Vol. 33, No. 1, Winter, 2007 - American Museum Of Fly Fishing

The
American
Fly Fisher
Journal of the American Museum of Fly Fishing
WINTER 2007
VOLUME 33 N UMBER 1
Fish List: The Fifth Index
Timothy Achor-Hoch
Armed with her 61⁄2-foot, 3-weight Kretchman bamboo rod, this journal’s editor
takes a comma-free pause from her regular duties on New York’s Ausable River.
I
T’S FINALLY HERE: the index of the American Fly Fisher
issues from 1999 through 2006.
For some of you, this is Christmas morning. Fly-fishing
history buffs and writers have been after me to get this one out
for some time. Combing the indexes is the fastest way to figure
out what our journal can offer, and if you happen to be an
indexed author, it’s a way to get other readers to find you.
Think of this as your own special toolbox (or tackle box, or—
if you must—fishing vest).
Others of you are no doubt groaning in pain and gnashing
your teeth that you will both have to endure this and wait until
the spring issue to once again sink your teeth into some serious historical narrative. But it’s been eight years since the last
index, and it will be awhile before you see another. To placate
you a bit, we’ve thrown in some pretty pictures, a book review,
and the regular museum news, all right up front.
So here are some vitals: in thirty-two years of publishing,
this is our fifth index, the previous four having been published
in 1978, 1984, 1992, and 1999. Our indexes have traditionally been
published as an issue of the journal itself, and this one is no
exception. Each index covers only the issues of the journal that
came before it and after the last index; to date, no single index
that covers all issues of the journal has been generated.
This fifth index covers eight years of issues, from Winter 1999
(vol. 25, no. 1, the last index issue) through Fall 2006 (vol. 32, no.
4). It is divided into three sections: a subject index, an author
index, and a table of contents index (the last isn’t a true index,
but a list of each issue’s table of contents can come in darn
handy). The one thousandish pages of the last eight years were
professionally indexed by Teri Maurice of Sandpoint, Idaho.
In reviewing what I said last time I introduced the index, I
see that I made some good points. To sum:
• The index itself is an historical document—one that reflects
our history as a journal and as a museum.
• Reviewing the journal may lead you to back issues you haven’t
seen and would like to take a look at, the majority of which
can still be purchased from the museum (see page 34).
• “You could read it aloud, like an epic poem. So many of your
favorite words.” This could make you quite popular at parties.
(But it’s also something that could be done in your own home,
for your private edification. Consider this option.)
Don’t forget to check out the message from Executive
Director Bill Bullock, coming straight to you, as always, from
the inside back cover.
Happy researching and reminiscing.
KATHLEEN ACHOR
EDITOR
THE AMERICAN MUSEUM
OF FLY FISHING
Preserving the Heritage
of Fly Fishing
TRUSTEES
E. M. Bakwin
Michael Bakwin
Foster Bam
Pamela Bates
Duke Buchan III
Mickey Callanen
Peter Corbin
Jerome C. Day
Blake Drexler
Christopher Garcia
Ronald Gard
George R. Gibson III
Gardner L. Grant
Chris Gruseke
James Hardman
James Heckman
Arthur Kaemmer, MD
Woods King III
Carl R. Kuehner III
Nancy Mackinnon
Walter T. Matia
William C. McMaster, MD
James Mirenda
John Mundt
David Nichols
Wayne Nordberg
Raymond C. Pecor
Stephen M. Peet
Leigh H. Perkins
John Rano
John K. Regan
Roger Riccardi
Kristoph J. Rollenhagen
William Salladin
Robert G. Scott
Richard G. Tisch
David H. Walsh
James C. Woods
TRUSTEES EMERITI
Robert N. Johnson
Charles R. Eichel
David B. Ledlie
G. Dick Finlay
Leon L. Martuch
W. Michael Fitzgerald
Keith C. Russell
William Herrick
Paul Schullery
OFFICERS
Chairman of the Board
President
Vice Presidents
Treasurer
Secretary
Clerk
Robert G. Scott
Nancy Mackinnon
George R. Gibson III
Stephen M. Peet
David H. Walsh
James Mirenda
James C. Woods
Charles R. Eichel
S TA F F
Executive Director
Collections Manager
Administration & Membership
Art Director
Account Manager
William C. Bullock III
Yoshi Akiyama
Rebecca Nawrath
Sara Wilcox
Patricia Russell
THE AMERICAN FLY FISHER
Editor
Design & Production
Copy Editor
Kathleen Achor
Sara Wilcox
Sarah May Clarkson
Journal of the American Museum of Fly Fishing
WINTER 2007
VOLUME 33
NUMBER 1
The Batten Kill Bash . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Bill Bullock
Book Review: Swanson’s Grand Cascapedia Giants . . . . . . 5
John Mundt
Museum News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
The Collective Index: 1999–2006
Teri Maurice
Subject Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Author Index. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Table of Contents Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
ON THE COVER: Among the issues indexed here are (clockwise from top left):
Winter 2000 (vol. 26, no. 1), Winter 2001 (vol. 27, no. 1), Summer 2002 (vol.
28, no. 3), and Summer 2005 (vol. 31, no. 3).
INDEX ILLUSTRATIONS: From H. Cholmondeley-Pennell, Fishing: Salmon
and Trout (London: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1895).
The American Fly Fisher (ISSN 0884-3562) is published
four times a year by the museum at P.O. Box 42, Manchester, Vermont 05254.
Publication dates are winter, spring, summer, and fall. Membership dues include the cost of the
journal ($15) and are tax deductible as provided for by law. Membership rates are listed in the back of each issue.
All letters, manuscripts, photographs, and materials intended for publication in the journal should be sent to
the museum. The museum and journal are not responsible for unsolicited manuscripts, drawings, photographic
material, or memorabilia. The museum cannot accept responsibility for statements and interpretations that are
wholly the author’s. Unsolicited manuscripts cannot be returned unless postage is provided. Contributions to The
American Fly Fisher are to be considered gratuitous and the property of the museum unless otherwise requested
by the contributor. Articles appearing in this journal are abstracted and indexed in Historical Abstracts and America:
History and Life. Copyright © 2007, the American Museum of Fly Fishing, Manchester, Vermont 05254. Original
material appearing may not be reprinted without prior permission. Periodical postage paid at
Manchester, Vermont 05254 and additional offices (USPS 057410). The American Fly Fisher (ISSN 0884-3562)
EMAIL: [email protected] WEBSITE: www.amff.com
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The American Fly Fisher, P.O. Box 42, Manchester, Vermont 05254.
We welcome contributions to the American Fly Fisher. Before making a submission,
please review our Contributor’s Guidelines on our website (www.amff.com), or
write to request a copy. The museum cannot accept responsibility for statements
and interpretations that are wholly the author’s.
Statement of Ownership, Management, and Circulation
The American Fly Fisher (publication number 0084-3562) is published four times per year (Winter,
Spring, Summer, Fall). Editor is Kathleen Achor. Complete address for both publisher and editor is
The American Museum of Fly Fishing, P.O. Box 42, Manchester, VT 05254. The journal is wholly
owned by the American Museum of Fly Fishing. Total number of copies: 2,300 (average number of
copies of each issue run during the preceding twelve months; 2,300 actual number of copies of single
issue published nearest to filing date). Paid/requested circulations (including advertiser’s proof and
exchange copies): 1,512 (average; 1,512 actual). Free distribution by mail: 150 (average; 150 actual). Sales
through dealers and carriers, street vendors, and counter sales: 0 (average; 0 actual). Free distribution
outside the mail: 200 (average; 200 actual). Total free distribution: 200 (average; 200 actual). Total distribution: 2,200 (average; 2,200 actual). Copies not distributed: 100 (average; 438 actual). Total: 2,300
(average; 2,300 actual). Percent paid and/or requested circulation: 85% (average; 85% actual).
The Batten Kill Bash
On August 19, 2006, the museum celebrated its first anniversary in our new home on Route 7A by holding its
inaugural Batten Kill Bash.
Traffic was brisk for the daylong vendor exhibitions. Our members and guests enjoyed visiting with the many
artists, carvers, rodbuilders, fly tyers, antique book dealers, and other vendors who exhibited on our grounds. A
big hit was our version of Antiques Roadshow, which brought many friends in with their heirloom tackle and books
to be evaluated free of charge by a team of antique tackle and book appraisers.
The day culminated with our Batten Kill Barbeque under the tent, where 150 guests were treated to a history of
the Batten Kill. Historic photo panels and banners, depicting the river’s rich history of angling, decorated the tent
and its tables. After dinner, guests enjoyed a spirited auction and raffle that raised important funds for the museum. At the end of the evening, we all had prime seating for the Orvis Company’s incredible 150th Anniversary fireworks display.
The museum would like to thank all of our sponsors and attendees for their wonderful support of this event.
BILL BULLOCK
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Photos by Yoshi Akiyama and Bill Bullock
Museum friend and fly-tying master Bill Newcomb.
George Butts of the Green Mountain Fly Tyers chats with
museum member Pen Reed.
Visitors browse the AMFF sale table.
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THE AMERICAN FLY FISHER
Museum Board Chairman Bob Scott shows his
granddaughter how to cast a bamboo rod.
Hildene volunteers Chris Bongartz, Laine Akiyama, and Vinnie
Pizzo grilled hamburgers and hot dogs during the lunch hours.
Trustee Jim Hardman (right) with museum
friend and bamboo rodmaker Jim Becker.
Tackle expert Marty Keane conducts his version
of the Antiques Roadshow.
WINTER 2007
3
Noted artist C. D. Clarke visits with Orvis employee Meg Mayer.
Rodmaker Fred Kretchman (right) educates a
visitor about his extraordinary bamboo rods.
Orvis’s Master Rodmaker Charlie Hisey chats with longtime
museum supporter Ron Wilcox of Manchester, Vermont.
Henry Caldwell and Jim Schottenham man the booth for the
Old Reel Collectors Association.
4
THE AMERICAN FLY FISHER
BOOK REVIEW
Swanson’s Grand Cascapedia Giants
by John Mundt
T
ALES OF GIANT FISH
are usually received
with raised eyebrows.
An angler’s enthusiasm
often leads to sincere but
somewhat exaggerated estimates when describing a
prized catch. As a result of
this inherent trait, the
International Game Fish
Association requires a series
of proof sources before a
fish is entered into today’s
record books. But how does
one test the veracity of tales
concerning record fish of
the past?
Ron Swanson’s Grand
Cascapedia Giants is the
result of an exhaustive
analysis of seventy-eight
such accounts concerning
the King of the Game Fish.
For a salmon to earn the
distinction of being a Cascapedia giant, it had to
have a verifiable weight of
45 pounds or more. Swanson writes that the 45pound benchmark “evolved
early in the salmon fishing
history of the Cascapedia,
prior to any serious thinking about ‘record salmon’
(those fish that weigh 50
lbs. or more) or even 40
pounders. By the mid-19th
century, it was clear to the early salmon
fishermen/explorers that the Cascapediac, as it was then called, was special
in that it held the largest Atlantic salmon
in the new continent” (p. iv). That special quality is firmly established by more
than a century and a half of Atlantic
salmon fishing in North America.
Each entry was investigated with the
painstaking discipline of a seasoned historian. Swanson also called on his close
friend and fellow Cascapedia authority
Hoagy Carmichael to write the introduc-
tion and to shed light on a few of the
mysteries time had forgotten. The stories
are fascinating. One angler, J. C. H. Bonbright, earned an entry as a twelve-yearold, whereas veteran William Mershon
took thirty-four seasons to reach the 45pound-plus mark. But, as the saying
goes, “That’s fishing.”
More than a decade of research is refined into 109 pages comprising the body
of Grand Cascapedia Giants. The text is
nicely complemented by a series of related photographs, paintings, and maps.
The endnotes provide further detail, and the appendices anticipate other questions the inquisitive angler
might have: Record Fish in
Chronological Order, Best
Cascapedia Fish by Anglers
of Interest, Grand Cascapedia Camp Owners’ Biggest Salmon, the Tradition
of Fish Models, Flies That
Caught the Biggest Fish,
and Pools That Held the
Biggest Fish Caught. All
neat facts for fireside chats
at the lodge.
This book will inspire
you to keep casting during
those sullen periods when
you’re convinced that there
are no salmon in your
pool or that the water is
either too high, low, warm,
cold, clear, cloudy, or
acidic. It will also provide
you with a sense of appreciation for the traditions
being followed each time
you endure the travel,
expense, and persistence
associated with the pursuit of these majestic fish.
Grand Cascapedia Giants
is published by the Meadow Run Press of Far Hills,
New Jersey, in a handsome
edition of 1,000 clothbound, slipcased volumes, each signed
by Swanson. Should you wish to secure
one for your shelf, contact the Meadow
Run Press at (908) 719-8858, or visit their
website at www.meadowrunpress.com.
Copies are available at $90 postpaid. A
deluxe edition is to be published at a
later date.
!
This book review previously appeared in the winter
2005/2006 Anglers’ Club Bulletin (vol. 80, no. 3,
73–75).
WINTER 2007
5
Sara Wilcox
A beautiful sunrise greeted the attendees on Wednesday
morning, portending a great day on the water and on the links.
Half of the contestants met their guides at the Watch Hill
Marina to chase the striped bass, bluefish, and false albacore on
their southern migration while the other contestants hit the
links for a challenging morning of golf at the Shelter Harbor
Golf Club. After a lunch break at the club, the groups switched
venues—the hackers went casting, and the casters went hacking.
The group then reassembled at the club for the awards dinner, where they also viewed the museum’s recent traveling
exhibit on Babe Ruth and Ted Williams.
Significant funds were raised for the museum, and plans are
under way for next year’s tourney.
Napa Winery Dinner
Cathy Hall, AMFF’s 2006 Volunteer of the Year,
stands next to the museum’s reel collection.
Volunteer of the Year Award
For the countless hours of work she has given the museum
shop, Cathy Hall of Manchester, Vermont, was presented the
Joe Pisarro Volunteer of the Year Award in August at our first
annual Batten Kill Bash (see pages 2–4). In spring 2005, Cathy
approached Becky Nawrath, who coordinates the staff at the
shop, and inquired about volunteering. Cathy was enthusiastically welcomed and soon became our Sunday afternoon shop
assistant. Her retail background and experience with the register and the products made the learning curve easy.
Cathy helped tremendously in June 2005 when the museum
celebrated its new building with the grand reopening celebration. The museum was jammed with shoppers that day, and
Cathy handled it all with great skill and aplomb. She’s been
willing to fill in, even after her tenure was officially up, and she
helped us transition to new staff this past spring.
Executive Director Bill Bullock presented Cathy with a certificate and some of her favorite items—our school-of-fish
wine glasses—in appreciation for her many months of service
to the museum. Thanks, Cathy! Don’t be a stranger!
The Napa Winery Dinner and Sporting Auction was held on
Saturday, October 7, at the Paraduxx Winery in St. Helena,
California. Executive Director Bill Bullock and Membership
Director Becky Nawrath made the journey from Vermont
along with museum friend and auctioneer extraordinaire
Lyman Foss.
This dinner, once again chaired by museum Trustee Roger
Riccardi, was a glorious gastronomic affair that was thoroughly enjoyed by everyone in attendance. Our hosts, Dan
Duckhorn and Alex Ryan, lavished our guests with tastings of
their award-winning wines from their Paraduxx and
Duckhorn labels. Dan Duckhorn also treated us to a succulent
Hog Island oyster bar.
The weather cooperated beautifully, allowing the crowd of
one hundred to enjoy a magnificent Napa Valley sunset outside
under the canopy of several beautiful fig trees.
Bill Bullock
Cast and Hack Tourney
The American Museum of Fly Fishing launched a new fundraising event in fall 2006: our first annual Cast and Hack
Tourney. This was made possible through the generous support of Trustee Steve Peet and his fellow Trustees Carl Kuehner
and Chris Garcia. The venue was the Shelter Harbor Golf Club
of Charlestown, Rhode Island, and the saltwater fishery of the
Rhode Island coast.
The Cast and Hack Tourney kicked off on Tuesday, October
3, with a traditional clambake and bonfire. Attendees warmed
up their golf games with a closest-to-the-pin contest with a
TPC-like floating green.
6
THE AMERICAN FLY FISHER
Napa dinner attendees enjoy the antics of auctioneer
Lyman Foss as he works to raise funds for the museum.
The live and silent auctions featured a wide array of artwork, fishing tackle, and fishing trips and drew great interest.
Lyman was masterful at engaging the crowd. We are proud to
report that we exceeded our aggressive fund-raising goal for
this event, and significant dollars were raised for our ongoing
programs.
Alex Ryan made a special presentation to museum Trustee
Leigh Perkins, celebrating his contributions to the museum
and the fly-fishing industry. A beautiful magnum of Paraduxx
Wine, personalized with the museum’s insignia by the artists at
the Gallo family’s G-3 studio, was given to Leigh.
We owe a great deal of gratitude to Roger Riccardi and his
dinner committee for their wonderful support. We also extend
a special thank you to museum member Lisa Pavageau for her
tireless efforts in procuring wonderful live and silent auction lots.
In addition, we’d like to recognize the following sponsors
and auction donors, without whom we could not have had
such a successful event: Joe Gallo and the Gallo Family
Vineyards; artist Roger Fowler; Dana Post and the gang at
North Fork Crossing Lodge in Ovando, Montana; museum
members John Regan and Laura Dawson; Leigh Perkins;
Reynolds Pomeroy and the Crescent H Ranch; Douglas Reid;
Mikey Eddy and Federico Ochoa from Argentina; Richard
Warren and MacLennan Lodge on the Upsalquitch; Sonia
O’Neal; Jill Alcott; Fred Kretchman; Dave Van Winkle; Art
Teter; Frank Pisciotta; Leo Siren; Herb Burton; Lance Rave and
Orvis Reno; Tony Lavely and Ruth Chris Steak House; Gary
Widman; and Erica Nichols and Ruby the Wonder Dog.
Friends of Peter Corbin Shoot
Artist and Museum Trustee Peter Corbin hosted our Fifth
Annual Friends of Peter Corbin Shoot in Millbrook, New York,
on October 17 and 18. This year’s event featured two venerable
Millbrook venues: Orvis Sandanona and the Tamarack
Preserve. The museum gratefully acknowledges the support of
both of these organizations for making their exceptional facilities available to us.
Participants enjoyed a wonderful afternoon of shooting and
camaraderie at Orvis Sandanona, then attended a reception at
Peter Corbin’s studio to view his current works before repairing to dinner at the Tamarack Preserve. The group reassembled
the next morning at Tamarack Preserve for a day in the field.
The highlight was a spirited drawing for an original Peter
Corbin painting, Million Dollar Afternoon, which depicts
Atlantic salmon angling on the Patapedia pool on the
Restigouche River. Each participant’s name was included in the
drawing, and the last name drawn took this painting home. The
lucky shooter this year was Thomas Gravina. All other participants received a signed limited-edition giclée of the painting.
The museum thanks all of our supporters and participants
for making this another successful event, raising significant
funds for our archival and collections work.
Recent Donations
David R. Notter of Turners Falls, Massachusetts, donated a
9-foot, two-piece Omar Needham Deluxe Needham pentagonal bamboo fly rod. Alex Hoffman of East Dorset, Vermont,
sent us an 8-foot, 6-inch, three-piece Lew Morrison Expert
bamboo fly rod. And Linda Perini of Ashland, Massachusetts,
gave us a 9-foot, three-piece Montague bamboo fly rod that
belonged to Joseph R. Perini of Farmington, Massachusetts.
Ralph Billingsley of Campbellton, New Brunswick, Canada,
donated a leather rod case that belonged to Dean Sage. John
Amos of Auckland, New Zealand, sent an F. Steans & Co. fly
reel made by Ernie Brown of New Zealand.
Dick Talleur of Sunset Beach, North Carolina, sent along a
Western Stone Fly tied by Robert Boyle. Denyse Zyveniuk of
Tide Head, New Brunswick, Canada, donated fly-tying material from the collection of J. Clovis Arseneault, the creator of the
Rusty Rat Atlantic salmon fly. Philip Brett III of Manchester,
Vermont, gave us forty-one English snelled-hook wet flies.
Greg Duval of Pownal, Vermont, donated a painting of a
fishing scene by Dave McGrath. John T. Brunson of Mexico,
New York, sent us a photocopy of a painting done by Gregory
Pryor called Wyoming Brown Trout.
David and Natalie Slohm of Shushan, New York, donated
six master audiotapes by Battenkill Productions of Come Fish
with Me, Vol. 1, fishing stories recorded by Arnold Gingrich,
Ernest Schwiebert, Dana Lamb, Art Flick, Ed Zern, and Nick
Lyons (marketed in 1975), and an assortment of cassette tapes
along with promotional paper materials. John S. Mackiewicz
of Albany, New York, gave us a collection of magazines (for a
detailed list, contact the museum).
David Walsh of Jackson, Wyoming, donated a Diamondback 7-foot, 6-inch, two-piece #7645 graphite fly rod; an Orvis
7-foot, 6-inch, two-piece impregnated Battenkill bamboo fly
rod; a J. S. Sharpe 9-foot, three-piece impregnated bamboo fly
rod; a framed limited edition print (42/200) of Peter Corbin’s
Battenkill Afternoon; and a limited edition print (14/25) of
Peter Corbin’s The Line.
CORRECTION: A museum friend pointed out a rather embarrassing misprint in the Summer 2006 list of recent donations.
The two-piece rod and Taurus Airex saltwater fly reel donated
by Lefty Kreh was used by Lee Cuddy (not Lee Cubby) to catch
the first Atlantic sailfish on the fly. Our apologies.
Many thanks to all our donors.
In the Library
Thanks to the following publishers for their donations of
recent titles that have become part of our collection (all titles
were published in 2006):
Northwest Fly Fishing sent us Jack W. Berryman’s FlyFishing Pioneers & Legends of the Northwest. Mr. Berryman
sent us a personalized copy as well.
Frank Amato Publications, Inc., sent us Al Buhr’s TwoHanded Fly Casting: Spey Casting Technique; Marty Bartholomew’s Tying Flies Like a Pro; and Richard R. Twarog’s Atlantic
Salmon Flies: Postcards from Rivers Past.
