. The sportsman's gazetteer and general guide : the game animals, birds and fishes of North America; their habits and various methods of capture. Copious instructions in shooting, fishing, taxidermy, woodcraft, etc. Together with a directory to the principal game resorts of the country; illustrated with maps . he technical names of theminor appurtenances of a salmon fly is not essential to one whoplies his seventeen foot withe, or scarcely to one who makes hisown flies for American rivers, but to be thorough we must nameall the little adjuncts and accessories. I will therefore call the readers


. The sportsman's gazetteer and general guide : the game animals, birds and fishes of North America; their habits and various methods of capture. Copious instructions in shooting, fishing, taxidermy, woodcraft, etc. Together with a directory to the principal game resorts of the country; illustrated with maps . he technical names of theminor appurtenances of a salmon fly is not essential to one whoplies his seventeen foot withe, or scarcely to one who makes hisown flies for American rivers, but to be thorough we must nameall the little adjuncts and accessories. I will therefore call the readers close attention to the third fig-ure. The tail is what is usually called a topping, /. e. featherfrom the crest of the golden pheasant. The body is wrapped withfloss silk, ribbed with gold twist, z. e. stout gold thread, which isfollowed by a hackle almost to the head where, as will be observed,another feather is tied on, a blue jay, for what is termed a shoul-der. There is a mixed wing of golden pheasant neck, teal, guineahen, and light brown turkey, with a topping much longer than thetail surmounting the wing. The head is of black ostrich herl. 6oo OCEAN, LAKE, AND RIVER. wound on closely, both for ornament and to hide the but end ofthe wing where it is clipped off. Referring to the fourth figure, a. tag just at the but of the tail. A tag may be of ostrich herl,or pigs or seals wool, or floss. The feelers which by a greatstretch of imagination are supposed to represent the antennse of a THE ART OF FLY-MAKING. 6oi natural fly—are the two long fibres of macaw tail feather tied in oneach side of the head and extending back over the wings; and an-other stretch of imagination is to suppose that a natural fly carriesthem thus. The third or fourth fly figured is much too large forthe rivers of Canada at an ordinary stage of water. The thirdmight do on very high water after it has gone down just enoughfor the fish to commence noticing a fly. The second figure is a very plain fly,


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectf, booksubjecthunting