. Salmon-fishing in Canada, by a resident;. Salmon-fishing. A JN'OYEL LEAP. 83 a narrow sorsre, throusrh which the water rushes roaring, raving, and laslring for miles, into which every salmon you hook will use all his energies to throw himself, and if he succeeds, you may depend upon it he will not stop till he reaches the bank of Newfoundland. In many of them the pine, the beech, the alder, and the tamarack grow down to the edge of the water on both sides, impeding every throw,—nay they do worse, they die and fall across the stream, making, it is true, in some pools a very pretty. ripple, to


. Salmon-fishing in Canada, by a resident;. Salmon-fishing. A JN'OYEL LEAP. 83 a narrow sorsre, throusrh which the water rushes roaring, raving, and laslring for miles, into which every salmon you hook will use all his energies to throw himself, and if he succeeds, you may depend upon it he will not stop till he reaches the bank of Newfoundland. In many of them the pine, the beech, the alder, and the tamarack grow down to the edge of the water on both sides, impeding every throw,—nay they do worse, they die and fall across the stream, making, it is true, in some pools a very pretty. ripple, to disguise the fly, Init enabling the fish to execute the beautiful but embarrassing manoeuvre of jumping, as G 2. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Adamson, William Agar, 1800-1866?; Alexander, James Edward, Sir, 1803-1885. London, Longman, Green, Longman, and Roberts


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, booksubjectsalmonfishing, bookye