Stackpole Books sent us Keith Fulsher’s Thunder Creek Flies:
Tying and Fishing the Classic Baitfish Imitations (with David
Klausmeyer); Paul Gustafson’s How to Catch Bigger Pike from
Rivers, Lochs and Lakes (expanded second edition by Swan Hill
Press); and Paul Schullery’s The Rise: Streamside Observations
on Trout, Flies & Fly Fishing.
Upcoming Events
January 19–21
Fly-Fishing Show
Marlborough, Massachusetts
January 26–28
Fly-Fishing Show
Somerset, New Jersey
Winter (date TBD)
New York Anglers’ Club Dinner
For more information, contact the museum at (802)
362-3300 or via e-mail at [email protected].
WINTER 2007
7
SUBJECT INDEX
References are by volume(number):page.
Illustration or caption page references are in italics.
Articles, poems, or short stories are in quotation marks.
Books, magazines, paintings, and foreign language words are
in italics.
[Bracketed names] are staff writings, sometimes uncredited.
For flies by name see flies, by name.
“n” indicates the reference is to a note on the page.
“c1” indicates front cover.
“c2” indicates inside front cover.
“c3” indicates inside back cover.
“AMFF” stands for American Museum of Fly Fishing.
Companies are listed by proper name first.
A
Abbey & Imbrie, 25(3):22, 32(3):3, 7
Abbotts Barton fishery, 27(4):14
Achor, Kathleen, 26(1):c2, 31(4):c2
See also Author Index
Achor-Hoch, Timothy, 26(4):c2, 29(1):c2
Adams, Richard Nelson, 31(2):17
Adirondack Guide Boat, 25(3):27, 26(3):21
Advanced Bait Casting (Fox), 31(1):12, 14, 19
Agnew, Art, 28(3):8
Akiyama, Laine, 26(3):20, 26(4):12, 22
Akiyama, Yoshi, 26(3):20, 26(4):22, 27(2):28, 29(1):25, 30(2):31,
32(2):31, 32(3):14
and AMFF reopening, 31(4):19, 20, 22
and Anglers All exhibit, 26(4):10, 11
See also Author Index
Albright, Jimmie, 31(4):5
8
THE AMERICAN FLY FISHER
Aldam, W. H., 26(2):9, 11, 26(4):18
See also Aldham, W. H.
Alder Creek (WI), 31(1):2, 2–5, 3, 4, 5
“Alder Fork—A Fishing Idyl” (Leopold), 29(4):8, 11
Aldham, W. H., 30(4):13
See also Aldam, W. H.
Aldo Leopold Foundation, 29(4):10
See also Leopold, Aldo
Alfred, H. J., 32(2):16
Ælfric the Abbot, 26(4):4
Ælianus, Claudius, 27(1):7, 8, 27(4):17
Allcock, Polycarp, 30(1):12
See also S. Allcock Company
Allcock, Samuel. See S. Allcock Company
Allen, F. George, 32(4):12, 12–15, 14
Allen, Harry, 30(3):5
Allsopp, John, 29(2):22
Alphabet of Angling (Rennie), 27(3):13, 19, 28(3):4
Alten: The Story of a Salmon River (Fleury/Dalenson), 30(3):5,
7–8
America
dominant ideas in fishing in, 28(1):21–22
early hooks from, 32(2):17–18, 18
early Native American fishing in, 25(3):2–7
fly fishing in before 1860s, 28(1):2–3, 11n3, 11n4, 29(2):8,
9–15
growth of conservation movement in, 29(3):2–3
introduction of brown trout in, 27(4):12
Norris’s innovations for fly fishing in, 29(2):4
popularity of fly fishing in 19th century, 29(3):6
presidents and fishing, 26(1):15–25, 30(4):10–11
See also specific states
American Anglers Book, The (Norris), 29(2):2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 32(3):4
American Angler’s Guide (Brown), 32(3):6
American Fish Culture (Norris), 29(2):4
American Fishing Tackle Manufacturers Association
(AFTMA), fly line standards, 28(3):8, 8
American Fly Fishing: A History (Schullery), 27(2):10, 28(1):2
American Museum of Fly Fishing, The
AAM accreditation of, 29(3):c3
awards presentations, 25(3):28, 26(1):26–27, 26(3):24–25,
27(3):30–31, 28(1):27–28, 28(3):18–19, 29(1):20–21,
29(3):32, 30(2):34–35
and Bates collection, 25(2):12, 19
collection from Gordon’s library, 27(2):5
collections of, 25(2):8, 9, 10, 10–11, 11, 25(3):30, 26(4):14, 15,
16, c1
dinner/auctions, 25(2):23–24, 25(3):28–29, 26(1):28–30, 33,
26(2):22, 24, 26(3):25, 27(1):18, 20, 27(3):31–32,
28(1):30, 28(2):30, 28(3):20, 22, 29(1):24–25,
29(2):22, 24, 29(3):26, 29(4):25–26, 26, 30(1):22, 24,
30(2):30, 30(3):28–29, 30(4):24, 26, 31(1):23–25,
31(2):28, 31(3):25, 32(1):23–24, 32(2):29–30, 32(3):18
donation of Norris rod, 29(2):2, 3, 5
donation of Prince Charles’s vest, 27(4):26
donations to, 25(2):24–26, 25(3):30, 25(4):24, 26(1):33,
26(2):24, 26(4):23–24, 26, 27(1):22, 27(2):30,
27(3):33, 27(4):26, 28, 30, 28(1):30–32, 28(2):32, 34,
36, 28(3):22, 24, 28(4):24, 29(1):25–26, 29(2):24,
29(3):30, 29(4):26, 28, 30(1):25, 30(2):32, 30(4):26,
31(1):25, 31(2):28–29, 31(3):25–26, 31(4):26, 32(1):24,
32(2):31, 32(3):19–20, 32(4):21–22
donors, 25(2):21, 26(2):26, 27(2):27, 28(2):27, 28(3):25,
29(2):21, 30(2):33, 31(3):25, 32(2):33
Father’s Day Event, 32(4):21–22
Festival Weekends, 25(3):25–27, 26(3):20–22, 27(3):26–29, c2
Finlay (Dick)’s association with, 25(2):20, 31(4):14, 14, 16–17
Friends of Peter Corbin Shoot, 29(1):28, 31(1):24, 32(1):23
and International Museum of Fly Fishing, 32(4):21
library of, 32(2):28
marketing/program news, 31(2):28, 32(3):18–19
Neff exhibit, 26(2):2
new site/reopening of, 28(1):c3, 28(4):20, 20–21, 21,
29(2):17, 18, 18–20, 19, 20, 30(1):26, 26–27, 27, 28,
c2, c3, 30(2):c2, 30(3):22, 22, 23, 30(4):30, 30, 31,
31(1):26, 26, 27, 28, 29, c3, c3, 31(2):c3, 31(4):18,
18–22, 19, 20, 21, 22, 22–23, 24, 24, 25–26
oral history report, 28(1):32–33
and Orvis/Marbury’s flies/panels, 29(3):7, 8
and Orvis traveling exhibit, 32(2):31, 32(3):20
representation at shows, 26(2):21, 27(2):28, 30, 28(2):32,
29(1):25, 29(2):24, 29(3):26–27, 30(2):30–31,
31(2):28, 32(1):24, 32(2):30–32
and Sage collection, 32(3):14, 14–17, 15, 16, 17
staffing news, 25(2):23, 26(4):22–23, 31(1):22–23, 31(2):27–28
35th anniversary of, 29(2):17–20
tournament/fundraiser, 25(4):12–13
traveling exhibit, 25(2):22, 22, 26(4):10–13, 28(1):30,
28(4):20
trustee meetings/news, 26(1):28, 27(3):30, 28(1):27, 31,
29(1):24, 29(4):25, 31(1):22, 32(1):23
website of, 32(1):24
American Sportsmen and the Origins of Conservation (Reiger),
28(2):29
American Trout-Stream Insects (Rhead), 28(1):2, 28(4):13,
30(3):c2, 30(4):20, 21
American Turf Register and Sporting Magazine (Skinner),
29(2):8
Ancient Angling Authors (Turrell), 27(1):4
Andrews, George, 30(3):10, 10
Andrews, William Loring, 26(2):10
Andrus, Gary, 27(1):18
“Angler, The” (poem by Lathey), 26(2):9, 11, c1
Angler in Ireland, The (Belton), 27(2):19
anglers, depictions of, 26(4):7, 7–8, 8, 28(1):18, 20, 21,
28(2):7–9, 9
Anglers All (exhibit), 25(2):22, 22, 26(4):10–13, 27(1):20,
28(1):30, 28(4):20, 31(1):6, c3
Anglers’ Club of New York, 30(4):9
dinner/auctions, 25(3):28, 26(2):22, 27(3):31, 28(2):30,
29(2):22, 24, 30(2):30, 32(3):18
and Flyfishers’ Club of London, 27(4):12–13, 13
and Halford letter and flies, 27(2):3
and Payne rod, 27(2):9, 16–17
Angler’s Entomology, An (Harris), 26(4):16
Anglers Guide, The (Salter), 30(4):13, 15, 16
Anglers in 1611 (painting, Bunbury), 28(1):20
Anglers in 1811 (painting, Bunbury), 28(1):21
Angler’s Manual, The (Turton), 27(4):4
Angler’s Paradise, An (Barker), 30(1):2, 3–4, 6
Angler’s Secret, The (Bradford), 30(3):18, 18–19, 19
Angler’s Souvenir, The (Fisher), illustration from, 27(1):c2
angling. See fishing; fly fishing
Angling Club of Japan, 25(2):6
Angling in All Its Branches (Taylor), 27(2):18, 29(1):13, 30(4):16
Angling in America (Goodspeed), 28(1):23–24, 30(3):5
Angling in Hibernia (Neff binding), 26(2):8, 10
Angling Letters of S. A. Neff Jr. and J. S. Hewitson, 26(2):8
Angling or How to Angle and Where to Go (Blakey), 27(4):3
Angling Sketches (Lang), 25(4):22
Annesley, Patrick Grove, 28(3):15
Anticosti Island (Canada), 27(3):4–5
ants, patterns of, 25(4):7, 26(2):16
Apte, Stu, 28(1):32, 33
Arnold, Tom, 26(1):29
art, angling
AMFF collection, 25(2):10–11, 25(3):30, 26(4):32
Bewick’s, 32(4):16–20, 17, 18, 19, 20, c1
Homer’s, 28(2):22, 22–26, 23, 24, 25, 26
winemakers’ labels, 30(2):2, 2–12, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11
See also specific artists
Arte of Angling, The (Samuel), 26(4):2–3, 4–6, 7, 27(1):4
on coarse fishing, 28(3):3
illustrations in, 26(4):5
Arte of Venerie (Twici), 28(2):5–6
Arthur, Chester A., 26(1):15, 16–17, 32(1):4
Art of Angling, The (Barker), 25(3):8, 29(4):23
Art of Angling (Bowlker), 26(4):17
Art of Falconry (Emperor Frederick II), 28(2):4, 4
Art of Fly Fishing for Trout and Grayling in Germany and
Austria, The (Horrocks), 25(3):13, 14–19
Art of Fly Making (Blacker), 25(2):14, 18
Art of Hunting, The (Dryden), 28(2):5, 5–6
Art of the Atlantic Salmon Fly, The (Bates), 25(2):12, 13, 14, 17,
17, 18, 19
Art of Tying the Wet Fly, The (Leisenring), 26(3):18
Ashworth, Edmund, 27(4):2
Ashworth, Thomas, 27(4):2
Astorga, manuscript of, 25(4):11
Astræus river. See Macedonia
Atherton, James S., 30(2):18
Atherton, John, 25(2):17, 26(4):12, 30(1):17, 30(3):6
Atlantic salmon, 30(2):15
books on, 30(3):2, 2–11, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9
in Iceland, 31(2):8, 8–9, 9
Williams’s passion for, 31(4):10
Wood’s collection on, 27(3):2–11, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8–9, 10–11, c1
See also salmon
Atlantic Salmon Association, 27(3):5
WINTER 2007
9
Atlantic Salmon Flies and Fishing (Bates), 25(2):14, 19
Atlas of Early Man (Hawkes), 32(2):15
Atlas of the Roman World (Cornell & Matthews), 27(4):17
aurora trout, 31(3):2, 2–9, 6
Austin, Bill, 32(3):12
Austin, Ed, 26(3):5
Austin, R. S., 32(4):6
Austin, Reed, 32(3):13
Australia
first artificial fly, 30(2):5, 6, 11n27, 11n28
introduction of game fish in, 27(4):3–4
B
Back, Howard, 27(4):24
Bacon, Francis, 25(2):9
Baddeley, John, 28(1):21
Baden-Powell, Heather, 25(4):15–16, 17–18
Baden-Powell, Robert S. S., 25(4):14–19, 20, 21
photos of, 25(4):14, 15, 16, 17, 19, c1
Baetis (mayfly), 26(2):15
Baillie-Grohman, F., 28(2):6–7
Baillie-Grohman, W. A., 28(2):6–7
Bainbridge, George, 26(4):20
Baker, James, 29(2):22
Baker, Rhodes S., 32(4):12, 12–15, 13, 14, 15
Baker’s Crossing, 32(4):15, 15
Bakwin, Doris, 27(3):29
Bakwin, Michael, 27(3):29
Bakwin, Pete, 27(3):29
Baldwin, Sallie, 28(3):22, 29(4):25, 31(2):8
Balkans. See Macedonia
Bam, Foster, 27(3):29, 28(3):18, 19, 29(3):35, 29(4):25, 31(2):8
bamboo rods
Allcock’s split-cane, 30(1):8, 9, 9, 13, c1
of early 1900s, 29(1):11
and Gordon, 27(2):5, 9, 9, 12–17, 14, 15, 16, 17
Leonard & Hudson Valley/Catskill rod, 25(3):22–23
and Norris, 29(2):3, 4, 5, 5, 6, c1
origins of, 28(1):23
Payne Model 410, 32(3):21, 21
Young’s, 31(4):4, 5–10, 6, 8, 9
See also rods
Banks, Joseph, 29(2):8
barbel, 28(3):2, 3
Barker, Frederick Drummon, 30(1):2–7
Barker, Thomas, 25(3):8, 27(3):17
Barnum, P. T., 25(2):9, 10
Barrett, William Michael, 32(4):23
Barter, Arthur, 32(2):5–6
Barter, Terry, 30(3):7, 9
Bartlett, G. Donald, 26(1):13, 28(2):21
Bashline, Jim, 26(2):16
Basile, Kenneth, 27(4):28
bass. See specific species of
Bassano, Jacopo da, 25(4):10, 11
Bates, Joseph D., Jr., 25(2):11, 12–19, 15, 19, c1
and Carrie Stevens, 26(1):12
and Letourneau, 26(3):10
on Nine-Three, 26(3):7, 8
Bates, Joseph D., Sr., 25(2):15
Bates, Josephine Avery, 25(2):15
Bates, Pamela, 28(2):12, 28(3):22, 31(4):c2, 32(2):30
See also Richards, Pamela Bates; Author Index
10
THE AMERICAN FLY FISHER
Batten Kill (VT), 32(3):c3
Bayard, Thomas Francis, 29(1):4, 8
bead-heads, 30(3):15–16
Beam, Philip, 28(2):25
Beazley, David, 28(1):26, 30(4):13, 14
Becker, Baron, 25(4):13
Beckwith & Topham, illustration by, 27(1):c2
Beddow, Ed, 30(1):24
Bedford, Tim, 25(2):11
beetles, 28(3):3, 30(4):13, 14, 16
Japanese, 26(2):15
and Skues, 25(4):7
Behnke, Robert J., 31(3):6, 7
“Being Instructions How to Angle for a Trout or Grayling in a
Clear Stream” (Cotton), 29(3):20
Belgrade region (ME), 26(3):2–9
photos/brochures, 26(3):2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8–9, 11
and tandem fly, 26(3):6, 7–9
Belknap, Timothy, 28(4):13
Bell, Dick, 30(1):24
Bellows, Ralph, 32(3):12
Belton, William, 27(2):19
Benardete, Steve, 28(3):19, 29(4):26
Benson, Frank, 32(3):12
Benson, Jackson, 32(4):8
Bentley, Gerald Eades, 26(4):4
Bergman, Ray, 28(1):21, 30(1):15, 30(3):13, 32(3):7
Just Fishing, 31(1):13, 19–20
Berlant, Anthony, 25(3):3
Berls, Robert, 27(4):24
See also Author Index
Berners, Dame Juliana, 25(2):2, 18, 25(3):12, 25(4):11, 27(3):20,
30(1):8, 30(4):4, 4–5, 32(1):14
on angling, 28(2):7
book on, 28(1):26
Best, Thomas, 27(1):6, 27(3):13, 28(3):4
Best of the British Baits, The (Sandford), 30(4):13, 16
Bethune, George Washington, 28(4):22
Betters, Fran, 29(1):22
Betts, John, 25(3):28, 29(1):c3, 30(1):17, 31(1):11, 32(2):29, 32(4):9
at Gore Creek, 31(2):20–24
See also Author Index
Bewick, Thomas, 32(4):16, 16–20, 17
art of, 32(4):17, 18, 19, 20, c1
Bible, fishing in, 30(4):2–4, 3
Bibliotheca Piscatoria (Westwood & Satchell), 30(4):19, 19–20
Bickerdyke, John, 27(2):c2, 28(1):16, 28(3):4, 29(1):16–17
Bigelmair, Andreas, 25(4):11
Bigelow, Albert M., 27(3):2
Big Whitney Meadow (CA), 31(3):13, 15, 17, 18, 19
Biography of Lord Baden-Powell of Gilwell (Reynolds), 25(4):16
Bischoff, Wilhelm, 25(3):16, 20n
Bissell, Alfred E., 30(3):4, 6–7
Black, Angus, 25(2):25, 25(3):28
Black, Dennis, 29(1):22
black bass, 29(2):11, 13
in Belgrade Lakes, 26(3):4–5
Blacker, William, 25(2):14, 18, 26(2):9, 11, 29(1):16, 30(4):16
Blakey, Robert, 27(3):17, 27(4):3, 28(2):10, 30(4):19–20
Blome, Richard, 25(3):9–10, 10, 27(1):4, 6, 6
Blondel, Sveinbjorn, 31(2):8, 9, 9
blueback trout (Salvelinus oquassa), 26(1):13–14
bobbin, 27(2):22, 22
Böcklin, Arnold, 25(3):14
Bodine, Ernest “Moose,” 26(1):9
bodkin, 27(2):22, 22, 23
Bogdan, Stan, 28(4):26, 31(2):28, 31(4):21, 32(2):30
Boilard, Bob, 26(1):15
Boit, John, 32(3):11
Boke of St. Albans, 28(2):5, 8
Bolin, Rolf L., 32(4):9, c2
Bonbright, George D. B., 32(1):8–9, 10, 11–12, 32(2):5, 6, 7, 9–10, 11
flies of, 32(1):10–11, 32(2):4, 8
Bonbright, Irving, 32(1):8, 9, 9–10, 11, 32(2):4–5, 7, 8, 10
Bonbright, William Prescott, 32(1):10
bonefish, fishing for, 31(2):14, 14–15
and Williams, 31(4):5, 6, 10
bone gorge. See gorges
Booke of the English Husbandman, The (Markham), 29(4):17
Book of Fishing with Hooke & Line, A (Mascall), 26(4):7,
29(4):14, 14, 16, 23
Book of Small Flies, A (Neff binding), 26(2):3, 5
Book of the All-round Angler (Bickerdyke), 27(2):c2
Book of the Pike, The (Cholmondeley-Pennell), 29(1):13
Book of Trout Flies, A (Jennings), 28(1):10, 30(2):14
Book on Angling, A (Francis), 27(4):4, 7, 28(3):3
Book Society (Watson), 32(4):6
Borden, Lewis M., III, 28(1):31
Borders, Larry, 25(2):17, 18
Borger, Gary, 25(4):7, 31(2):16, 17
