult to keep a good jewel hidden. "But now, since it is divulged, [I] value it not the less, but esteem it as a jewel." To attract fish, the ointment was applied to the last eight inches of line near the hook. Other curious ointments included the marrow from a heron's thigh bone, grave earth, powder from the bones or skull of a dead man at the opening of a grave, and mummy powder. As John Waller Hills noted, "The older fishermen had some advantage over us."

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