Borie, Beauveau, 29(2):2, 2
Borie, Mrs. Frances, 29(2):2, 3
Borne, Max von dem, 25(3):18, 19
Bosnia. See Macedonia
Bowlker, Charles, 26(4):17
Bowlker, Richard, 26(4):17, 29(1):13
Bowman, Jim, 29(2):22
Bowman, Judith, 29(2):22, 29(4):28
Bowness, George, 32(3):5
Boyd, Megan, 25(2):16, 17, 18, 28(2):37, 37
Bradford, Charles, 30(3):18–19
Bradford & Anthony sporting goods, 25(3):22
Bradford table carpet, 26(4):7–8, 8
Brandin, Joe, 31(2):28
Brandt, David, 28(4):17
Brautigan, Richard, 32(1):21–22
Braziller, George, 29(4):13
Brenton, Joanie, 30(1):22
Bridgett, Tony, 27(3):21, 22, 24, 24
Bright Stream of Memory, The (Bucknall), 28(4):4
British Angler’s Manual, The (Bohn), 28(3):2, c1, 29(4):c2
British Field Sports (Scott), 27(3):13, 18
British Sportsman, The (Osbaldiston), 27(3):13, 16
Brodhead Creek (PA), 31(3):22–23
Brody, J. J., 25(3):3, 4, 5, 6
Brookes, Richard, 28(3):4, 29(1):13
Brooks, Charles, 27(4):24, 30(3):13, 30(4):21, 31(2):16–17
Brooks, Joe, 30(3):13
brook trout
and Aurora trout, 31(3):2, 3–4, 5–7
Eastern brook, 27(2):5–6
in Rangeley Lake region, 26(1):10, 14
Brook Trout and the Writing Life (Nova), 32(4):4
Brothers, Jack, 31(4):5
Brown, Jim, 26(3):24
Brown, John, 28(1):21, 32(3):6
Browne, Moses, 29(3):20
Browning, Mark, 32(4):3
brown trout, 27(4):12, 29(1):11, 31(2):18
German brown, 27(2):6, 10
Bruns, Henry P., 27(3):2
Buchan, Duke, 28(3):19
Buchan, John, 27(4):7–8
Buckland, Frank, 27(4):3
Bucknall, Geoffrey, 28(4):4, 5
Bugbee, Frank, 26(1):13
Buller, Frederick, 27(4):18, 28(1):26
on emperor’s pike, 26(4):6–7
on Macedonian flies, 27(1):8
photographs by, 26(4):2, 3, 4
salmon flies of, 30(4):13, 13–15, 14, 15, 16, 16
See also Author Index
Bullock, Bill, 31(4):c3, 32(2):30
See also Author Index
Bullock, Renate, 29(4):c3
Bunbury, Henry, 28(1):20, 21
Burling, Dean, 29(2):22
Burnette, David, 30(1):3
Burns, Walter, 27(4):9
Burton, Peter, 25(2):25
Bush, George H. W., 26(1):15, 15, 16, 24–25
Bush Pilot Angler: A Memoir (Wulff), 28(2):28
Buss, Keen, 26(4):7
Butler, A. J., 27(1):2, 28(2):3–4
Buxton, Anthony, 28(4):6–7
C
Cabinet of Natural History and American Rural Sports
(Doughty), 29(2):8
cabinets of curiosity, 25(2):9, 10
See also museums
caddisflies, 27(1):16
Caldwell, Sam, 30(2):3
California golden trout, 31(3):10, 10–21, 11, 12, 14, 20, 21
Callaghan, Dan, 27(4):24
Cameron, Angus, 25(2):15, 18
Cameron, Ken, 25(2):20
See also Author Index
Cameron, L. C. R., 32(2):17
Camp, Samuel G., 28(1):8, 9, 32(3):8
Camp David, 26(1):22, 23
Camp Harmony (Canada), 26(1):2, 3, 3, 4, 30(3):25, 25, 26,
32(3):14
Camyr Allyn Wines, 30(2):5, 5–6
Canada
accounts of early fly fishing in, 29(2):8
Atlantic salmon fishing in, 26(1):2, 27(3):3–5, 4, 5, 5–8, 6, 7,
8, 9
aurora trout in, 31(3):2–9
See also specific places in
Canan-Reynolds, Lily, 25(3):29
Canfield, Mark, 31(4):8
Canoe & Camera (Steele), 31(2):3, 31(3):22
Card, Bill, 25(3):27
Carlson, Clarence W. “Sam,” 28(4):26, 26, 28
carp, 28(3):3
ground baiting for, 25(3):9, 10
Carter, Jimmy, 26(1):23–24, 24, 26(2):18, 19
Caruso, Frank, 32(3):11
Cascapedia Club, 27(3):3, 3, 11n10, 32(1):5, 7, 32(2):4, 6, 9, 10–11
Cascapedia Company, 32(2):7
Cascapedia River: Home of the 40 Pounders (Barter), 30(3):7, 9
Cassie, Les, 31(4):2, 3
Castagnetti, Peter, 25(2):24, 31(4):21
Casteneda, Pedro de, 26(3):13, 17n3
casting, 30(3):12, 13, 15, 16
earliest instructions for modern, 26(4):19
WINTER 2007
11
false, 26(4):17–18, 19, 31(4):27
Gordon’s method, 27(2):14
Wulff ’s technique, 27(2):14, 17n30, 28(4):15
Casting, A Rise (painting, Homer), 28(2):26
Castleman, Phil, 30(1):24
catch-and-release, and Baden-Powell, 25(4):20
Catch and Release (Kingwell), 32(4):3
caterpillar lures, 28(3):4, 30(4):13, 14, 15, 16
catgut, 32(3):4
Catskill Rivers: Birthplace of American Fly Fishing
(Francis/Neff binding), 26(2):6, 7
Catskill School, of fly tying, 27(2):4, 28(1):6, 7
See also Gordon, Theodore
Cauci, Al, 29(1):22
Causey, Charlie, 31(2):14, 14, 15
Caxton, William, 32(1):15
Cevaso, Marisa, 27(3):27
chalk-stream fishing, 25(4):2–6, 8, 9
Chandler, J. Leon, 25(2):7, 28(1):32, 33, 28(3):8
Chapin, Roy D., Jr., 28(1):31, 32(2):28
char
arctic, 31(2):11, 31(3):7
in Japan, 25(2):5, 6, 7
Charles, Frank, Sr., 30(1):10
Charles F. Orvis Co. See Orvis Company
Charles Kirby’s of London, 27(2):20
Chaucer, Geoffrey, 28(2):4
Cheney, Albert Nelson, 26(1):2, 3, 5, 27(4):12
at Camp Harmony, 26(1):2–4
Chethan, James, 28(3):3
Chicago, Columbian Exposition at, 29(3):2–5
Choate, Joseph E., 27(4):10
Cholmondeley-Pennell, Harry, 28(1):13–14, 17
Chouinard, Docille, 31(4):21
Chouinard, Yvon, 29(1):20, 21
Christian, Herman, 27(2):9, 12, 14, 15, 16, 17n10
Christianity
dietary disciplines and fishing, 25(3):10, 11–12
symbology of fish in, 25(4):11, 32(1):15
chub, flies for, 28(3):3–4, 5
Churchill, Winston, 26(1):22
Clark, Kenneth, 28(2):6
Clarke, Brian, 25(4):7, 8, 27(3):18, 27(4):14, 31(3):24
Clayton, Lynn, 26(1):30, 27(3):27
Clement, George, 28(3):8
Cleveland, Grover, 26(1):16, 17, 30(4):11, 11–12
Clifden House (Corofin, Ireland), 30(1):2, 2–7, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7
Clifford, Albert, 26(3):4
clubs. See fishing clubs
Clune, Jim, 31(4):19
Cobb, Henry Ives. See Fisheries Building
Cobden-Sanderson, T. J., 26(2):5
Cody, William “Buffalo Bill,” 29(3):3, 4
Coffman, Ralph, 26(1):23
Cohen, Al, 25(2):18
Coigney, Rodolphe L., 26(2):6
Coleby, R. J. W., 26(4):2, 4
Coleman, Lewis, 28(1):28
Colloquy (Ælfric the Abbot), 26(4):4
Columbian Exposition (Chicago), 29(3):2–5, 3, 4, 5
Marbury panels, 29(3):6, 7, 8, 9, c1, c2
Common Fishes of Pennsylvania, The (Everett), 31(1):13, 20
Compleat Angler, The (Walton), 25(3):17, 27(3):20–24, 28(2):c2,
30(4):5, 5, c2, 32(2):19, 20, 20
Hawkin’s edition, 27(2):23, 27(3):12, 12–13, 13, 14, 15–19
350th anniversary of, 29(3):18–20
Compleat Fisherman, The (Saunders), 32(3):5
12
THE AMERICAN FLY FISHER
Complete Fly Fisherman, The (McDonald), 27(2):9, 15, 28(1):3, 10
Concise Treatise on the Art of Angling, A (Best), 27(1):6,
27(3):13, 14
Connell, Aleta, 30(1):22
conservation movement
in America, 29(3):2–3
and Gordon, 28(1):5–6
and Leopold, 29(4):2–5, 6
Cooke, Jane, 29(3):35
Coolidge, Calvin, 26(1):15, 18–19, 19
Coolidge, Charlie, 32(3):12
Coolidge, Grace, 26(1):18–19, 19
Coon Valley watershed (WI), restoration of, 29(4):4
Cooper, Mechele, 26(3):5
Cooper, Robert, 25(2):22
Coppinni, Alberto, 32(4):21
Corbin, Peter, 29(1):28, 29(4):26, 31(1):24, 31(4):18, 32(1):23
painting by, 30(2):2, 5
and Sage collection, 32(3):14
Corkran, Dudley C. “Ducky,” 31(4):14, 15, 16
Cornell, Tim, 27(4):17
Corning, Erastus, 31(1):7
Cortland Line Company, 28(3):7, 9
Cotton, Charles, 25(3):17, 26(2):7, 8, 16, 27(3):12, 20, 21, 22,
30(4):5, 6
Cramer, R. B., 31(4):5
Crandall, Bob, 28(3):8
Cremin, Charles, 27(3):8, 9
Crosby, Bing, 25(2):11
Crosfield, Ernest M., 28(2):14
Cross, Reuben, 28(1):7
Crossman, E. J., 31(3):7
Crowth, Alison, 27(4):13
Cuddy, J. Lee, 31(4):5, 9, 12n35
Cueman, John, 31(2):27
Cueman, Lisa, 31(2):27
Cumberland Valley (PA), 26(2):5, 12, 13
Cummess, Thomas, 26(4):14, 15, 16
fly by, 28(1):24
Curtis, Bert, 26(3):5
Cushner, William, 25(2):16
cutthroat trout
Rio Grande strain, 26(3):13
in Yellowstone, 29(1):2, 6, 11
D
dace, 28(3):3, 4
Dalenson, Theodor, 30(3):5, 7–8
Dallari, Giorgio, 32(1):17, 17–20, 18, 19, 20
Dame Juliana: The Angling Treatyse and Its Mysteries (Buller &
Falkus), 28(1):26
Dana, Charles, 26(1):16
Daniel, W. B., 29(1):14–15
Darbee, Elsie, 28(1):7
Darbee, Harry, 28(1):7, 31(4):14
Darling, Jay N., 26(1):20
Darlington, Roy, 27(4):14
Daugherty, Jack, 28(3):8
Davis, Edmund W., 28(3):10, 30(3):2, 5, 32(1):5–7, 6, 9, 32(2):5
Davis, Edward G., 30(1):10
and Condor and Grizzly fly, 31(2):5, 5–7, 6
See also Author Index
Davis, John V., 26(3):2
Davis, Steuart, 32(1):5, 7–8, 9
Davy, Sir Humphrey, 27(2):19, 30(2):26
Deane, Peter, 25(2):18
Decantelle, M. A. P., 28(4):4–5
De Feo, Charles, 25(2):17, 25(2):c2, 26(2):c2, 26(4):12, 28(4):3
Demarest, Robert J., 29(3):23–24, 31(2):18
See also Author Index
Dennis, Jerry, 29(3):15
Dennys, John, 27(1):4, 29(4):16, 16, 23
Denton, S. F., 30(2):15
Descartes, René, 25(2):9
Dette, Walt, 28(1):7
Dette, Winnie, 28(1):7
Devil. See caterpillar lures
Devonshire Hunting Tapestries (Digby), 28(2):8, 9
Diary of a Test Fisherman (Durnford), 26(4):16
Diary of the Bonaventure Salmon Club, 27(3):4, 4, 30(3):8, 9
Diawa tackle, 25(2):7
Diccionario historico de los artes de la pesca nacional
(Reguart), 27(3):13, 16
Dickerson, Lyle, 25(2):11
Dickman, Erin, 28(2):30
Dickman, Rick, 28(2):30
Dictionary of Trout Flies, A (Williams), 27(4):4
Dictionary of Trout Patterns (Millard), 26(3):6, 6
Diebler, Ollie, 31(1):13, 20
Digby, George Wingfield, 28(2):8
Dodd, G. L. Ashley, 29(1):18
Doerr, Bobby, 31(4):2, 2, 3, 3–4, 4, 11, 13, c1
Young’s Doerr model rods, 31(4):7, 7–10, 8, 9, 10
Dolly Varden, 31(2):12
Dominquez, Francisco, 26(3):13
Doughty, Thomas, 29(2):8
Douglass, Benjamin, Jr., 32(1):6–7, 32(2):4, 6
Downes, Stephen, 28(1):26
Downes, William H., 28(2):22
Downing Family Vineyards, 30(2):4, 5
Downs, Dorothy, 26(4):15
Dryden, Sir Henry, 28(2):5, 5–6
dry flies, 28(1):8
Catskill style, 28(1):5, 6–7
and chalk-stream fishing, 25(4):2, 4, 5, 9
fishing downstream, 30(3):12, 13–16, 14, 15, 16
and Gordon, 27(2):3, 4, 4
Halford’s development of, 28(1):3–4, 4, 12–17, 15, 16
and La Branche, 28(1):8–9, c2, 28(4):12–13, 15, 16, 16–19, 17, 18
Marinaro’s innovations, 26(2):12, 16
Ogden’s, 28(1):14
Schwiebert’s examples/comments on, 27(1):13–15
and tackle changes, 26(4):17–19, 27(2):12
See also flies
Dry Fly and Fast Water, The (La Branche), 28(1):9, 28(4):12
Dry Fly Entomology (Halford), 27(2):22
Dry-Fly Fishing, Theory and Practice (Halford), 25(4):2, 4,
30(3):12, 13, 15, 32(4):6
Dry Fly Man’s Handbook (Halford), 25(4):4
dubbing
needles, 27(2):22, 23
for Tups Indispensable, 26(3):18
Dubois, Donald, 31(4):14
Du Monceau, Duhamel, 27(3):13
Dun, Robert Graham, 32(1):2, 4, 4–6
Durnford, Richard, 26(4):16
Dyalogus Creaturarum Optime Moralizatus, 27(1):3, 4
dyes, 25(2):4, 32(3):3
Dyke, Samuel, 27(4):28
E
E. F. Payne Co., 25(3):23
Model 410 rod, 32(3):21, 21
Early Scottish Angling Literature (Simmonds), 30(4):19
Earnhardt, Tom, 29(3):33
Eastman, George, 32(1):10, 11, 11, 12, c1
East of Eden (Steinbeck), 32(4):3, 3, 4–6, 10n22
Eaton, Alfred, 30(2):26
Eaton, Forest, 26(1):13
Ebright, Don, 26(2):18
Edinburgh Angling Club, 30(4):8
Edson, Bill, 25(2):15
eels, 29(2):15
Egyptians
development of hooks, 32(2):15, 15
use of landing net, 27(1):2, 3
Eichel, Charles “Buzz”, 27(3):29, 32(4):21
Eisenhower, Dwight, 25(2):15, 26(1):22, 22–23
Eliot, T. S., 30(2):27
Elliot, Charles, 31(4):5
Elsey, Al, 31(3):5
Emory, W. H., 25(3):3
Emperor’s Pike, The (painting), 26(4):6
England
chalk streams of, 27(4):14
first use of silkworm gut, 32(3):5–6
fishing literature in, 29(4):24, 32(4):6
fly fishing for pike in, 29(1):13–19
fly fishing in Victorian era, 28(1):20–21
Peasant’s Revolt in, 25(3):11–12
River Dove, 27(3):21, 21, 22
St. Mary’s Church, Eynesbury, 26(4):3, 4
St. Mary’s in Godmanchester, 26(4):2
Enright, John, 26(4):15
Enys, Robert, 29(2):8
Epeorus pleuralis (mayfly), 27(1):13
Ephemerella dorothea (mayfly), 26(2):4, 5
Europe, origins of sport in, 28(2):2, 2–10, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8–9
See also specific countries
Everett, Fred, 31(1):12, 12–15, 13, 14, 15, c2
“Opening Day: Word Sketch 4,” 31(1):16–21
Evermann, Barton Warren, 31(3):11–12
Evers, John. See Camyr Allyn Wines
Excelsior Geyser. See Yellowstone National Park
Experienced Angler, The (Venables), 29(4):12, 17, 23
F
Fables of Aesop, The (Bewick), 32(4):19
Fairbairn, Gordon, 27(3):5
Falkus, Hugh, 28(1):26, 32(1):21
false casting. See casting
Favorite Flies and Their Histories (Marbury), 27(4):24, 28(1):4,
4, 5, 29(3):7
Fawkes, Francis, 27(4):2
feathers
golden pheasant, 26(4):16
peacock, 27(2):21, 21, 29(1):14, 17
starling, 27(2):20, 20, 28(4):17
Feely, Connie, 25(2):4
Feely, David, 25(2):4
WINTER 2007
13
Feldenzer, John, 31(4):13
Fewkes, J. Walter, 25(3):3, 5
fiberglass, 31(4):9
Field & Stream, and Carrie Stevens, 26(1):7, 9–11
Fighting for Peace (van Dyke), 28(4):2
Finchley, Jack, 31(2):5–6, 6
Finkel, David, 31(3):11
Finlay, G. Dick, 25(2):20, 20, 25(3):28, 27(3):29, 31(4):14, 14–17, 16, 17
See also Author Index
Finnegans Wake (Joyce), fishing in, 30(2):13, 13–14, 15–29, 16, 17
Fisher, Shirley, 32(4):7
Fisheries Building (Columbian Exposition), 29(3):4, 5, 5
Fisherman’s Testament, A (Venables), 27(4):25
Fisher’s Craft and Lettered Art (Hoffman), 27(1):3, 4, 28(2):4
fishing
and art, 30(2):2–11
books on/writing about, 29(4):24, 30(4):17, 32(2):19–21,
32(4):2–4, 6
earliest representation of, 30(1):15
in Finnegans Wake, 30(2):13, 13–14, 15–29, 16, 17
during Middle Ages, 28(2):2, 2, 3, 7–10, 9
during World War I, 28(4):2–8, 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, 11
See also fly fishing
Fishing and Shooting Sketches (Cleveland), 30(4):11, 11, 12
Fishing Atlantic Salmon (Richards), 25(2):16, 19
fishing clubs, 27(4):6, 30(4):2–12, 7, 9
Atlantic salmon clubs, 27(3):3–4
See also specific clubs
Fishing for Fun and to Wash Your Soul (Hoover), 30(4):10,
32(4):2
Fishing from the Earliest Times (Radcliffe), 28(2):3, 30(1):15,
32(2):13, 13, 32(3):8n2, 8n3, 8n6
Fishing Gazette, 27(2):6, 8, 14, 28(4):4, 6, 11
Fishing in American Waters (Scott), 29(2):9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, c2,
31(2):c2, 32(3):7
“Fishing in the North American Lakes and Rivers”
(Tattersall), 29(2):8, 9–15, 11
fishing tackle, 32(3):21, 21
changes in, 26(4):18–21
Diawa’s, 25(2):7
Fortin’s, 25(3):8–10
in La Branche’s era, 28(4):14–15
Ramsbottom’s, 27(4):4, 5, 5
See also specific type of
Fishing Tackle, Its Materials and Manufacture (Keene), 27(4):5
Fishing with Floating Flies (Camp), 28(1):8, 9, 32(3):8
Fishless Days, Angling Nights (Sparse Grey Hackle), 27(2):9,
28(4):3, 30(4):9–10
Fitzgibbon, Edward, 26(4):18, 29(1):15, 19
Fletcher, George, 26(1):6
Fletcher, Gordon, 28(2):19
Fleury, Roy, 30(3):5, 7–8
Flick, Art, 25(2):11, 27(1):13, 14, 15, 28(1):7, 30(1):17, 30(2):15
flies
AMFF collection, 25(2):11, 26(4):15, c1
Australia’s first artificial, 30(2):5, 6, 11n27, 11n28
Bates collection, 25(2):14, 16, 17
bead-heads, 30(3):15–16
from Belgrade region, 26(3):9
changes in 20th century, 30(1):14, 14–19, 15, 16, 18
copies of Flyfisher’s Entomology, 25(3):15, 16, 17, 18
development of wet/dry forms, 26(4):17–21
floating flies, 26(4):18, 18, 19, 28(1):7
Harris collection, 26(4):14, 16
in Macedonia, 27(1):7, 7–11, 8
natural materials for, 27(2):20, 20–21, 21, 32(3):2
Orvis’s standardization of, 29(3):5–6
14
THE AMERICAN FLY FISHER
palmered, 26(4):17, 28(3):4, 4, 29(1):18
for pike, 29(1):13, 14, 16, 18, 19
Schwiebert’s fly box, 27(1):12–17
Skues’s nymph patterns, 25(4):4, 5–6, 9, 26(3):18, 18
Treatyse, 25(2):2–4, 3
use of glass-bead eyes, 30(4):16
Venables’s, 29(4):22, 23
See also flies, by name; dry flies; streamer flies; salmon flies
flies, by name
Alexandra, 27(2):18
Babbs Ghost, 26(1):9
Belgrade, 26(3):6, 6–7
Bivisibles, 28(4):15, 17
Black Doctor, 27(2):20
Black Ghost, 28(2):18
Black Grouse & Brown, 27(1):17
Blue Devil, 28(2):18, 20–21, 21, c1
Blue Ghost, 26(1):9
Blue-Winged Olive, 25(4):9, 26(2):15, 27(1):13, 28(1):16
Brown Olive Ghost, 26(1):9
Brown Partridge & Black, 27(1):17
Brown Partridge & Olive, 27(1):17
bucktail, 29(1):18
Bumble Puppy, 27(2):9, 9, 28(2):14, 28(3):6
Carpenter Ant, 27(1):15
Cassard, 27(2):18, 25
Cinnamon, 27(4):2, 4
Cleveland, 27(2):18
Condor and Grizzly, 31(2):5, 5–7, 6
Dark Rusty Dun, 27(1):15
Dawson, 30(2):4, 5
Doctors, 28(2):17, 18
Embden Fancy, 28(2):17
Fan-Wing Royal Coachman, 27(2):4, 31(1):14, 15
Ferguson, 27(2):18
FRS Bucktail, 28(2):19
G. Donald Bartlett, 28(2):17, 21
Glentana, 27(2):18
Golden Parsons, 25(2):17
Gordon Quill, 27(1):13
Gray Fox, 27(1):14, 27(2):4
Gray Ghost, 26(1):9, 12, 13, 28(2):18
Gray Partridge & Olive, 27(1):17
Gray Partridge & Primrose, 27(1):16
Green Ghost, 26(1):9
Green Highlander, 30(2):2
Green Parson, 27(2):18, 21
Grouse & Black, 27(1):17
Grouse & Green, 27(1):17
Grouse & Yellow, 27(1):16
Hare’s Ear, 27(1):16
Hendrickson, 27(1):14, 16, 27(2):4
Hippouros, 27(1):8, 8
Holburton, 27(2):18
Horrocks Fly, 25(3):13, 18–19
Humble Bee, 28(3):4
Hummingbird, 27(2):18
Judge, 28(2):15
Jungle Ghost, 26(1):9
King-of-the-Waters, 28(4):16
Lady Amherst Fly, 32(1):11, 11
Lefty’s Deceiver, 30(2):3
Light Cahill, 27(1):14, 15, 27(2):4
Light Hendrickson, 27(1):15, 16
Lord Baltimore, 27(2):18
March Brown, 27(1):14, 16, 27(2):4
Marinaro Jassid, 26(2):12, 15
Martinek’s Midnight Sun, 30(2):3
May Flies, 28(1):15
Nine-Three, 26(3):7, 7–8
Partridge & Brown, 27(1):17
Phase One, 28(2):15
Pink Ghost, 26(1):9
Pink Lady, 28(4):17, 17
Polka, 27(2):18
Queen-of-the-Waters, 28(4):16, 17
Quill Gordon, 27(2):4, 9, 10, 28(1):10, 28(4):17
Rainbow Ghost, 26(1):9
Ramsbottom’s Favourite, 27(4):3, 4
Ramsbottom’s Parson, 27(4):3, 4
Rangeley’s Favorites, 26(1):8, 9, 12
Red Ant, 26(2):16
Red Ghost, 26(1):9
Red-Green Ghost, 26(1):9
Red Ibis, 28(2):24
Red Quill, 27(1):13
Red Quill Gnat, 27(2):c2
Red Spinner, 28(3):4
Reverse-Tied Bucktails, 28(2):13, 17
Rogan Royal Gray Ghost, 26(1):9
Royal Coachman, 25(4):7, 26(2):16, 30(1):15
Sherry Spinners, 28(1):16
Tups Indispensable, 25(4):4, 9, 26(3):18, 18, 32(4): 6–7, 7
Wallkill, 27(1):14
Whirling Dun, 28(4):17
Winesop Black, 27(4):3, 4
Woodcock & Green, 27(1):16
Yellow Sally, 26(4):17
floating flies, 26(4):18, 18, 19, 28(1):7
See also flies
Floating Flies and How to Dress Them (Halford), 25(4):2, 4,
28(1):4, 15, 16, 32(4):6
float rig, 26(4):5, 5
Fly, The (Herd), 28(4):22–23
Fly Casting with Lefty Kreh (Kreh), 30(3):13
Flyfisher and the Trout’s Point of View, The (Harding), 25(4):7
Fly Fishers Club of Brooklyn, 30(4):9–10
Fly Fishers’ Club of Harrisburg, 26(2):13, 31(1):12, 13
Flyfishers’ Club of London, 27(4):6–15
photos of, 27(4):6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 15, c1
Flyfisher’s Entomology (Ronalds), 25(3):16–17, 27(3):17, 32(2):21, 21
copies of flies, 25(3):15, 16, 17, 18
Fly Fisher’s Guide, A (Bainbridge), 26(4):20
Fly Fisher’s Textbook (South), 26(4):19
fly fishing
agencies/regulations in, 29(4):5, 7
books on, 30(4):17–22, 18, 19, 20, 21, 32(2):19–21
changes in, 30(3):12, 12–16, 14, 15, 16
for “coarse” fish, 28(3):2–6
early accounts of in North America, 29(2):8, 9–15
history and myth in, 28(1):19–25
in Japan, 25(2):5–7, 27(1):11
Leopold’s contribution to, 29(4):2–10
in Macedonia, 27(1):7–11, 10
in Montana, 1870s, 29(1):6–7
in northern New Mexico, 26(3):12–17
popularity in late-19th-century America, 29(3):6
portrait of new fishermen, 29(3):21–22
in Renaissance, 25(4):10–11
and spirituality, 32(1):14–16
Valsesiana technique, 27(1):11
Fly Fishing, Some New Arts and Mysteries (Mottram), 32(3):6
Fly-Fishing and Fly-Making (Keene), 27(2):22, 28(1):4, 6, 7,
30(4):16
Fly Fishing (Grey), 25(4):3, 30(2):26–27
Fly-Fishing in Salt and Fresh Water (Hutchinson), 29(1):16, 16
Fly Line (magazine), 25(4):10–11
Fly-Rods and Fly-Tackle (Wells), 32(3):5, 5, 9n18
fly-tying techniques
Catskill School, 27(2):4, 28(1):6, 7
examples of Irish, 26(4):15
by hand, 27(2):18, 18–24, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23
Stevens’s streamers, 26(1):7, 28(2):11–21, 15, 17, c1
Treatyse flies, 25(2):2–4
tying a Cassard, 27(2):25
See also flies
Foggy Bottom Boys, 31(2):25
Foix, Gaston de, 28(2):6
Folkins, H. Wendall, 26(1):6, 28(2):11, 14
Ford, Emory, 32(2):10
Forest and Stream, 27(2):7, 8, 8, 28(1):5, 29(1):4
Forster, Johann Reinhold, 32(2):17
Fortin, François, 25(3):8–10, 27(1):4
Fosten, D. S. V., 25(3):13
Foster, David, 28(1):14
Fowler, Fred, 26(1):7
Fox, Charles K., 26(2):13, 18, 31(1):12, 13, 14, 19, 20
France
Fortin’s reels, 25(3):8–10
medieval sporting literature in, 28(2):4–6, 10
Francis, Austin, 26(2):6, 28(1):3
Francis, Francis, 25(3):18, 20n, 27(4):4, 7, 28(1):12, 13, 16
and chub/pike flies, 28(3):4, 6
Franck, Richard, 27(3):17, 30(4):19
Frank, Konstantin, 30(2):7, 7–8
Fraser, Rob, 27(1):20
Frederick II, Emperor, 28(2):4, 4–5, 7
Frenchman’s Pond. See Voelker, John Donaldson
Fresh Waters (Weeks), 32(4):6
Frey, Arthur, 30(2):36
Frick, Henry C., 32(2):4, 4, 6
Fritz, Bill, 26(2):18–19
Fulsher, Keith, 25(2):19, 28(2):13
Fumagalli, Maxine, 30(2):8, 9
Fun with Game Birds (Bergman), 31(1):14
Fun with Trout (Bergman), 31(1):14, 14, 15
Further Notes on the Pursuit of Salar (Bissell), 30(3):4, 6
Fyfe, Marjorie, 28(2):4, 5
G
Gable, Thomas P., 26(3):15, 16
Gage, George, 29(1):16, 19n20
Game Fish of the Northern States and British Provinces
(Roosevelt), 28(3):c2
Game Management (Leopold), 29(4):5
Gardiner, J. C., 26(4):15
Garibaldi, Giuseppe, 27(4):3
Garman, Joe, 31(2):28
Garnett, Thomas, 27(4):2
Garrison, Everett, 26(4):13
Garry River. See Herd, William Archibald
Gehring, Moira, 31(2):27
Gehrm, Barbara, 27(4):28
General History of Quadrupeds (Bewick), 32(4):16, 18, 18
Gentleman’s Recreation, The (Blome), 25(3):9
“George La Branche’s High Holt: A Place in His Life and
Work” (Belknap), 28(4):13
WINTER 2007
15
Germany, fly fishing in 1800s, 25(3):14–19, 20n
Gessner, Conrad von, 25(3):20n, 26(4):6, 27(3):17
Gibson, George, 29(1):28, 29(4):25, 31(4):20
Giedion-Welcker, Carola, 30(2):15–16
Gierach, John, 29(4):8, 30(3):13, 15–16, 30(4):5, 11, 12
Gilder, Richard, 26(1):17
Gill, Emlyn, 28(1):8, 9
Gingrich, Arnold, 25(2):11, 26(4):3, 28(1):3, 28(4):13, 31(4):10,
14, 23
on fishing books, 30(4):17, 17–18, 19, 20
Gingrich, Jane, 31(4):14
glass-bead eyes, 30(4):16
Glasso, Sydney, 25(2):17, 18
flies tied by, 25(2):14, 17
gnats, 30(1):17
Goddard, John, 25(4):7, 8, 27(3):18, 31(2):17
Godfrey, Ted, 25(2):17
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, 25(3):14, 20n
Golden Trout Creek (CA), 31(3):12, 15, 17, 18, 18, 19, 21
Golden Trout Project, 31(3):15–17
See also California golden trout
Gonzales, Boyer, 28(2):25
Goode, George Brown, 25(2):9
Goodrich, Silas, 29(1):22
Goodspeed, Charles Eliot, 28(1):23–24, 30(3):5
Gordon, Fanny Jones, 27(2):3, 10–11
Gordon, Theodore, 27(2):2–7, 8–12, 27(4):14, 28(1):15, 30(1):17
on American Angler’s Book, 29(2):4–5
and bamboo rods, 27(2):5, 9, 9, 12–16
collection from (Gordon’s) library, 27(2):5, 17n17
on Fishing Gazette, 28(4):4
flies of, 26(1):7, 27(1):13, 27(2):4, 4–5, 7, 9, 9, 10, 28(3):6
and Flyfishers’ Club of London, 27(4):11–12
Halford letter and flies, 27(2):3
influence/contributions of, 28(1):2–11, 28(4):15
myth of, 28(1):21, 22, 24
photos of, 27(2):2, 4, 6, 8, 10, c1
Gore Creek (CO), 31(2):20, 20–24, 21, 22, 23
gorges. See also hooks, 32(2):13, 13–14
Gosden, Thomas, 26(2):9, 11, c1
Gothic Image: Religious Art in France in the Thirteenth Century
(Malle), 32(1):14
Goulet, David, 26(1):9
Graf, Paul, 31(3):5, 5
Grand Cascapedia River (Canada), 32(1):2, 3, 4–5, 5, c1, 32(2):2,
3, 9
books on, 27(3):2, 28(3):10
See also Red Camp
Grant, Ellen, 29(3):35
Grant, Gardner, 25(4):12, 13, 26(1):27, 26(3):24, 26(4):24,
27(3):27, 29, 28(1):27, 29(3):35, 32(2):22, c2
and AMFF reopening, 31(4):18, 22, 24, 32(2):23, 26
See also Author Index
Grant, Ulysses S., 26(1):16
grasshoppers, 25(4):7, 29(1):6, 30(4):13
Marinaro’s patterns, 26(2):17
grayling, in Alaska, 31(2):11–12, 12, 13
Great Britain. See England
Greene, H. Plunkett, 27(4):7, 14
Greenhalgh, Malcolm, 28(1):26
Gregory, Myron, 28(3):8
Gregory, Richard, 26(4):15
Grey, Sir Edward, 25(4):3, 27(4):7, 28(4):7, 11, 30(2):23, 26–27
Grey, Zane, 25(2):11, 31(4):3, 5, 11
grey trout (salmon), 29(2):12–13
Grieg, Elizabeth, 27(1):13
Griffith, George, 28(3):7
16
THE AMERICAN FLY FISHER
Grinnell, George Bird, 29(1):12n24
Gross, Murray J., 30(2):13, 14
ground baiting, for carp, 25(3):9, 10
Grove, Alvin, 31(4):14
Grover, Jan Zita, 32(4):7
Grubic, Aleksandar, 27(1):8
Grubic, Goran, 27(1):8, 9–10, 11
See also Author Index
grubs, 28(3):3, 30(4):13, 14
Guillon, Claude, 25(3):10
Gwilym, Vince, 27(3):23–24
H
H. L. Leonard Fly Rod Co., 25(3):23
See also Leonard, Hiram L.
hackle capes, 27(2):21, 21
Haig-Brown, Roderick, 27(4):25, 28(1):3, 31(1):4, 32(3):7
Halberstam, David, 31(4):2, 3, 11
Hale, John, 27(2):22
Haley, James, 26(1):18, 19
Halford, Frederic M., 25(4):2, 4–5, 6, 7, 9, 27(2):22, 30(1):16,
32(4):6
and dry flies, 27(2):3, 4, 9, 10, 12, 28(1):3–4, 4, 8, 12–17, 15, 16
and Flyfishers’ Club of London, 27(4):7, 7, 11
photos of, 27(2):11, 28(1):12, 13, c1
on using dry flies downstream, 30(3):13, 14–15
Hall, Henry S., 25(4):2, 27(4):7, 12, 28(1):14
and ring-eyed hook, 27(2):12
Hall, Luther K., 25(3):26, 31(4):19
Hallam, Edgar Chalmers, 26(4):2
Hamilton, Edward, 32(1):22
Hamilton, Thomas, 32(4):4, 5
Hammond, Nicholas G. L., 27(4):17, 18
Harding, E. W., 25(4):7, 27(3):18
Hardy, James Leighton, 28(4):3–4
Hardy, Leslie, 28(4):4
Hardy, William J., Jr., 28(4):4, 5
Hardy Brothers Ltd., 32(3):6, 7, 8, 9n19, 32(4):6
House of Hardy, 32(4):6, 7
Harmsworth, Cecil, 30(3):3, 6
Harner, Pat, 30(1):24
harpoon, earliest North American depiction of, 25(3):6
Harpster, Wayne, 26(1):23
Harris, J. R., 26(4):15, 16
Harris, Steve, 29(2):23
Harrison, Jim, 32(2):4, 12, 32(4):3
Harrison, Thomas P., 26(4):2–3
Harrop, Rene, 27(1):15
Harvey, George, 27(3):31
hats, fishing, 31(2):16–17
Hawes, Cora Leonard, 25(3):23
Hawes, Hiram, 25(3):21, 22, 23, 26(4):11
Hawes, Loman, 25(3):21, 22, 23
Hawkes, Jacquetta, 32(2):15
Hawkins, John, 27(2):23, 27(3):12, 12–13, 13, 14, 15–19
Haynes, William de Forest, 32(2):7
Head, Elizabeth Smith, 25(3):21
Heckscher, John Gerard, 27(3):2, 32(1):5–6
Heddon, Jack, 25(2):18, 28(1):9, 26
Hells Canyon Winery, 30(2):9–10, 10
Hemingway, Ernest, 28(4):8, 9, 10, 32(4):6, 7, 8, 8
Hemingway, John Hadley Nicanor, 28(4):10, 10, 11, 11, c1
Henn, Arthur W., 31(3):3, 5
Henn, T. R., 27(2):18
Henryville Flyfishers, The (Schwiebert), 28(1):8
Henshall, James A., 28(1):21, 30(1):8
Herd, Andrew, 26(4):19, 28(3):14, 32(4):7
The Fly, 28(4):22–23
on Kelson, 30(4):20
See also Author Index
Herd, William Archibald, 28(3):11, 11–17
and Garry River, 28(3):11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17
Herrick, William, 26(4):10, 31(1):22, 32(2):26
and AMFF reopening, 31(4):23, 24, 24
See also Author Index
herring, 29(2):11, 14
Herter, George Leonard, 30(4):21, 22
Hewitt, Edward R., 26(2):13, 26(4):13, 27(3):18, 28(4):15, 17,
30(1):20
in Yellowstone, 29(1):2–12, c1
“Hidden Hatch, The” (Marinaro), 26(2):15
Hildebrand, Heinrich, 25(3):16, 20n
Hildebrand/München catalog, 25(3):13
Hill, Charles, 26(3):4
Hills, Alexander, 30(2):8, 8
Hills, John Waller, 25(3):9, 25(4):7, 27(1):4, 27(4):7, 28(1):23,
28(4):22
and false casting, 26(4):17, 18
on Franck, 30(4):18, 19
on Halford and dry flies, 25(4):2, 4, 5
and medieval sporting literature, 28(2):4, 5, 6
Hilyard, Graydon R., 26(3):8, 20
See also Author Index
Hilyard, Leslie K., 26(1):9, 26(3):20
See also Author Index
Hints on Angling (Blakey), 27(3):17
Hinzerling Vineyards, 30(2):6, 6
Historical Sketches of Angling Literature of All Nations
(Blakey), 28(2):10, 30(4):19
History of British Birds, The (Bewick), 32(4):16, 19, 20
History of British Fishes, The (Bewick), 32(4):16
History of Fly Fishing, A (Bark), 28(4):23
History of Fly Fishing for Trout, A (Hills), 25(3):9, 26(4):17,
27(1):4, 28(1):23, 28(2):4, 28(4):22, 30(4):18
History of the Fish Hook (Hurum), 29(4):15, 15, 32(2):16
Hitschler, Lynn, 29(3):34, 31(1):23
Hoetzer, Walt, 31(4):19
Hoey, Cheryl, 26(2):22
Hoffman, Richard C., 27(1):3, 28(2):4
Hofland, Thomas, 28(3):4
Hogan, Austin, 25(2):20, 28(1):19, 31(4):14
Hokkaido (Japan), 25(2):7
Holden, George Parker, 26(3):6
Holland, George, 25(4):5
Homer, Winslow, 28(2):22–26, 29(3):23–24
paintings/drawings by, 28(2):22, 23, 24, 25, 26
Honshu (Japan), 25(2):7
Hook Book, The (Stewart), 29(4):18
hooks
ancient and indigenous, 32(2):13, 13–18, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18
in Arte of Angling, 26(4):5, 5
early descriptions/illustrations of, 29(4):13, 13–17, 14, 15, 16, 17
handmade, 27(2):18, 19, 19–20
paternostering, 30(2):20
reproductions of in Treatyse, 25(2):3
ring-eyed, 27(2):10, 12, 29(4):19, 21, 21, 30(4):13
shank bendings/lengths in, 29(4):18, 18–19, 19, 22, 23
TMCs, 29(4):12, 18, 18, 20
Venables on, 29(4):12, 17, 18–19, 21
Hoopes, Donelson F., 28(2):23
Hoover, Herbert, 26(1):15, 19–20, 23, 25n24, 25n41, 30(4):10,
10–11, 32(4):2
Hoover, Lou Henry, 26(1):20
Hoover: The Fishing President (Wert), 32(4):2
Horne, Bernard S., 29(3):20
horns, illustration of, 28(2):5
Hornsby, Rogers, 31(4):3
Horrocks, John, 25(3):13–20
Horrocks Fly, 25(3):13, 18–19
horseflies, 27(1):8, 30(3):20–21
horsehair, 29(4):19, 21
for fly tying, 25(2):2–3
lines, 26(4):17, 18, 19, 32(3):3
Houghton Fishing Club, 27(4):8, 29(1):16
Hours of Catherine of Cleves, hooks in, 29(4):13, 13, 15
Howard Park Winery, 30(2):8, 8–9
Howlett, Robert, 29(1):13
How to Dress Salmon Flies (Pryce-Tannant), 27(2):18–19, 19
How to Tie Salmon Flies (Hale), 27(2):22
Hummel, Johann Nepomuk, 25(3):14, 20n
Humphreys, Joe, 29(1):22
Hunt, Richard Carley, 30(3):3, 6
Hunter, Bill, 25(2):18–19
Hunter, Irene, 27(3):28
Hunter, James H. “Bing,” 26(2):21
Hunter, John, 25(2):6
Hunter, Robert, 29(2):8
hunting. See sport
Hurum, Hans Jorgen, 32(2):16
Hynes of Gort, 26(4):14, 16
I
Iceland, salmon in, 31(2):8, 8–9, 9
Ickes, Harold, 26(1):20–21
I Go A-Fishing (Prime), 30(4):18, 20
Ilm River (Germany), 25(3):19
Indian Fishing: Early Methods on the Northwest Coast
(Stewart), 32(2):14
Indian Summer (O’Connor), 30(3):4, 4, 7
In Pursuit of Salar (Bissell), 30(3):4, 6
Intercolonial Salmon Fishing, 27(3):4, 4
In the Arena (Nixon), 26(1):23
In the Ring of the Rise (Marinaro), 26(2):18
Neff binding, 26(2):4, 5–6
Ireland
fishing for pike in, 29(1):13–19
fishing at Corofin/Clifden House, 30(1):2–7, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7
flies from, 26(4):16
salmon’s significance in mythology, 30(2):25–26
Irish Trout and Salmon Flies (Malone), 26(4):15, 16
Irvine, William D., 27(3):9
Irving, Washington, 31(4):27
Ishiyama, Nelson, 29(1):21, 30(2):34
Italy
fly fishing in Renaissance, 25(4):10–11
Roman use of landing nets, 27(1):2, 2
Valsesiana fly-fishing technique, 27(1):11
Itchen Memories (Skues), 25(4):6
Izaak Walton: A New Bibliography, 1653–1987 (Coigney/Neff
binding), 26(2):6, 7, 8, 8
WINTER 2007
17
J
Jackson, William Henry, 29(3):8, 9
Janssen, Hal, 31(2):12, 13
Japan
history of fly fishing in, 25(2):5–7
Tenkara fly-fishing technique, 27(1):11
Jardine, Charles, 27(4):17, 18
jassids, 26(2):15
Jenkins, Guy, 27(2):13, 16
Jennings, Preston, 25(2):11, 26(2):9, 11, 27(1):13, 14, 28(1):7, 10
and Joyce, 30(2):14, 14–15, 27
Jernigan, Wesley, 25(3):2
Jerusalem Creek (Leeson), 32(4):3
Jett, Stephen C., 25(3):5, 6
Johnson, John W., 26(3):16, 17
Jones, Barton T., 29(3):33
Jordan, Wes, 31(4):14
Jorgensen, Poul, 25(2):17
Joyce, James, 30(2):13, 14, 14–19, 16, 17, 21
See also Finnegans Wake
Joys of Trout, The (Gingrich), 30(4):17
Judy, John, 30(3):13, 14
Jumping Trout (painting, Homer), 28(2):23
Just Fishing (Bergman), 31(1):13, 19–20
K
Karas, Nick, 31(3):7
See also Author Index
Karaska, Gerald J., 27(3):26
See also Author Index
Kashgarian, Jeanie, 29(3):35
Kauffman, John M., 25(2):24
Keane, Martin J., 25(2):20, 31(4):4, 9, 10
Keeler, Greg, 31(2):22, 32(1):21
Keene, James, 28(4):13
Keene, John Harrington, 27(2):22, 27(4):5, 28(4):22, 30(4):16
development of dry flies in America, 28(1):4, 6, 7, 9
Kelliher, Cornelius, 26(3):3, 4
Kelly, Dawn, 31(4):19
Kelson, George M., 25(2):17, 27(2):18, 30(2):4, 5, 30(4):20, 20
Kendall, William C., 31(3):6
Kenny, Tom, 30(4):13
Kessler, Helen Shaw, 26(1):30
Kessler, Hermann, 25(2):20, 31(4):14, 16, 23
Kimball, Moses, 25(2):9
King, Archie, 31(3):2, 3
King, Woods, III, 27(3):32, 29(1):25, 29(3):28, 30(3):28
Kingwell, Mark, 32(4):3, 4
Klein, Jim, 31(2):26
Knight, John Alden, 26(4):13
Koch, Ed, 30(1):17
Kotrla, Raymond, 31(4):14
Kraus, Hans, 30(2):15
Kreh, Lefty, 28(1):32, 33, 30(3):13, 31(2):17
Kretchman, Fred, 26(3):20–21, 27(3):27, 28(4):26, 29(4):28, 31(2):28
at AMFF reopening, 31(4):20, 21
Krieger, Fanny, 26(2):22, 30(2):34, 35
fishing in Alaska, 31(2):10–13, 11, 12, 13
Krieger, Mel, 25(2):7, 31(2):10, 11, 12
Heritage Award, 30(2):34, 35
18
THE AMERICAN FLY FISHER
Kristensen, Katie, 31(4):18
Kristensen, Taylor, 31(4):18
Kuehner, Carl, 31(2):29, 32(1):23
Kukonen, Paul, 26(1):9
Kuralt, Charles, 29(3):10, 15
Kyushu (Japan), 25(2):7
L
La Branche, George, 26(2):13, 26(4):13, 28(4):12–19
dry flies of, 28(1):c2, 28(4):15, 16, 17, 18
and Gordon, 27(2):17n6, 28(1):8
influence of, 28(1):9–10
photos of, 28(1):2, 28(4):12, 13, 14, 19
La Chasse Dou Cerf (The Hunting of the Stag), 28(2):5, 5
LaFontaine, Gary, 25(4):7
Lamb, Dana S., 26(3):5, 28(1):22
Lambuth, Letcher, 26(4):11
Lanano, Bob, 29(2):23
landing nets, 27(1):2–6
early illustrations of, 27(1):2, 3, 4, 5, 6, c1
Fortin’s, 25(3):9, 10
Lane, A. J., 28(3):5, 5, 6
Lang, Andrew, 25(4):22–23
Lange Winery, 30(2):4, 5
Lansing, Alfred, 26(1):23
Late in an Angler’s Life (Wickstrom), 31(1):11
Lathey, T. P., 26(2):9
Lawrence, John S., 26(1):20
leaders, 26(4):18, 28(4):14
See also lines
LeBlanc, Steven A., 25(3):3, 6
Ledlie, David, 25(2):19, 28(1):32, 33
Leeson, Ted, 27(4):25, 32(4):3, 4
Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm, 25(2):9
Leisenring, James E., 25(4):6, 26(2):14, 26(3):18, 27(1):16,
29(2):6, 30(1):17
Lenroot, Irvine L., 26(1):19
Leon, Paul, 30(2):16–17
Leonard, Hiram L., rods by, 25(3):21–23, 23, 26(4):11,
27(2):12–13, 14, 15, 15
Leonard, Lewis, 25(3):21
Leopold, Aldo, 25(2):11, 29(4):2–10, 31(1):2, 5
photos/map, 29(4):2, 3, 4, 6, 7, c1
“The Alder Fork—A Fishing Idyl,” 29(4):11
Leptis Magna, mosaic at, 27(1):2
Les Ruses Innocentes (Fortin), 25(3):8–10, 27(1):4, 6
Lessons from the Varsity of Life (Baden-Powell), 25(4):18
Letourneau, Emile, 26(1):7, 26(3):7, 8
Letourneau, Eugene L., 26(3):7, 8, 10
Leuver, Peter, 30(2):5, 6
Library at Alexandria, 25(2):8–9
Liebhaber, Gene, 25(3):28
light, for fly tying, 27(2):23–24
Lilly, Bud, 26(1):26, 27, 27(3):32–33, 28(1):32, 33
Limestone Club, East Canaan (CT), 30(4):8
lines, 32(2):17
for Allcock rods, 30(1):13
evolution of modern, 28(3):7, 7–9, 8, 9, 29(3):9
Fortin’s line reservoir, 25(3):9, 11
horsehair, 26(4):17, 18, 19, 32(3):2–3, 3
knotless, 26(4):18–19, 29(4):21–22
silkworm gut, 32(3):3, 4, 4–9, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, c1
Lisella, Carmine, 29(2):23
Liszt, Franz, 25(3):14, 20n
Little, J. I., 32(3):12
Little Fishing Book, A (Harmsworth), 30(3):3, 6
Little History of the Sainte Marguerite Salmon Club, A (Lyon),
27(3):4
Livre de Chasse (de Foix), 28(2):6, 6, 7
London Angler’s Book, or Waltonian Chronicle (Baddeley), 28(1):21
Longest Silence, The (McGuane), 32(4):6
Longfin lampfish (Lampanyctus steinbecki), 32(4):9, c2
Lost Land of Moses, The (Thomas), 30(3):25
Lowe, Ted, 26(4):2
Lowell, Harley, 28(2):19
Lucas, Larry, 31(4):7, 7, c1
Lukenda, Mark, 30(1):22
lures, 30(4):13, 14, 14, 15, 16
Lyon, Dennis, 25(3):4
Lyon, Gard T., 27(3):4
Lyon, Janis, 25(3):4
Lyons, Nick, 25(2):11, 28(2):c3, 30(4):6, 32(4):4
on AMFF’s new site, 29(2):20
Heritage Award, 29(3):32, 32, 33, 34
on Voelker, 29(3):11
M
MacDonald, Charles B., 32(2):4
MacDonald, Ramsay, 26(1):20
Macdonald, Susan Agnes, 30(3):7, 8–9, 24–26, 25, c1
Macedonia
fly fishing in, 27(1):7–11
locating the river Astræus, 27(4):16, 17, 17–22, 18, 19, 20, 21,
22, c2
Mackay, Clarence H., 32(1):8, 9
MacKay, H. H., 31(3):5–6
Mackie, Gordon, 25(4):6
Mackinnon, Nancy, 31(4):22
Mackintosh, Alexander, 28(3):4–5
Maclean, Norman, 29(1):22, 32(1):14, 15, 16, 16
Macy, W. Kingsland, 27(3):3, 3
Madden, Pat, 31(1):2, 3
Maine
Androscoggin River, 26(1):10
Belgrade region, 26(3):2–9, 11
fly tyers from, 26(1):7
Mount Katahdin, 32(4):c3
Rangeley Lakes area, 29(2):2
Malle, Emile, 32(1):14
Mallory, William W., 28(2):11
Malone, E. J., 26(4):15, 16
Man Fishing (sketch), 28(2):22
Marbury, Mary Orvis, 27(4):24–25, 28(3):2, 29(3):6–9
and Halford’s dry flies, 28(1):4, 4, 5, 11n11
panels of, 29(3):6, 7, 8, 9, c1, c2
Marinaro, Vincent C., 26(2):5, 12–19, 27(3):18, 28(1):7, 28(2):28,
30(1):17
at Abbots Barton, 27(4):14
and Fly Fishers’ Club of Harrisburg, 31(1):13
photos of, 26(2):12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 19
and Skues, 25(4):6, 7
Markham, Gervase, 29(4):17, 17, 23
Marriot, Richard, 29(4):17, 23
Marryat, George Selwyn, 25(4):5, 27(2):10, 12, 28(1):14, 15
Marston, R. B., 27(4):7, 11, 12, 28(4):4, 5
on Blakey, 30(4):20
See also Fishing Gazette
Martin, Darrel, 27(4):18
Martin, W. R., 31(3):7
Martinez, Belarmino, 25(2):17, 18
Martuch, Leon P., 28(3):8–9, 29(1):18, 32(3):6
Mascall, Leonard, 26(4):7, 29(4):14, 14, 15
Massas, Charles de, 27(1):10
Matching the Hatch (Schwiebert), 27(1):12, 13, 30(1):19,
32(2):22, 25
Mathews, Craig, 27(4):24
Matia, Walt, 32(1):23
Matthews, John, 27(4):17
Maxwell, W. H., 26(4):16
May, Anthony, 29(3):34
mayflies, 27(1):16, 30(2):26
appeal of, 26(4):21, 21
Epeorus pleuralis, 27(1):13
Ephemerella dorothea, 26(2):4, 5
European March brown dun, 30(2):19–20, 29n49
Siphlonurus, 27(1):8
U.K. references to, 28(1):15
Maystre of Game (Edward, Duke of York), 28(2):6
McBride, John, 26(4):16
McCabe, George, 27(3):32, 29(3):28
McCaskie, Norman, 25(4):7
McClane’s New Standard Fishing Encyclopedia (Gingrich),
28(4):13
McCormick, Kyle, 26(1):9
McCosker, John, 29(1):21
McCusker, Joe, 25(3):28
McDonald, John, 25(2):2
on Frederick II, 28(2):4–5
on Gordon, 27(2):7, 8, 9, 17n14, 17n15, 17n16, 28(1):3, 8–9, 10
on Norris, 29(2):3
McGaffy, John, 26(3):5
McGlade, J. M., 31(3):7
McGuane, Thomas, 29(3):20, 32(4):3, 6
McGuire, Christy, 31(3):16
McKay, Pat, 26(4):15
McKenny, Ross, 25(2):15, c1
McMahan, James Henry, 32(4):15
McPhail, Roger, 27(4):10, 13
Medici family collection, 25(2):8–9
Menier, Henri, 27(3):5
Merrick, John, 32(1):5
Merritt, J. I., 29(1):22
Mershon, William, 32(1):6, 7–8, 9, 12, 32(2):5, 6, 6, 7, 10, 11
Merwin, John, 31(4):17
Messalonskee Beach Camps (ME), 26(3):3–4
Meyrisch, Emile, 28(4):8
Middle Ages, sport in, 28(2):2, 2–10, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8–9
Migdalski, Ed, 31(2):8, 8–9, 9
Millard, Bennett, 26(3):6, 6
Miller, Alfred, 27(2):9, 15, 27(4):8
See also Sparse Grey Hackle
Miller, Glenn, 25(2):11
Mills, Derek, 32(1):21
Mills, William, 28(1):4
Milner, William, 28(1):24
Mimbres culture, fishing in, 25(3):2–7
pottery of, 25(3):3, 4, 5, 6, 7, c1
Mimbres Painted Pottery (Brody), 25(3):3
Miner Family Vineyard, 29(1):24
Miniature Nymphs: A Chapter from The Masters on the
Nymph (Neff binding), 26(2):4, 5, 6, 6
Minor Tactics of the Trout Stream (Skues), 25(4):4, 8, 9
Miramichi Fish and Game Club, 27(3):9, 11
Miramontes, Mark, 26(3):22
WINTER 2007
19
Mirenda, Jim, 29(1):26
Misadventures of a Fly Fisherman (Hemingway), 28(4):10
Mitchell, Archibald, 27(3):7, 11n22
fishing the Restigouche, 26(1):2–3, 4, 5
Modern Angler, The (Alfred), 32(2):16
Modern Development of the Dry Fly (Halford), 28(1):15, 15–16,
16
Modern Dry-Fly Code, A (Marinaro), 26(2):12, 13, 14, 16, 18,
32(3):7
Neff binding, 26(2):4, 5, 6
Mogle, Peter B., 25(3):5, 6
Mondavi, Janice, 26(1):28, 29
Mondavi, Marc, 26(1):28
Monell, Ambrose, 28(4):15
Montana, fly fishing in 1870s, 29(1):6–7
See also Yellowstone National Park
Morgan, J. J. M. de, 27(1):2
Morland, George, 28(1):18
Morrill, Linnie, 26(3):5
Moscrop reels, 31(1):6, 6, 8, 8–10, 9, 10, c1
Moser, Bob, 30(1):22
Mottram, J. C., 32(3):6
Mountain View Ranch. See Pecos River (NM)
Mr. Crabtree Goes Fishing (Venables), 27(4):25
Mt. Vernon Creek (WI), 29(4):4
Mudge, Henry U., 26(3):14
Mundt, John, 25(4):13, 27(1):20, 28(1):27
See also Author Index
Mundus, Frank, 32(4):8
museums, history of, 25(2):8–10
See also specific museums
Myers, Jim, 31(2):10, 13
Myers, Paige, 31(2):10, 13
My Sporting Life (Hills), 25(4):2, 4
N
Nadeau, Edmund, 32(2):6, 7
Nahm, Milton C., 26(3):15–16
Native Americans, and fishing
hooks used by, 32(2):17, 17–18
Mimbres culture, 25(3):2–7, 4, 5, 6, 7
in Pecos River valley, 26(3):13, 17n2
Natural History of the Fishes of Massachusetts (Smith), 29(2):8
Nawrath, Rebecca, 31(4):18, 21, 32(2):30
Neff, S. A., Jr., 26(2):2, 3–11, 11, 26(4):26
bindings of, 26(2):3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10
nets. See landing nets
Neversink River. See Gordon, Theodore
Nevins, Allen, 26(1):17
New Mexico
fly fishing in Pecos wilderness, 26(3):12, 12–17, 13, 16, 17
Mimbres culture in, 25(3):2–7
Newton, Isaac, 27(3):18
Nichols, David, 27(3):27
Nicholson, Jerlyn, 32(2):29
Nielsen, Aksel, 26(1):23
Nishiki, Masaaki, 25(2):5, 7
Nixon, Richard, 26(1):23
Nobbs, Percy, 27(3):5
Noble, Robert, 28(4):22
Nordberg, Wayne, 26(1):27
Norris, Charles C., 27(3):5–6, 6
Norris, Hedley F., 27(4):7
20
THE AMERICAN FLY FISHER
Norris, Thaddeus, 28(1):11n8, 13, 29(2):3, 3–7, 7, 32(3):4
rods of, 29(2):2, 4, 5, 5, 6, c1
North America, early fly fishing in, 29(2):8, 9–15
See also America; Canada
Northern Memoirs (Franck), 30(4):19
Northup, Jeff, 25(4):12, 13
Norton, Candy, 31(2):25–26
Norway, salmon fishing in, 27(3):5, 5
Nova, Craig, 32(4):4, 5
Nye, Carol, 26(3):4, 6
nylon, introduction of, 32(3):8
Nymph Fishing for Chalk Stream Trout (Skues), 25(4):9
nymph patterns. See flies
Nymphs and the Trout (Sawyer), 25(4):6
O
O’Behen, Peter, 32(2):15
Observations Made during a Voyage Around the World
(Forster), 32(2):17
O’Connor, Roy, 30(3):4, 7
O’Connor, Susan Engelhard, 30(3):4, 7
Ogden, James, 26(4):18, 21, 27(2):19, 28(1):14
Ogden on Fly Tying (Ogden), 27(2):19
O’Gorman, James, 27(2):19
Olchewsky, John, 30(2):4, 5
Olds, Edward Alan, Jr., 26(1):2, 27(3):6, 7, 7
Oldys, William, 27(3):12
Oliver, Blair, 31(2):2–4
Olney, Richard, 26(1):17
On a Canadian Salmon River (Macdonald), 30(3):7, 8–9, 24–26
“On Fishing” (Steinbeck), 32(4):3, 7–8, 9
On Trout Streams and Salmon Rivers (Lamb), 26(3):5
Oquossoc Angling Association, 29(2):2
Oram, Frank, 25(3):21, 22, 23
Ordonnez, Juan, 26(1):29
Origins of Angling, The (McDonald), 25(2):2, 28(1):26
Orvis, Charles F. See also Orvis Company, 28(1):4, 29(3):5, 5–6
on Mary Orvis Marbury, 29(3):2
Orvis Company, 25(2):24, 32(3):6
and AMFF, 31(4):14, 16–17
and Finlay, 31(4):15–17
and Golden Trout Project, 31(3):15
and Marbury, 29(3):5, 6
Osborn, E. D., 25(3):3
Osborn, George M., 32(2):6, 7
Osborne, Debby, 27(3):27
Osborne, Michael, 26(3):21, 27(3):27, 32(2):c2
O’Shaughnessy, Bob, 25(3):25
Osler, Glyn, 27(3):7, 7, 8, c1
Ovenden, Denys, 28(1):26
Owen, Michael, 26(1):27
P
Pacific Islands, early hooks from, 32(2):16, 16–17, 17
Pacific salmon, in Japan, 25(2):6
Pafort, Eloise, 26(4):4
Page, Margot, 31(4):14
Paine, Alfred Bigelow, 31(2):2
Palfrey, Tony, 30(2):4
Palmer, John, 30(1):13
Panic, Alexander, 27(1):10
paraffin, 28(4):16
Partridge of Redditch, 25(2):3
Party Angling, A (painting, Morland), 28(1):18
paternostering, 30(2):20
Paul H. Young Rod Co., 31(4):4, 6, 12n35
See also Young, Paul H.
Payne, Edward, 25(3):21, 22, 23
rod by, and Gordon, 27(2):9, 14–15, 16–17
Payne, Jim, 25(3):21, 22, 23
peacock sword, 27(2):21, 21
Peale, Charles, 25(2):9
Pecos River (NM), 26(3):12, 12–17, 13, 16, 17
Mountain View Ranch, 26(3):14, 14–16, 15, c1
Peet, Stephen, 27(3):27, 29(1):25, 31(2):29
Pennsylvania Angler, 31(1):12, 13, 14, 14, 20, c2
Penobscot Salmon Club, 30(4):10, 10–11
Pepys, Samuel, 32(3):4
Percy, Gardner, 26(1):7, 9
Perella, Joe, 28(3):19
Perkins, David, 27(3):29
Perkins, Leigh H., 25(2):20, 26(1):27, 26(3):20, 27(3):29,
29(4):25, 31(4):14, 14, 16
on gut, 32(3):7
head of Orvis/starting AMFF, 31(4):15–17, 22
Perkins, Molly, 31(4):18
Perkins, Romi, 26(3):20, 27(3):29
Pertwee, Roland, 30(3):7, 8
Peterson, Eleanor, 30(1):24
Petrie, John, 28(1):22
Phair, Charles, 26(2):9, 11
pheasant, earliest use of, 26(4):16
Philadelphia Museum, 25(2):9
Phillipe, Samuel, 28(1):21, 29(2):5
Phillips, John C., 32(3):10
Phipps, Howard, 32(2):4, 7, 10
Phipps, John S., 32(2):4, 6, 6, 6–7, 10
pickerel, 28(3):c2
Pierson, Lee, 26(1):30
pike
in America, 29(2):11, 12, 13
The Emperor’s Pike, 26(4):6
flies for, 29(1):13, 14, 16, 18, 19
fly fishing for, 28(3):3, 4–6, 6, 29(1):13–19, 15, 17
and gorges, 32(2):13, 13
Pikes Wines, 30(2):6, 7
Pinkowski, Lori, 31(4):28
Pleasures of Angling with Rod and Reel for Trout and Salmon
(Dawson), 29(2):10
Plourde, Pierrette, 30(1):24
Plourde, Roger, 30(1):24
Plumley, Ladd, 26(1):10
Poland, Alta, 26(3):6
Polo, Marco, 25(2):6
Poole, Allan, 25(4):12, 13, 26(3):21, 31(4):20
Poor, Archer, 28(2):12, 21
Porter, William T., 29(2):8
Pound, Ezra, 30(2):18
Powell, Walton E., 27(4):23
Pozek, Toney, 25(2):23, 27(3):26, 28
Practical Dry-Fly Fishing (Gill), 28(1):9
Practical Fly Tying (Henn), 27(2):18
Practical Observations on Angling in the River Trent (Snart),
28(1):23
Practice of Angling as Regards Ireland, The (O’Gorman), 27(2):19
Preller, Friedrich, 25(3):14
“Presence of Theodore Gordon, The” (Wickstrom), 28(1):24
presidents, and fishing. See also specific presidents,
26(1):15–25, 30(4):10–11
Price, John, 25(3):26–27, 26(4):12–13, 27(2):28
Prime, W. C., 30(4):18, 20
Professional Fly Tying, Spinning and Tackle Making Manual
and Manufacturer’s Guide (Herter), 30(4):21, 22
Proper, Datus, 25(4):7, 28(2):28–29
Prosek, James, 25(3):27, 29(3):19, 34, 30(2):3
on Walton, 30(4):6, 7
Pryce-Tannatt, T. E., 25(2):17, 27(2):18–19
Pulitzer, Joseph, 30(3):5, 8
Pulman, George P. R., 26(4):17–18, 28(1):13
Pye, Alan, 28(4):6
Q
Quaint Treatise on Flees and the Art of Artyfichall Flee Making
(Aldam), 26(4):18
Quimby, Bert, 25(2):15, 26(1):7, 9
R
Radcliffe, William, 27(1):2, 28(2):2
rainbow trout, 29(1):11, 30(2):19
Raines, Howell, 29(3):20, 33, 35, 30(4):9
Ralph, Julian, 26(1):16, 17
Ramsbottom, Robert, 27(4):2–4
Ramsbottom, Robert, Jr., 27(4):2, 4, 4–5, 5
Ramsbottom, Westall, 27(4):3, 4
Ramsbottom, William, 27(4):3–4
Rano, John, 31(4):18
Rayjeff, Steve, 25(2):7
Raymond, Steve, 32(4):4
Read, Sandy, 32(3):19
Recherches sur les origines de l’Egypte (Morgan), 27(1):2
Recollections of Cascapedia and Camp Douglas Beck (Bigelow),
27(3):2
Recollections of Fly Fishing for Salmon, Trout and Grayling
(Hamilton), 32(1):22
Red Camp (Canada)
beginning of and Bonbright years, 32(1):2, 3–13, 4, 5, 6, 9,
11, 12
from Phipps to present, 32(2):2, 2–12, 3, 5, 8, 9, 11, c1
Red Flower: Poems Written in War Time (van Dyke), 28(4):3, 4
Redford, Robert, 30(2):2
red trout (S. marstoni), 30(1):9, 10, 11, 12
Reed, Nathaniel P., 26(3):24, 31(2):14, 14–15
reels
Allcock’s, 30(1):11, 12, 13, 13
AMFF collection, 25(2):10, 11, 25(3):30
brass, 1800s, 28(1):23
Dallari’s wooden, 32(1):17, 18, 18–20, 19, 20
from early Hildebrand/München catalog, 25(3):13
Fortin’s line-winders, 25(3):8–10, 9, 10
Hardy’s, 28(4):2, 32(4):7
Marryat, 25(2):7
Moscrop’s, 31(1):6, 6, 8, 8–10, 9, 10, c1
2/0 Otto Zwarg Model 300, 32(3):21
Ramsbottom, 27(4):5
Vom Hofe’s, 31(1):6, 6–8, 7, 32(3):16
WINTER 2007
21
Reid, Mrs. John, 26(1):4
Reiger, John F., 28(2):29
Rembert, Edna “Pansy,” 32(4):13, 13
Remembrances of Rivers Past (Schwiebert), 32(2):22, 24
Renaissance, fly fishing in, 25(4)10–11
Rennie, John, 27(4):13, 13
Repine, Sonia, 27(3):24
Restigouche River (Canada), 26(1):2, 2, 27(3):6
Macdonald’s trip on, 30(3):24, 24–26, 25, 26
Restigouche Salmon Club, 27(3):2, 3, 3, 30(4):11
Reynolds, E. E., 25(4):16–17
Rhead, Louis, 26(4):10, 12, 27(2):10, 29(2):15
American Trout-Stream Insects, 28(1):2, 28(4):13, 30(3):c2,
30(4):20, 21
Rhodes, D. E., 26(4):2, 6
Riccardi, Roger, 26(1):29, 27(1):18, 30(1):25
Ricco, John, 30(2):4, 5
Rice, Ed, 31(2):12, 13
Richards, Brad, 31(1):23
Richards, Carl, 25(2):5, 28(1):7, 39(3):13
Richards, John, III, 30(1):22, 31(1):23
Richards, John, IV, 30(1):22, 31(1):23
Richards, Pamela Bates, 25(2):23, 25(3):25
See also Bates, Pamela; Author Index
Ricketts, Edward F., 32(4):3
Rigdon, William, 26(1):22
Riley Game Cooperative. See Leopold, Aldo
Rinkenbach, William H., 31(3):2, 3, 3
Ripley, Aiden, 27(3):9, 11, 30(3):9, 10
Ripp, Tom, 31(4):8, 9
Rise, The (painting, Homer), 28(2):25
Ristigouche and Its Salmon Fishing, The (Sage), 26(1):2,
30(3):2, 4, 5, 32(3):14, 14, 15, 17n3
Ritz, Charles, 31(2):16, 16
River God, The (Pertwee), 30(3):7, 8
River Runs Through It, A (film), 30(2):2, 11n2
River Runs Through It, A (Maclean), 32(1):14, 15, 16
Riverside Wines, 30(2):6, 6
Roberts, H., engravings by, 27(3):12, 12–13, 13, 14, 15–19
Robertson, Albert, 32(2):5
Robson, Bernadette, 30(1):2
Robson, Jim, 30(1):2
rock bass, 29(2):14
Rod, Pole & Perch (Cameron), 32(2):17
Rod and Line, The (Wheatley), 30(4):13, 15, 16
rod box, millennium, 27(4):13, 15n19
rods
AMFF collection, 25(2):10, 11
early Orvis, 29(3):5
English before 1886, 27(2):12, 17n14, 17n16
graphite, 28(4):15
Hildebrand/München, 25(3):13
Homer’s B. F. Nichols, 25(2):20
Marinaro’s, 26(2):17
materials for, 32(3):2, 7
Powell’s, 27(4):23
Sage’s Baillie rod, 33(3):15
Victorian and match, 30(4):14, 15, c1
See also bamboo rods
Rogan, Alex, 26(1):9
Rogan, Michael, 27(2):21, 21
Rogan’s of Donegal, 25(2):2, 4, 25
Rogowski, Ted, 31(4):14
“Roman Fishing Methods Revealed in Mosaics” (Butler), 27(1):2
Romans
early hooks of, 32(2):16, 16
use of landing net, 27(1):2, 2
22
THE AMERICAN FLY FISHER
Ronalds, Alfred, 25(3):16–17, 27(3):17, 18, 30(2):27, 29n90
Rooper, George, 29(1):16
Roosevelt, Franklin D., 26(1):15, 18, 20–22, 21
Roosevelt, James, 26(1):20
Roosevelt, Robert Barnwell, 28(3):c2
Roosevelt, Theodore, 26(1):18, 28(2):6–7
Rotert, Chick, 31(4):2
Roth, Jeffrey, 31(1):3
Royal Coachman (Schullery), 26(4):18, 32(3):2, 32(4):9
Rudolph, Josh, 29(2):23
Ruffed Grouse, The (Everett), 31(1):14
Running Waters (Proper), 28(2):28–29
Runnymede Lodge (Canada), 27(3):7, 7
Rural Sports (Blaine), 27(3):19
Rural Sports (Daniel), 27(3):13, 17, 29(1):14
Ruth, Babe, 25(2):11
S
S. Allcock Company, 30(1):9, 12–13
reels, 30(1):11, 12, 13
rods of, 30(1):8, 9, c1
Sadler, Dendy, 25(3):10–11, 11, 12
Sage, Dean, 26(1):2, 2, 3, 4, 30(3):2, 5, 5, 25, 31(2):4, 32(3):14
collection of, 32(3):14–17, 15, 16, 17
Sale, P. F., 31(3):7
Salladin, Bill, 28(3):22
Salminen, Ray, 26(1):9
salmon
artificial breeding of, 27(4):2–4
Atlantic, 30(2):15, 31(4):10
earliest depiction of, 28(2):3
introduction in Rangeley watershed, 26(1):14
Pacific, 25(2):6
recipe for green smoked, 26(1):3, 4
significance in Ireland/Finnegans Wake, 30(2):25–26
See also salmon fishing
Salmon, The (etching, Hofland), 32(1):c2
Salmon and Its Artificial Propagation, The (Ramsbottom),
27(4):2–3
Salmon and the Dry Fly (La Branche), 28(4):15
Salmon and Trout (Sage), 31(2):4
Salmon Anglers of Philadelphia, 27(3):5, 5
salmon fishing
books on, 30(3):2, 2–11, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9
described by Baden-Powell, 25(4):18
on Grand Cascapedia River, 32(1):2, 3, 4–5, 5, c1
on the Restigouche, 26(1):2–4, 30(3):24–26
Wood’s collection on, 27(3):2, 2–11, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8–9, 10–11, c1
See also salmon
Salmon Fishing on Cain River New Brunswick (Sturges),
30(3):2, 5, 11n20
Salmon-Fishing on the Grand Cascapedia (Davis), 28(3):10,
30(3):2, 5, 32(1):6
Salmon Fishing (painting, Walker), 30(4):15
salmon flies, 28(1):25, 32(4):7
Bates collection, 25(2):16, 16–19
Buller’s unusual, 30(4):13, 13–15, 16, 16
described by Baden-Powell, 25(4):19
Harris collection, 26(4):16
See also flies
Salmon Fly, The (Kelson), 27(2):18, 19, 30(4):20, 20, 32(3):4
Salmonia (Davy), 27(2):19
Salmon in Low Water (Hunt), 30(3):3, 6
Salmon of the World (Schwiebert), 32(2):22
Salmon on the Dry Fly (Wertheim), 30(3):3, 6
Salmon Streams of Anticosti Island, The, 27(3):4, 4
Salter, T. F., 30(4):13, 15
Saltzman, Salty, 26(1):33
Samuel, William, 26(4):2, 3–6, 8, 27(1):4, 27(3):17
Sanborn, J. Herbert, 26(3):7–8
Sand Country Almanac, A (Leopold), 29(4):2, 3, 7, 31(1):2
Sandford, Chris, 30(4):13
Sanfilippo, Jim, 28(3):20
San Zeno, 25(4):10, 11
Satchell, Thomas, 27(3):2, 30(4):19, 19–20
Saunders, James, 32(3):5
Sawyer, Frank, 25(4):6
Schley, Ben, 31(4):14
Schlotman, Joseph, 32(2):10
Schmitt, Waldo, 26(1):21
Schmitten, Rollie, 31(2):25
Schmitz, John, 28(3):19
Schullery, Paul, 25(2):19, 26(1):27, 26(4):18, 28(1):32, 33, 32(4):9
award for, 25(3):29–30
on fishing, 29(4):8
on Gordon, 27(2):9, 10, 11
on Orvis’s flies, 29(3):7
on Roosevelt, 26(1):18
See also Author Index
Schuylkill Fishing Club, 30(4):7
Schwiebert, Ernest, 25(2):5, 28(1):22, 30(1):19
at AMFF reopening, 31(4):20, 22, 22–23, 24
books by, 27(1):12, 27(3):5
drawing of Payne rod, 27(2):9, 15
flies of, 27(1):12, 13–15, 15–17
photos of, 26(2):22, 26(4):12, 27(1):17, 29(3):35, 32(2):22, 23,
26, 27, c2
tributes to, 32(2):22–27, c3
view of Gordon, 28(1):8–9
on Young rods, 31(4):8
See also Author Index
Scientific Anglers, 28(3):9
Scotland
Atlantic salmon fishing in, 27(3):8–9, 10
early landing nets in, 27(1):2–3, 6n8
pike fishing in, 29(1):14, 15, 17
Scott, Bob, 25(4):13, 28(3):19, 29(3):33, 34, 31(1):22, 31(4):20
Scott, David, 27(4):14, 15n21
Scott, Genio C. See Fishing in American Waters
Scott, Karen, 28(3):19
Scott, Michael, 28(1):24–25
Scott, Robert, 26(3):24, 31(4):22
Scott, W. B., 31(3):7
Scouting for Boys (Baden-Powell), 25(4):14, 19
Sea of Cortez (Steinbeck), 32(4):3
Seasons of a Fisherman, The (Haig-Brown), 27(4):25
Second Salmon Fishing Trip to Norway (Andrews), 30(3):10, 10
Secrets of Angling, The (Dennys), 27(1):4, 29(4):16, 17
Secrets of Streamer Fly Fishing (Letourneau), 26(3):7
Selective Trout (Richards and Swisher), 30(3):13
Senior, William, 27(4):7, 7, 12, 28(1):13
Serbia. See Macedonia
Sewell, Michael, 31(1):2
Seymour, Edward, 26(1):13–14
shad, 30(2):24
Shaheen, Jean, 28(4):26
Shappy, Clayton, 31(4):14, 15
Shaw, Helen
See Kessler, Helen Shaw
Shepard, Odell, 32(4):4
Sheppard, Charles, 31(3):3
Sheridan, Philip, 29(1):5
Sheringham, Hugh Tempest, 28(3):4
Sherman, Ben, 29(3):33, 34, 35
Sherman, Gary, 29(2):23
Sherman, Mark, 29(2):23, 29(3):34, 35
Sherman, Steve, 29(2):23
Sherman, Todd, 29(2):23
Shiels, Mary, 25(2):4
Shipley, William, 26(4):18
Shultz, Paul, 31(2):26
“Sick Trout Streams” (Leopold), 29(4):5
Siebold, Diana, 26(4):22, 27(3):26, 28, 28(3):20, 30(2):31
See also Author Index
silk
history of, 32(3):3, 3–4, 5
thread, 27(2):22–23
silkworm gut, 26(4):18–19, 29(4):19, 21, 32(3):2, 3, 3–9, 4, 5, 6, 7,
8, 9, c1
Simmonds, N. W., 30(4):19
Six Months in America (Vigne), 29(2):8
Skeat, William, 27(1):2
Sketch Book, The (Irving), 31(4):27
Skinner, John S., 29(2):8
Skues, G. E. M., 25(4):2–7, 27(1):13, 28(1):3, 30(1):16–17,
32(4):6–7, 11n40
on Bosnian fisherman, 27(1):10
excerpts from, 25(4):8–9
and Flyfishers’ Club of London, 27(4):7, 11
and Gordon, 27(2):9, 11, 12, 13, 16
letter to Marston, 28(4):4
nymph patterns of, 25(4):4, 5–6, 28(1):5
photos of, 25(4):2, 3, 4, 5, 27(2):13
and Tups Indispensable, 26(3):18, 18
Slack Line Strategies for Fly Fishing (Judy), 30(3):13, 14
Sloan, Stephen, 31(2):25–26, 26, 31(3):22–23
Smith, Frank R., 28(2):19
Smith, Jerome Van Crowinshield, 29(2):8
Smith, Milford K., 31(4):14
Smith, Red, 30(4):7
Smithsonian’s National Museum, 25(2):9
Snart, Charles, 28(1):23
snell. See hooks
Snow, Frank, 30(1):10
Some of It Was Fun (Falkus), 32(1):21
Sonderman, Sean, 25(3):26–27, 25(4):24
Soque River (GA), 31(2):25–26
Soque Sisters, 31(2):25
Sorochan, Larry, 31(3):8–9, 9
South, Theophilus, 26(4):19
Soward, John, 27(3):28
Spain
fishing techniques in, 27(1):11
silkworm gut from, 32(4):6
Sparse Grey Hackle, 27(2):9, 30(4):9, 32(4):9
See also Miller, Alfred
Spaulding, Jack, 32(2):6
Speckled Brook Trout, The (Rhead), 29(2):12, 15, 30(4):2
Spendiff, James A., 27(3):31, 28(3):22
Spinning for American Game Fish (Bates), 25(2):14, 15
Spirit of the Times (Porter), 29(2):8
sport, in Middle Ages, 28(2):2, 2–10, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8–9
Sport in Classic Times (Butler), 27(1):2, 28(2):3
Sport in Peace and War (Buxton), 28(4):6
Sportsman’s Dictionary, The, 27(3):13, 16
Sportsman’s Scrapbook (Phillips), 32(3):10
Stanfield, Janice Payne, 25(3):23
WINTER 2007
23
Starling, Edmund, 26(1):18, 19, 20
starlings, 27(2):20, 20
Steele, Thomas Sedgwick, 31(3):3, 22
Steenrod, Roy, 27(1):14, 27(2):9, 12, 13, 16
Stegner, Wallace, 29(4):3
Steinbeck, John, 32(4):2, 2–11, 3, 4
Lampanyctus steinbecki, 32(4):9, c2
Steinbeck, John, IV, 32(4):2, 5
Stevens, Carrie G., 25(2):15, 26(1):6–13
on catching record trout, 26(1):10–12
photos of, 26(1):6, 13, 14, c1, 28(2):11
streamers of, 26(1):9, 9, 12–13, 28(2):11–21, 14, 15, 17, 18, c1
Stevens, Wallace, 26(1):7, 8, 12, 13
Stewart, Hilary, 32(2):14
Stewart, Richard, 29(4):18
Stickney, Joseph, 25(2):15, 16, 26(1):7
“stiletto.” See bodkin
Stock, Elliot, 25(2):2
Stoddard, John L., 29(1):6, 10
Stoddard, Seneca Ray, 29(3):8, 8
Stoddart, Thomas Tod, 29(1):15–16
StoneFly Vineyard, 30(2):10–11, 11
Stream, The (Clarke), 31(3):24
Streamcraft: An Angling Manual (Holden), 26(3):6
streamer flies, 29(1):18
Gordon’s contribution, 28(1):5
Stevens’s, 26(1):9, 9, 12–13, 28(2):11–21, 14, 15, 17, 18, c1
tandem, 26(3):7, 8–9
See also flies
Streamer Fly Fishing in Fresh and Salt Water (Bates), 25(2):14,
15
Streamer Fly Tying and Fishing (Bates), 25(2):14, 16, 19
Streamside Guide to Naturals and Their Imitations (Flick),
30(2):15
strike detectors, 30(3):15, 30(4):15
striking, 30(4):14, 15n12
stringer, 30(4):15
striped bass, 29(2):10, 11
Strumica River. See Macedonia
Sturges, Lee, 30(3):2, 5
suckers, 28(3):2
Summers, Bob, 31(4):6, 9, 10
Swayze, Vin, 29(4):c3
Sweigart, Alex, 31(1):20
Swisher, Doug, 25(2):5, 28(1):7, 39(3):13
T
Tabanus zonalis (horseflies), 30(3):20–21
tackle. See fishing tackle
Taking Trout with the Dry Fly (Camp), 28(1):8
Talcott, Terry, 29(2):22
tandem flies, 26(3):7, 8–9
See also flies
Tanner, Gary, 25(3):27, 28, 29, 26(4):24, 26, 27(3):29, 27(4):28,
28(1):28, 32, 28(2):c3, 28(3):18, 20, 22, 29(1):20, c3,
29(3):34, 29(4):26, c3
See also Author Index
Tanner, Martha, 26(1):29
Tathan, David, 28(2):22
Tattersall, George, 29(2):8, 9–15, 11, 13
Taylor, Frederick James, 29(1):18, 18, 19
Taylor, Kenneth, 29(1):18
Taylor, Samuel, 27(2):18, 30(4):16
24
THE AMERICAN FLY FISHER
on fly fishing for pike, 29(1):13–14
Temple, Stanley, 29(4):5
Ten Days’ Sport on Salmon Rivers (Sage), 30(3):5, 6, 8
Tent Dwellers (painting, Paine), 31(2):2
terrestrials, 25(4):7, 26(2):15, 16, 30(1):17
“Then My Arm Glassed Up” (Steinbeck), 32(4):3, 7
“Theodore Gordon and Bamboo Rods” (Scott), 28(1):24
Thomas, Edwards, & Hawes, 25(3):23
Thomas, Fred W., 30(2):9–10, 10
Thomas, Peter, 30(3):24–25
Thompson, A. W., 25(3):6
Thompson, Ernest, 26(3):2
Thompson, Lewis, 32(2):8
Thompson, Miles, 27(3):21
Thomsen, Henrik, 25(4):6
Thornton, Grant, 28(3):20
Through the Brazilian Wilderness (Roosevelt), 26(1):18
Thursday (painting, Sadler), 25(3):10–11, 11
Tihonet Club, 32(3):10, 10–13, 11, 12, 13
Tisch, Richard, 25(4):13, 26(1):28, 29, 28(3):19, 31(4):21
Titus, William W., 32(1):5
Tokyo Tackle Show, 25(2):7
Tomlin, W. David, 29(3):7
Tosti, Claudio, 32(4):21
Townsend, Sandra, artwork, 25(3):c1
Townshend, Joseph B., 29(2):6–7
Traité general des pêsches (Du Monceau), 27(3):13, 15
Transuc, Harold, 31(3):22, 23
Traveling with Winslow Homer: America’s Premier Artist/Angler
(Demarest), 29(3):23–24
Traver, Robert, 28(1):3
See also Voelker, John Donaldson
Treasury of Reels, A (Neff binding), 26(2):8, 9
Treatyse of Fysshynge wyth an Angle, A (Berners), 25(2):18,
25(3):12, 25(4):11, 27(2):19, 27(3):17, 20, 28(1):2, 11n2,
30(4):4, 4
on coarse fishing, 28(3):3
hooks in, 29(4):14, 14, 15
origins of, 28(2):8–10, 32(1):14–15
tying of flies from, 25(2):2–4, 3
Tricorythodes, 26(2):15, 30(1):17
Trinity River (Québec), 27(3):7, 8, c1
Trip to the Miramichi Fish and Game Club, Ltd., 30(3):9, 9–10
trolling, with streamer flies, 26(1):12, 26(3):7, 9
Troth, Al, 29(1):22
trout
in Corofin lakes, 30(1):5, 7, 7
depiction in Mimbres pottery, 25(3):4
in Gore Creek, 31(2):20, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24
“high-sticking” for, 28(3):2
in Macedonia, 27(1):7
in Mt. Vernon Creek, 29(4):4
in Pecos River, 26(3):13, 15, 15, 16–17
propensity for nymphs, 25(4):4, 5–6
rise of, 25(4):7, 26(2):18
in Soque River, 31(2):26, 26
streams and beavers, 31(1):4–5
using strike detectors for, 30(3):15
using terrestrials for, 26(2):15
See also specific species of
Trout and Salmon Fisherman for Seventy-Five Years (Hewitt),
29(1):2, 10–11
Trout (Bergman), 30(1):15, 16, 19
Trout Dreams: Gallery of Fly-Fishing Profiles (Merritt), 29(1):22
Trout Fishing (Brooks), 30(3):13
Trout Fishing in America (Brautigan), 32(1):22
Trout Fishing in the Highlands (painting, Petrie), 28(1):22
Trout Gulch Vineyards, 30(2):9, 9
Trout (Schwiebert), 32(2):22, 24
Trout Unlimited, 30(4):9
Trout Waters and How to Fish Them (Bates), 25(2):15
Troyes, Chrétien de, 28(2):5
Trueblood, Ted, 29(1):18, 18, 19
True Treatise on the Art of Fly Fishing, A (Shipley and
Fitzgibbon), 26(4):18
Turle knot, 29(4):21
Turrell, W. J., 27(1):4
Turton, John, 27(4):4
Twici, Guyllame (William), 28(2):5
“Twilight Salmon, The” (Norris), 27(3):6, 11n20
Two Men in a Canoe (painting, Homer), 28(2):24
Tyler, Wat, 25(3):11–12
U
Umpqua Enflycopedia, 30(1):19
Underwood, John, 31(4):2
Upland Stream (Wetherell), 32(4):3
Upon a River Bank (Mills), 32(1):21
Upper Dam Pool (ME), 26(1):7, 12
Upper Dam house, 26(1):8, 10–11, 13, 14
Upson, Ben, 25(2):20
Urtz, Sam, 29(4):28, 31(4):21
Ustonson, Onesimus, 32(3):5
V
van Dyke, Henry, 28(1):21, 28(4):2–3, 4, 7, 7–8, 11
Van Hook, George, 28(3):22
Van Ness, Sam, 26(2):21
Van Put, Ed, 29(1):22
Van Voorst, John, 30(2):24
Venables, Bernard, 27(4):25
Venables, Robert, 26(4):19, 28(3):3, 29(4):12–13, 23–24, 32(3):3, 4
flies of, 29(4):22, 23
on fly fishing for pike, 29(1):13
hooks of, 29(4):17, 18–19, 21, 23
Veverka, Bob, 25(2):18
Vigne, Godfrey, 29(2):8
Viles, Charles A., 26(3):13, 14
Viles, George “Skipper,” 26(3):12, 14, 14, 15, 15–16
vises, 27(2):18–19, 19
Vladykov, Vadim, 31(3):7
Voelker, John Donaldson, 29(3):10–17, 30(4):6, 32(4):4
Voelker’s Pond: A Robert Traver Legacy (McCullough and
Wargin), 29(3):10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 15, 16, 16, 17
Voljc, Bozidar, 27(4):18, 21
Vom Hofe reels, 31(1):6, 6–8, 7
von Cornelius, Peter, 25(3):14, 20n
von Dalberg, Johann, 26(4):5–6
von Fallersleben, Hoffmann, 25(3):14
von Herder, Johann Gottfried, 25(3):14, 20n
von Kienbusch, Carl Otto, 26(4):2, 4
von Schiller, Friedrich, 25(3):14, 20n
von Strasser, Rudy, 26(1):29
von Strasser Winery, 30(2):2, 5
Voss Bark, Conrad, 27(4):18, 28(4):23
W
W. M. Mills & Son, 26(3):6–7
Waddington, Richard, 28(3):14
Wagner, Jeff, 27(3):32, 29(3):26, 28
Walcott, F. C., 28(2):19
Walker, Francis, 30(4):15
Walker, Richard Stuart, 26(4):4, 9
Wallace, William, 27(1):2–3
Walsh, David, 26(3):21, 27(3):26, 28(1):27, 29(1):20, 31(4):20,
32(1):23
Walsh, Mike, 25(3):25, 26(3):22
Walter, H. D., 26(3):16
Walton, Izaak (Isaac), 25(3):17, 26(2):8, 9, 27(3):12, 17, 20–24,
22, 27(4):6, 11, 30(2):25, 26, 30(4):5, 5–8
on angling as art, 30(2):2
on emperor’s pike, 26(4):6–7
influence on Flyfishers’ Club of London, 27(4):9–10, 11, 13
popularity of Compleat Angler, 29(3):19–20
on Venables, 29(4):23, 24n12
Walton Fishing Club, Cornwall Bridge (CT), 30(4):8
Waltzing with the Captain: Remembering Richard Brautigan
(Keeler), 32(1):21–22
Ward, Richard, 27(3):23, 24
Warner, James, 26(1):9
Warren, Bob, 28(2):11, 12
Waslick, Mark, 25(2):18
Waterman, Charley, 29(1):22
Waters of Yellowstone with Rod and Fly (Back), 27(4):24
Watson, Graham, 32(4):3, 6, 7
wax, for fly tying, 27(2):22–23
Way of a Trout with a Fly, The (Skues), 25(4):2, 7, 8
Webb, Samuel, 30(3):5
Webster, Daniel, 25(2):11
Webster, David, 26(3):5–6, 32(3):6
Weeks, Edward, 32(4):6
We Go Fishing in Norway (Pulitzer), 30(3):5, 8
Welch, Herbert L., 25(2):15, 26(1):7
Welch, Paula, 26(4):22
See also Author Index, Paula “Stick” Morgan
Welles, Charles H., 26(1):12
Wells, C. S., 29(3):7
Wells, H. P., 32(3):5, 6
Wert, Hal, 32(4):2
Wertheim, Maurice, 30(3):3, 6
Westwood, Thomas, 27(3):2, 30(4):19, 19–20
wet flies, 28(1):24, 30(1):15
on chalk streams, 25(4):3–4, 5, 9
development of, 26(4):17–21, 20
Schwiebert’s examples/comments on, 27(1):15–17
and Skues, 25(4):3–4
See also flies
Wetherell, W. D., 32(4):3, 6
Wetzel, Charles, 27(3):2, 28(1):8
“What Is a Sportsman?” (Leopold), 29(4):8, 9, 9
What the Trout Said (Proper), 25(4):7
Wheatley, Hewett, 30(4):13, 15
Wheeler, Charles Edward, 26(1):8–9, 13
Wheeler, Shang, 28(2):16, 19
White, Stanford, 26(1):3, 30(3):5, 30(4):11, 32(3):14, 16n2
White, Stewart Edward, 31(3):12
whitefish, 29(2):11, 11
Whitehead, Alfred North, 25(4):7
Whitehouse, Helen, 32(2):15
Whitlock, Dave, 28(1):32, 33
WINTER 2007
25
Whittlesey, Lee, 29(1):12n22
Wickstrom, Gordon, 28(1):10, 24, 29(1):c3, 32(4):7, 7
on Compleat Angler, 29(3):19
Late in an Angler’s Life, 31(1):11
See also Author Index
Wieland, Christoph Martin, 25(3):14, 20n
Wightman, Eddie, 31(2):14, 15
Wilcox, Sara, 25(2):25, 25(3):26–27, 27(3):26, 28, 31(4):18
See also Author Index
wildlife management, and Leopold, 29(4):5, 7
Willett, Thomas, 32(2):9, 9
Willett, Viola May, 32(2):9, 9
Willett, William, 32(1):5
William Mills & Son, 25(3):22
See also W. M. Mills & Son
Williams, A. Courtney, 27(4):4
Williams, Jeff, 29(2):22
Williams, Theodore “Ted,” 28(4):30, 31(4):2, 2–4, 3, 4–7, 7,
10–11
photos of rods, 31(4):6, 13
Williams, Virginia, 29(2):22
Williamson, John, 29(1):13
Wills, Elizabeth Elinor, 26(1):7–8
Wilmot, Samuel, 30(3):25–26
Wilson, Bill, 25(4):13
Wilson, Nelson, 31(2):6–7, 7
Wilson, Woodrow, 28(4):2, 3
winemakers’ labels, 30(2):2, 2–12, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11
Winsor, Henry D., 26(3):14
Winsor, Henry M., 26(3):13
Wisconsin
Leopold’s work in, 29(4):3–4, 7
wildlife in, 31(1):4–5
Wood, A. H. E., 27(3):8
Wood, Casey, 28(2):4, 5
Wood, Charles B., III, 30(3):24
Atlantic salmon fishing collection, 27(3):2, 2–9, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7,
8, 9, c1
See also Author Index
Woodcock Shooting (Davis), 28(3):10
26
THE AMERICAN FLY FISHER
Wooding, F. H., 27(3):5, 5
Woodman, Elizabeth, 32(2):5, 10
Woodman, Jonathan, 32(1):4
Woodman, Mary, 32(2):5
Woodman, Ned, 32(2):11
Woods, Jamie, 29(4):c3, 31(4):20
Woods, Sam, 29(4):c3
wool
dyeing in medieval times, 25(2):3–4
pig’s, 26(4):16
Tups wool, 26(3):18
Woolley, Linda, 26(4):8
Woolner, Frank, 26(4):11
Worde, Wynken de, 28(2):8, 9–10
World War I, fishing during, 28(4):2, 2–8, 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, 11
Wulff, Joan, 25(2):23, 26(1):33, 28(4):15
casting technique, 27(2):14, 17n30
Wulff, Lee, 27(3):5, 6, 28(2):28
Y
Yarrell, William, 30(2):24
Yellowstone National Park, Hewitt in, 29(1):2–12
photos/map, 29(1):2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, c1
York, Rudy, 31(4):2
Young, Martha Marie, 31(4):7, 7, 10, c1
Young, Paul H., rods of, 31(4):4, 5–10, 8, 9, c1
Young, Todd, 31(4):8, 9, 10, 10
Younger, Jimmy, 25(2):17
Yugoslavia. See Macedonia
Z
Zabik, Alex, 32(4):21
Zahner, Don, 31(4):17
Zincavage, J. David, 28(3):10, 30(4):13
Zinsmaster, Charlie, 31(1):3
AUTHOR INDEX
Index of authors publishing in the American Fly Fisher.
References are by volume(number):page.
Illustration or caption page references are in italics.
Articles, poems, or short stories are in quotation marks.
Books, magazines, paintings, and foreign language words are
in italics.
[Bracketed names] are staff and trustee writings, sometimes
uncredited.
“c1” indicates front cover.
“c2” indicates inside front cover.
“c3” indicates inside back cover.
A
Achor, Kathleen
“A Marvellous Party,” 31(4):c2
“A Mother Club, a Mystery, and Best of the Worsts,” 30(4):c2
“An Angler, an Autopsy, and Art,” 28(2):c2
“A Place to Call Home,” 31(1):c2
“A Saint, A Scout, and Skues,” 25(4):c2
“A Storied Sport,” 32(1):c2
“At a Time Like This . . . ,” 28(4):c2
“Auroras and Goldens and Ivories,” 31(3):c2
“Crossing Lines,” 27(4):c2
“Ephemeral Summer,” 27(3):c2
“Everything about our sport is beautiful,” 32(2):c2
“Fish List,” 25(1):c2
“Gordon, More Gordon, and Dressing Flies by Hand,” 27(2):c2
“Hammock Havoc,” 30(3):c2
“Literature and Libations,” 30(2):c2
“Namesakes,” 32(4):c2
“No Words,” 25(3):c2
“Possibilities,” 29(2):c2
“Sampler,” 29(3):c2
“Show and Tell,” 25(2):c2
“Source,” 26(1):c2
“Streams, Sportsmen, Forks, and Hooks,” 29(4):c2
“Summer Scales,” 28(3):c2
“Summer Time,” 26(3):c2
“Surgeon General’s Warning: This Issue May Induce
Excessive Excitement,” 32(3):c2
“Sweet Spring,” 26(2):c2
“Tell Me a Story,” 31(2):c2
“The Content in the Context,” 30(1):c2
“The Winter Welcome,” 27(1):c2
“Time Flies,” 26(4):c2
“Trout Memories and Pike Tales,” 29(1):c2
“Who’s Your Daddy?”, 28(1):c2
[Achor, Kathleen]
“Carrie Stevens: A Family History,” 26(1):6
“Fishing and Escape,” 26(1):15
“S. A. Neff Jr., Angling Artisan: Caught by Trout,
Piscatorial Books, and Fine Binding,” 26(2):2
“The Confessions of a Duffer,” 25(4):22
“The Importance of G. E. M. Skues: An Angler-Writer for
Today,” 25(4):2
Agro, Elizabeth R., “S. A. Neff Jr., Angling Artisan: Caught by
Trout, Piscatorial Books, and Fine Binding,”
26(2):2–11, 26(2):27
Akiyama, Yoshi
“A Meeting, a Moment,” 30(4):c3
“A New Season,” 31(3):c3
“Many Thanks,” 30(3):c3
“The State of the Museum,” 31(2):c3
“Wading in Deep,” 30(2):c3
Atkinson, R. Valentine, “The New Gold Rush: Celebrating and
Protecting the California Golden Trout in the
Southern Sierra Nevada” (photos), 31(3):10–21, 31(3):28
B
Baker, Rhodes S., III, “Echoes from Yesteryear,” 32(4):12–15, 32(4):24
Bates, Pamela
“In Memoriam: Megan Boyd,” 28(2):37
See also Richards, Pamela Bates
Beazley, David, [Letter], 31(2):27
Behnke, Bob, [Letter], 30(2):32
Bell, Richard G., 29(3):24
“Common Threads among the Gold: A Brief Discourse
Regarding Common Characteristics of Fishing
Clubs and Their Members,” 30(4):2–12
“Mary Orvis Marbury and the Columbian Exposition,”
29(3):2–9
Berls, Robert H., 25(4):25
“Excerpts from The Essential G. E. M. Skues,” 25(4):8
“My Search for the Perfect Fishing Hat,” 31(2):16–17
WINTER 2007
27
“The Importance of G. E. M. Skues: An Angler-Writer for
Today,” 25(4):2–7
Betts, John, 27(2):32
“A New Look at Dame Juliana,” 28(1):26
“Fly Lines and Lineage,” 26(4):17–21
“George La Branche: A Very Beautiful Fisherman,” 28(4):12–19
“Gore Creek: A Love Story,” 31(2):20–24
[Letter], 27(4):32, 31(2):27
“Robert Venables’s Experience as an Angler,” 29(4):12–24
“Some Notes and Comment” (on salmon flies), 30(4):16
“Truly Hand-Tied Flies,” 27(2):18–25
Boyle, Robert H., “Flies Do Your Float: Fishing in Finnegans
Wake,” 30(2):13–29, 30(2):38
Bradford, Charles, “The Angler and the Bondman,” 30(3):18–19
Briscoe, Harry J.
“Gordon M. Wickstrom’s Late in an Angler’s Life,” 31(1):11
“Walton E. Powell: In Memoriam,” 27(4):23
Buller, Frederick, 25(3):31
“A History of the Landing Net,” 27(1):2–6
“A Hoard of Mysterious Salmon Flies,” 30(4):13–15
“Ancient Hooks,” 32(2):13–18
“Fly Fishing for Pike in Britain and Ireland,” 29(1):13–19
“Sidelights and Reflections on William Samuel’s The Arte
of Angling (1577),” 26(4):2–9
“Some Notes on the Evolution of Sport and Sport Fishing
during the Middle Ages,” 28(2):2–10
“The French Monk’s Alternative Reel,” 25(3):8–12
Bullock, Bill
“Cool. Never Heard of It.”, 32(1):c3
“The Historic Batten Kill,” 32(3):c3
“Remembering Ernie Schwiebert,” 32(2):c3
“Thoreau’s Maine Woods and Maine Fishing,” 32(4):c3
C
Cameron, Ken, 27(3):34
“First Impressions of the Harris Flies,” 26(4):16
[Letter], 28(1):31
“Rigor without Mortis,” 28(1):18–25
“Standing on the Shoulders of Giants,” 27(3):12–19
Carmichael, Hoagy B., 32(1):25
“Red Camp: Part 1: A Camp of His Own,” 32(1):2–13
“Red Camp Part 2: A Recipe for Change,” 32(2):2–12
Chandler, J. Leon, “Evolution of the Modern Fly Line,”
28(3):7–9, 28(3):27
D
Davis, Edward G., 30(1):31
“The Condor and Grizzly Inheritance,” 31(2):5–7
“Those Captivating Classic Rods and Reels: An S. Allcock
Story,” 30(1):8–13
Dawson, Bruce H. “Cemetery in the Highlands: A Cast from
Fly-Fishing History,” 25(3):21–23, 25(3):31
Demarest, Robert J., 28(2):38
“A Pair of Browns (Myotis lucifugus and Salmo trutta),”
31(2):18–19
“Winslow Homer: America’s Premier Fisherman/Artist,”
28(2):22–26
DeMott, Robert, 32(4):24
[Letter], 30(4):29
28
THE AMERICAN FLY FISHER
“Of Fish and Men,” 32(4):2–11
Dick, H. Lenox H., “Edward R. Hewitt: The Last Renaissance
Man,” 30(1):20, 30(1):31
Doggett, Joe, “Fishing Classic Tackle: A Museum Friend
Reports,” 32(3):21
E
Everett, Fred, “Opening Day Word Sketch 4,” 31(1):16–21
F
Feldenzer, John A., “Of Baseball and Bamboo: Bobby Doerr,
Ted Williams, and the Paul H. Young Rod Company,”
31(4):2–13, 31(4):27
[Ferree, Ted], “In Memoriam: Hunter,” 26(2):21
Finkel, David, “The New Gold Rush: Celebrating and
Protecting the California Golden Trout in the
Southern Sierra Nevada,” 31(3):10–21, 31(3):28
Finlay, Dick, “Notes and Comment,” 31(2):24
Fowler, G. William, 25(3):31
“Angling Art: The Winemaker’s Label,” 30(2):2–12
“Angling in the Pecos River Headwaters: The Development
of Fly Fishing in Northern New Mexico,” 26(3):12–17
“Brian Clarke’s The Stream,” 31(3):24
“Brothers of the Angle: The Flyfisher’s Club,” 27(4):6–15
“Early American Fishing: Mimbres Classic Period,
1050–1200 A.D.”, 25(3):2–7
[Frey, Arthur T.], “In Memoriam: Van Ness,” 26(2):21
G
[Gibson, George], “And So It Begins: A Groundbreaking
Story,” 30(1):27
Gilford, Jim, “The Contrary Angler and Artist,” 31(1):12–15, 31(1):31
Girard, Jerry, “Thaddeus Norris: America’s Izaak Walton,”
29(2):3–8, 29(2):26
Grant, Gardner L.
“Ernest G. Schwiebert, 1931–2005,” 32(2):22–23
“The Fishing Was the Best of It (With Apologies to Dana
Lamb)”, 31(2):19
Grubic, Goran, “Astræus: The First Fly-Fishing River,”
27(4):16–22, 27(4):34
H
Hardman, James, “A Tale of Two Reels,” 31(1):6–10, 31(1):31
Harwood, J. Keith, 27(4):34
“The Ramsbottoms: Pisciculturists, Tackle Manufacturers,
and Fly Dressers,” 27(4):2–5
“Thomas Bewick: Artist and Angler,” 32(4):16–20
Herd, Andrew, 27(1):23
“Astræus: The First Fly-Fishing River,” 27(4):16–22
“Fly Fishing for ‘Coarse’ Fish Before 1900,” 28(3):2–6
“Frederic M. Halford: The Myth and the Man,” 28(1):12–17
“Grandfather and Jock,” 28(3):11–17
[Letter], 27(4):32
“Return to Paradise,” 30(1):2–7
“Standing on the Shoulders of Giants,” 27(3):12–19
“The Macedonian Fly Revisited,” 27(1):7–11
“The Tying of the Treatyse Flies,” 25(2):2–4
Herrick, William F.
“In Memoriam: William Michael Barrett,” 32(4):23
“Poems Read on the Occasion of the Opening of the
American Museum of Fly Fishing, 11 June 2005,”
31(4):24
“Remembering Ernie,” 32(2):26–27
Hilyard, Graydon R., 26(1):34
“Carrie Stevens: A Family History,” 26(1):6–14
“Carrie Stevens: A Fly Tyer’s Progress,” 28(2):11–21
Hilyard, Leslie K., 26(1):34
“Carrie Stevens: A Family History,” 26(1):6–14
“Carrie Stevens” A Fly Tyer’s Progress,” 28(2):11–21
[Hitschler, Lynn], “Philadelphia Dinner Auction,” 31(1):23–24
Hmura, Merideth A., “Angling in the Pecos River Headwaters:
The Development of Fly Fishing in Northern New
Mexico,” 26(3):12–17, 26(3):26
Hoffman, Richard C. (translator), “John Horrocks, 1817–1881: A
Pioneer of Fly Fishing in Germany,” 25(3):13–20, 25(3):31
K
Karas, Nick, “Aurora: The Tale of the Comeback Trout,”
31(3):2–9, 31(3):28
Karaska, Gerald J., 31(4):27
“Fly Fishing, Skiing, Orvis, and the Museum: Dick Finlay,
the First Volunteer,” 31(4):14–17
“Our Library Grows,” 32(2):28
“The Old and Dear Tihonet Club,” 32(3):10–13
Kohrman, Robert, [Letter], 26(2):27
Kretchman, Fred, “In Memoriam: Clarence W. ‘Sam’ Carlson,”
28(4):26, 28(4):28
Krieger, Fanny, “To Alaska with Love, or Diary of a Fishing
Wife,” 31(2):10–13
L
Lang, Andrew, “The Confessions of a Duffer,” 25(4):22–23
Largay, Larry, “A Schwiebert Fly Box” (photos), 27(1):12–17
Ledlie, David B.
“Andrew Herd’s The Fly,” 28(4):22
“Lady Agnes Macdonald’s On a Canadian Salmon River,”
30(3):24–26
Lee, Charles T., Jr., “The Story of a Rod and Two Trout,”
29(2):2, 29(2):26
Leopold, Aldo, “The Alder Fork—A Fishing Idyl,” 29(4):11
M
Mares, Bill, “Fishing and Escape,” 26(1):15–25, 26(1):34
Masseini, Alvaro, 32(4):25
“Fly Fishing in Early Renaissance Italy? A Few Revealing
Documents,” 25(4):10–11, 25(4):25
“If Pinocchio Were a Fly Fisherman: The Marvels of
Wood,” 32(1):17–20
McCullough, James, “Secret, Storied Landscape: John
Voelker’s Frenchman’s Pond,” 29(3):10–17, 29(3):24
Merritt, J. I., “Reflections on an Angling Legend: Ernest
Schwiebert Jr.,” 32(2):24–25
Migdalski, Ed, “Panic and Whiskey in Iceland,” 31(2):8–9
Morgan, Paula “Stick,” [Letter], 32(4):23
Morosky, Paul A., “Green Smoked Salmon Dinner,” 26(1):2–5,
26(1):34
Mundt, John, Jr., 26(3):26
“A Homeric Odyssey,” 29(3):23–24
“Anglers at War,” 28(4):2–11
“Gilded Summers in Belgrade, Maine,” 26(3):2–11
“One Man, One River, Two Books,” 28(3):10
“The Dean Sage Collection Finds a Home,” 32(3):14–17
N
[Nawrath, Rebecca]
“A Volunteer Story,” 32(3):19
“Pesca Andata (Gone Fishing),” 32(4):21
O
Oliver, Blair, “Bright Feathered Things,” 31(2):2–4
P
Perkins, Leigh, “Notes and Comment,” 31(2):24
Peterson, Harry L., 29(4):30
“Aldo Leopold’s Contribution to Fly Fishing,” 29(4):2–10
“Searching for Alder Fork,” 31(1):2–5
[Pinkowski, Lori]
“Chamber Mixer/Shows/Anglers’ Club Dinner,”
31(2):27–28
“Hartford Dinner/Winery Dinner,” 31(1):24–25
Precourt, Douglas R., 25(4):25
“Fishing with Baden-Powell: Stories of the Chief Scout
and His Love of Angling,” 25(4):14–21
[Letter], 27(4):32
Preylowski, Jürgen F., “John Horrocks, 1817–1881: A Pioneer of
Fly Fishing in Germany,” 25(3):13–20, 25(3):31
R
Reagor, Michael W., [Letter], 28(3):26–27
Reed, Nathaniel P., “Islamorada with Charlie Causey,”
31(2):14–15
Repine, Jim, 25(2):26
“Fly Fishing in Japan,” 25(2):5–7
“Walton and Cotton: Compleat and Current,” 27(3):20–24
Richards, Pamela Bates, “Joseph D. Bates Jr.: The Collection of
a Lifetime,” 25(2):12–19, 25(2):26
See also Bates, Pamela
WINTER 2007
29
S
Schullery, Paul, 28(1):35
“A Crop of Classics,” 27(4):24–25
“A Look at Three New Titles,” 28(2):28–29
“Andrew Herd’s The Fly,” 28(4):22–23
“Crazy Coots and Mere Farragos,” 30(4):17–22
“Downstream Dries: Thoughts on Surviving the Historical
Process,” 30(3):12–16
“Edward in Wonderland: Yellowstone Recollections of an
Angling Great,” 29(1):2–12
“Fishing Books for the Masses: An Achievable Project,”
32(2):19–21
“Fly Fishing’s Three-Century Saga of Silkworm Gut,”
32(3):2–9
“History and Mr. Gordon,” 28(1):2–11
“J. I. Merritt’s Trout Dreams: Gallery of Fly-Fishing
Profiles,” 29(1):22
[Letter], 32(3):22–23
“Lives of Famous Anglers,” 32(1):21–22
Schwiebert, Ernest
“A Schwiebert Fly Box,” 27(1):12–17
“Remarks on the Opening of the American Museum of
Fly Fishing,” 31(4):22–23
Scott, Michael, “Theodore Gordon and Bamboo Rods,”
27(2):8–17, 27(2):32
[Siebold, Diana]
“2003 Dinner/Auctions,” 30(1):22, 30(1):24–25
“A Manchester Weekend: Sporting Collectibles & Antique
Show Meets Manchester Dinner & Sporting
Auction,” 29(4):25–26
“Cleveland Dinner/Auction,” 29(3):26, 30(3):28–29
“Fly-Fishing Shows,” 29(2):24
“Heritage Award 2003,” 30(2):34–35
“Manchester Dinner/Auction,” 30(4):24, 30(4):26
“Marin County Fly-Fishing Show,” 29(3):26–27
“New York Anglers’ Club Dinner/Auction,” 29(2):22,
29(2):24
“New York Anglers’ Club Dinner/Fly-Fishing Shows,”
30(2):30–32
Sloan, Stephen, 31(3):28
“Henryville, Pennsylvania, on the Brodhead,” 31(3):22–23
“The Soque Sisters vs. the Foggy Bottom Boys,” 31(2):25–26
Sonderman, Sean
“Museums, Oddities, and Slices of Life,” 25(2):8–11
“Our Man Finlay Moves North,” 25(2):20
[Sonderman, Sean], “The Tying of the Treatyse Flies,” 25(2):2
T
Tanner, Gary
“A Credit to Our Sport,” 29(3):c3
“A New Chapter in the Museum’s History,” 28(1):c3
“Anything Out There?”, 26(3):28
“Art and the Museum: A Call for Originals,” 26(4):32
“A Toast to Our Supporters,” 27(1):24
“Dinner, Anyone?”, 25(3):c3
“From Greenheart to Graphite,” 25(4):28
“From our website,” 25(2):c3
“Hooked Up,” 27(3):c3
“In the Direction of Our Dreams,” 29(2):c3
“Living Legends,” 26(1):c3
30
THE AMERICAN FLY FISHER
“Opening Day,” 26(2):28
“Our Anchor, Heart, and Memory,” 28(2):c3
“Room with a View,” 28(3):c3
“Summer Saturdays,” 27(4):c3
“Teaching Intangibles,” 29(4):c3
“The Ways of Attachment,” 29(1):c3
“Will Wonders Never Cease?”, 27(2):c3
“With Many Twists and Turns,” 28(4):c3
“Worth Their Salt” (photo album), 25(4):12–13
[Tanner, Gary], “A Schwiebert Fly Box,” 27(1):12
V
von Kienbusch, C. Otto, “A Critical Inquiry into the Nature of
Tabanus zonalis,” 30(3):20–21
W
Walsh, David
“A Letter from the President,” 30(1):c3
“Annual Friends of Peter Corbin Shoot,” 31(1):24
“From the President,” 31(4):c3
Wargin, Ed, “Secret, Storied Landscape: John Voelker’s
Frenchman’s Pond” (photos), 29(3):10–17, 29(3):24
Wickstrom, Gordon M., 26(2):27
“A Portrait of the New Fly Fisher,” 29(3):21–22
“The Last Religious House: A River Ran Through It,”
32(1):14–16
[Letter], 28(3):26, 30(4):29–30
“The Presence of Theodore Gordon,” 27(2):2–7
“The Tups Indispensable: A Dubbing Dilemma,” 26(3):18
“Vince Marinaro: On Point of Balance,” 26(2):12–19
“Washington Irving and the False Cast,” 31(4):27
“Where Are the Flies of Yesteryear? An Essay with
Interlinear Commentary,” 30(1):14–19
Wilcox, Sara
“A Grand Day Out,” 31(4):18–21
“Contemplating The Compleat Angler: A Remarkable
Anniversary,” 29(3):18–20
“Finishing Touches,” 31(1):26–29
“In Memoriam: Theodore ‘Ted’ Williams,” 28(4):30
“Into the Homestretch,” 30(4):30–31
“Much Ado about a Move,” 28(4):20–21
[Wilcox, Sara]
“A Century of Flies,” 26(4):15
“And So It Begins: A Groundbreaking Story,” 30(1):26
“The Shape of Things to Come,” 30(3):22–23
Wood, Charles B., III, 27(3):34
“Privately Printed Books on Atlantic Salmon Fishing,”
30(3):2–11
“Salmo salar: Notes from a Collector—Printed Ephemera
and Old Photograph Albums,” 27(3):2–11
TABLE OF CONTENTS INDEX
Books and foreign words are in italics.
VOLUME 25, NUMBER 1 (WINTER 1999)
The Collective Index:
Subject 2
Author 17
Table of Contents 22
VOLUME 25, NUMBER 2 (SPRING 1999)
The Tying of the Treatyse Flies 2
Andrew Herd
Fly Fishing in Japan 5
Jim Repine
Museums, Oddities, and Slices of Life 8
Sean Sonderman
Joseph D. Bates Jr.: Collection of a Lifetime 12
Pamela Bates Richards
Our Man Finlay Moves North 20
Sean Sonderman
Museum News 22
Contributors 26
VOLUME 25, NUMBER 3 (SUMMER 1999)
Early American Fishing: Mimbres Classic Period, 1050–1200
A.D. 2
G. William Fowler
The French Monk’s Alternative “Reel” 8
Frederick Buller
John Horrocks, 1817–1881: A Pioneer of Fly Fishing in
Germany 13
Jürgen F. Preylowksi
Richard C. Hoffman (translator)
Cemetery in the Highlands: A Cast from Fly-Fishing History 21
Bruce H. Dawson
Festival Weekend 1999 25
Museum News 28
Contributors 31
VOLUME 25, NUMBER 4 (FALL 1999)
The Importance of G. E. M. Skues: An Angler-Writer for Today 2
Robert H. Berls
Notes and Comment: Fly Fishing in Early Renaissance Italy?
A Few Revealing Documents 10
Alvaro Masseini
Museum Photo Album: Worth Their Salt 12
Gary Tanner
Fishing with Baden-Powell: Stories of the Chief Scout and
His Love of Angling 14
Douglas R. Precourt
Off the Shelf: The Confessions of a Duffer 22
Andrew Lang
Museum News 24
Contributors 25
VOLUME 26, NUMBER 1 (WINTER 2000)
Green Smoked Salmon Dinner 2
Paul A. Morosky
Carrie Stevens: A Family History 6
Graydon R. Hilyard and Leslie K. Hilyard
Fishing and Escape 15
Bill Mares
1999 Heritage Award 26
Museum News 28
Contributors 32
VOLUME 26, NUMBER 2 (SPRING 2000)
S. A. Neff Jr., Angling Artisan: Caught by Trout, Piscatorial
Books, and Fine Binding 2
Elisabeth R. Agro
Vince Marinaro: On Point of Balance 12
Gordon M. Wickstrom
Museum News 21
Letters 27
Contributors 27
VOLUME 26, NUMBER 3 (SUMMER 2000)
Gilded Summers in Belgrade, Maine 2
John Mundt
Angling in the Pecos River Headwaters: The Development of
Fly Fishing in Northern New Mexico 12
Merideth A. Hmura and
G. William Fowler
Notes and Comment: The Tups Indispensable: A Dubbing
Dilemma 18
Gordon M. Wickstrom
Festival Weekend 2000 20
Museum News 22
Contributors 26
VOLUME 26, NUMBER 4 (FALL 2000)
Sidelights and Reflections on William Samuel’s The Arte of
Angling (1577) 2
Frederick Buller
Anglers All: Humanity in Midstream 10
Gallery: A Century of Flies 15
Sara Wilcox
First Impressions of the Harris Flies 16
Ken Cameron
Fly Lines and Lineage 17
John Betts
Museum News 22
Contributors 27
VOLUME 27, NUMBER 1 (WINTER 2001)
A History of the Landing Net 2
Frederick Buller
The Macedonian Fly Revisited 7
Andrew Herd
A Schwiebert Fly Box 12
Ernest Schwiebert
Museum Notes 18
Contributors 23
WINTER 2007
31
VOLUME 27, NUMBER 2 (SPRING 2001)
The Presence of Theodore Gordon 2
Gordon M. Wickstrom
Theodore Gordon and Bamboo Rods 8
Michael Scott
Truly Hand-Tied Flies 18
John Betts
Museum News 28
Contributors 32
VOLUME 27, NUMBER 3 (SUMMER 2001)
Salmo salar: Notes from a Collector 2
Charles B. Wood III
Standing on the Shoulders of Giants 12
Ken Cameron and Andrew Herd
Notes and Comment: Walton and Cotton: Compleat and
Current 20
Jim Repine
Festival Weekend 2001 26
Museum News 30
Contributors 34
VOLUME 27, NUMBER 4 (FALL 2001)
The Ramsbottoms: Pisciculturists, Tackle Manufacturers, and
Fly Dressers 2
J. Keith Harwood
Brothers of the Angle: The Flyfishers’ Club 6
G. William Fowler
Astræus: The First Fly-Fishing River 16
Goran Grubic and Andrew Herd
In Memoriam: Walton E. Powell (1915–2001) 23
Harry J. Briscoe
Book Review: A Crop of Classics 24
Paul Schullery
Museum News 26
Letters 32
Contributors 34
VOLUME 28, NUMBER 1 (WINTER 2002)
History and Mr. Gordon 2
Paul Schullery
Frederic M. Halford: The Myth and the Man 12
Andrew Herd
Rigor Without Mortis 18
Ken Cameron
Book Review: A New Look at Dame Juliana 26
John Betts
Museum News 27
Letters 31
History Makers’ Circle: A History-Making Day 32
Contributors 35
VOLUME 28, NUMBER 2 (SPRING 2002)
Some Notes on the Evolution of Sport and Sport Fishing
during the Middle Ages 2
Frederick Buller
Carrie Stevens: A Fly Tyer’s Progress 11
Graydon R. Hilyard and
Leslie K. Hilyard
Winslow Homer: America’s Premier Fisherman/Artist 22
Robert J. Demarest
Book Review: A Look at Three New Titles 28
Paul Schullery
32
THE AMERICAN FLY FISHER
Museum News 30
In Memoriam: Megan Boyd 37
Pamela Bates
Contributors 38
VOLUME 28, NUMBER 3 (SUMMER 2002)
Fly Fishing for “Coarse Fish” Before 1900 4
Andrew Herd
Evolution of the Modern Fly Line 7
J. Leon Chandler
Book Review: One Man, One River, Two Books 10
John Mundt Jr.
Grandfather and Jock 11
Andrew Herd
Bam Honored with the 2002 Heritage Award 18
Museum News 20
Letters to the Editor 26
Contributors 27
VOLUME 28, NUMBER 4 (FALL 2002)
Anglers at War 2
John Mundt Jr.
George La Branche: “A Very Beautiful Fisherman” 12
John Betts
Much Ado about a Move 20
Sara Wilcox
Two Reviews: Andrew Herd’s The Fly 22
David B. Ledlie and Paul Schullery
Museum News 24
In Memoriam: Clarence W. “Sam” Carlson 26
Fred Kretchman
In Memoriam: Theodore “Ted” Williams 30
Sara Wilcox
Contributors 28
VOLUME 29, NUMBER 1 (WINTER 2003)
Edward in Wonderland: Yellowstone Recollections of an
Angling Great 2
Paul Schullery
Fly Fishing for Pike in Britain and Ireland 13
Frederick Buller
2002 Heritage Award 20
Book Review: J. I. Merritt’s Trout Dreams: Gallery of FlyFishing Profiles 22
Paul Schullery
Museum News 24
The Friends of Corbin Shoot 28
Contributors 30
VOLUME 29, NUMBER 2 (SPRING 2003)
The Story of a Rod and Two Trout 2
Charles T. Lee Jr.
Thaddeus Norris: America’s Izaak Walton 3
Jerry Girard
A Brief Introduction to George Tattersall and “Fishing in the
North American Lakes and Rivers” 8
David B. Ledlie
Fishing in the North American Lakes and Rivers 9
By the author of “The Backwoods of America”
The Campaign for the American Museum of Fly Fishing:
Phase II 17
Museum News 22
Contributors 26
VOLUME 29, NUMBER 3 (SUMMER 2003)
Mary Orvis Marbury and the Columbian Exposition 2
Richard G. Bell
Secret, Storied Landscape: John Voelker’s Frenchman’s Pond 10
James McCullough with photos by Ed Wargin
Gallery: Contemplating The Compleat Angler: A Remarkable
Anniversary 18
Sara Wilcox
Notes and Comment: A Portrait of the New Fly Fisher 21
Gordon M. Wickstrom
Book Review: A Homeric Odyssey 23
John Mundt
Contributors 24
Museum News 26
Heritage Award 32
VOLUME 29, NUMBER 4 (FALL 2003)
Aldo Leopold’s Contribution to Fly-Fishing 2
Harry L. Peterson
The Alder Fork—A Fishing Idyl 11
Aldo Leopold
Robert Venables’s Experience as an Angler 12
John Betts
Museum News 25
Contributors 30
VOLUME 30, NUMBER 1 (WINTER 2004)
Return to Paradise 2
Andrew Herd
Those Captivating Classic Rods and Reels:
An S. Allcock Story 8
Edward Davis
Where Are the Flies of Yesteryear? 14
Gordon M. Wickstrom
Reminiscences: Edward R. Hewitt: The Last Renaissance Man 20
H. Lenox H. Dick
Museum News 22
And So It Begins: A Groundbreaking Story 26
Sara Wilcox and George Gibson
Contributors 31
VOLUME 30, NUMBER 2 (SPRING 2004)
Angling Art: The Winemaker’s Label 2
G. William Fowler
“Flies Do Your Float”: Fishing in Finnegans Wake 13
Robert H. Boyle
Museum News 30
Letter 32
2003 Heritage Award: Mel Krieger Honored 34
In Memoriam: Arthur Frey 36
Contributors 38
VOLUME 30, NUMBER 3 (SUMMER 2004)
Privately Printed Books on Atlantic Salmon Fishing 2
Charles B. Wood III
Downstream Dries: Thoughts on Surviving the Historical
Process 12
Paul Schullery
Off the Shelf: The Angler and the Bondman 18
Charles Bradford
Off the Shelf: A Critical Inquiry into the Nature of
Tabanus zonalis 20
C. Otto von Kienbusch
The Shape of Things to Come 22
Sara Wilcox
Book Review: Lady Agnes Macdonald’s On a Canadian
Salmon River 24
David B. Ledlie
Museum News 28
Contributors 30
VOLUME 30, NUMBER 4 (FALL 2004)
Common Thread among the Gold: A Brief Discourse
Regarding Common Characteristics of Fishing Clubs 2
Richard G. Bell
A Hoard of Mysterious Salmon Flies 13
Frederick Buller
Some Notes and Comment 16
John Betts
Crazy Coots and Mere Farragos 17
Paul Schullery
Museum News 24
Contributors 28
Letters 29
Into the Homestretch 30
Sara Wilcox
VOLUME 31, NUMBER 1 (WINTER 2005)
Searching for Alder Fork 2
Harry L. Peterson
A Tale of Two Reels 6
James Hardman
Book Review: Gordon M. Wickstrom’s Late in an Angler’s
Life 11
Harry J. Briscoe
The Contrary Angler and Artist 12
Jim Gilford
Opening Day: Word Sketch 4 16
Fred Everett
Museum News 22
Finishing Touches 26
Sara Wilcox
Contributors 31
VOLUME 31, NUMBER 2 (SPRING 2005)
Bright Feathered Things 2
Blair Oliver
The Condor and Grizzly Inheritance 5
Edward G. Davis
Panic and Whiskey in Iceland 8
Ed Migdalski
To Alaska with Love, or Diary of a Fishing Wife 10
Fanny Krieger
Islamorada with Charlie Causey 14
Nathaniel P. Reed
My Search for the Perfect Fishing Hat 16
Robert H. Berls
A Pair of Browns (Myotis lucifugus and Salmo trutta) 18
Robert J. Demarest
The Fishing Was the Best of It (With Apologies to Dana
Lamb) 19
Gardner L. Grant
Gore Creek: A Love Story 20
John Betts
Notes and Comment 24
Dick Finlay
Leigh Perkins
WINTER 2007
33
The Soque Sisters vs. the Foggy Bottom Boys 25
Stephen Sloan
Letters 27
Museum News 27
Our Library Grows 28
Gerald J. Karaska
Museum News 29
Contributors 32
VOLUME 31, NUMBER 3 (SUMMER 2005)
Aurora: The Tale of the Comeback Trout 2
Nick Karas
The New Gold Rush: Celebrating and Protecting the California Golden Trout in the Southern Sierra Nevada 10
David Finkel with photos by R. Valentine Atkinson
Book Review: Brian Clarke’s The Stream 24
G. William Fowler
Museum News 26
Contributors 28
VOLUME 32, NUMBER 3 (SUMMER 2006)
Fly Fishing’s Three-Century Saga of Silkworm Gut 2
Paul Schullery
The Old and Dear Tihonet Club 10
Gerald J. Karaska
The Dean Sage Collection Finds a Home 14
John Mundt Jr.
Museum News 18
Fishing Classic Tackle: A Museum Friend Reports 21
Letter 22
Contributors 23
VOLUME 31, NUMBER 4 (FALL 2005)
Of Baseball and Bamboo: Bobby Doerr, Ted Williams, and
the Paul H. Young Rod Company 2
John A. Feldenzer
Fly Fishing, Skiing, Orvis, and the Museum: Dick Finlay, the
First Volunteer 14
Gerald Karaska
A Grand Day Out 18
Sara Wilcox
Remarks on the Opening of the American Museum of Fly
Fishing, 11 June 2005 22
Ernest Schwiebert
Poems Read on the Occasion of the Opening of the American
Museum of Fly Fishing 24
William F. Herrick
Museum News 25
Notes and Comment: Washington Irving and the False Cast 27
Gordon M. Wickstrom
Contributors 27
VOLUME 32, NUMBER 1 (WINTER 2006)
Red Camp: Part 1: A Camp of His Own 2
Hoagy B. Carmichael
The Last Religious House: A River Ran Through It 14
Gordon M. Wickstrom
If Pinocchio Were a Fly Fisherman 17
Alvaro Masseini
Book Reviews: Lives of Famous Anglers 21
Paul Schullery
Museum News 23
Contributors 25
VOLUME 32, NUMBER 2 (SPRING 2006)
Red Camp: Part 2: A Recipe for Change 2
Hoagy B. Carmichael
Ancient Hooks 13
Frederick Buller
Notes and Comment: Fishing Books for the Masses: An
Achievable Project 19
Paul Schullery
Ernest G. Schwiebert, 1931–2005 22
Gardner Grant
Reflections on an Angling Legend:
Ernest George Schwiebert Jr. 24
J. I. Merritt
Remembering Ernie 26
William F. Herrick
34
THE AMERICAN FLY FISHER
VOLUME 32, NUMBER 4 (FALL 2006)
Of Fish and Men 2
Robert DeMott
Echoes from Yesteryear 12
Rhodes S. Baker III
Thomas Bewick: Artist and Angler 16
J. Keith Harwood
Museum News 21
In Memoriam: William Michael Barrett 23
Letter 23
Contributors 23
BACK ISSUES!
Volume 6:
Volume 7:
Volume 8:
Volume 9:
Volume 10:
Volume 11:
Volume 13:
Volume 15:
Volume 16:
Volume 17:
Volume 18:
Volume 19:
Volume 20:
Volume 21:
Volume 22:
Volume 23:
Volume 24:
Volume 25:
Volume 26:
Volume 27:
Volume 28:
Volume 29:
Volume 30:
Volume 31:
Volume 32:
Numbers 2, 3, 4
Number 3
Number 3
Numbers 1, 2, 3
Number 2
Numbers 1, 2, 3, 4
Number 3
Number 2
Numbers 1, 2, 3
Numbers 1, 2, 3
Numbers 1, 2, 4
Numbers 1, 2, 3, 4
Numbers 1, 2, 3, 4
Numbers 1, 2, 3, 4
Numbers 1, 2, 3, 4
Numbers 1, 2, 3, 4
Numbers 1, 2
Numbers 1, 2, 3, 4
Numbers 1, 2, 4
Numbers 1, 2, 3, 4
Numbers 1, 2, 3
Numbers 1, 2, 3, 4
Numbers 1, 2, 3
Numbers 1, 2
Numbers 1, 2, 3, 4
Back issues are $4 a copy.
To order, please contact Rebecca Nawrath at (802)
362-3300 or via e-mail at [email protected].
Save the Date!!
The American Museum of Fly Fishing
is proud to announce
An Evening in Honor of Stanley E. Bogdan,
our 2007 Heritage Award Recipient
Thursday Evening, May 3rd, 2007
New York City (Venue to be determined)
For 66 years, Stan Bogdan has been producing the
world’s finest salmon and trout reels. Please join us
for a special evening, celebrating one of 20th century’s
great reel makers and one of the most engaging and
respected fly fishing personalities of our time.
Our evening will feature an exhibit displaying Stan’s
contributions to our sport and remarks from his
friends and admirers. Stan’s biography, written by
Graydon Hilyard will be available at the event.
For more information on this event, please call the
American Museum of Fly Fishing at (802) 362-3300
or email us at [email protected]
The Brookside Angler
The Brookside Angler Gift Shop at
the American Museum of Fly Fishing
offers an extensive collection of fly
fishing gifts and collectibles. The store
is a wonderful complement to the
gallery and gives the shopper the
opportunity to bring home remembrances of their trip to the museum.
Customers are tempted by an assortment of fine art, antique and contemporary home décor, quality books and
stationery as well as exclusive AMFF
logo merchandise.
Rolf Cut Crystal School of Fish design is our most popular item!
Made in the USA and diamond wheel engraved, every glass is
dishwasher safe. We carry 9 designs of this pattern, and if you look
closely, you will see one fish swimming in the opposite direction!
For more information, please contact the AMFF:
PO Box 42 • Manchester, Vermont 05254 • (802) 362-3300 • [email protected]
WINTER 2007
35
New York Dinner
The New York Anglers’ Club in New York City is once
again hosting our Annual Dinner & Sporting Auction on
Thursday, March 8, 2007. The proceeds from this event
support our ongoing programs and operations.
The festivities begin at 5:30 PM with cocktails and hors
d’oeuvres and a preview of our excellent auction and raffle
items. Renowned chef Mary O’Malley and her staff have
already planned the delicious dinner, which will be followed
by our spirited live auction and raffle drawing.
The auction will feature fantastic fishing and hunting
trips, premium fly rods, fine art, and many more
wonderful items sure to please the discriminating angler.
The ticket price is $150 per person and includes
hors d’oeuvres, open bar, dinner, and a chance
to visit with old friends and make new ones.
If you would like to attend this event and help raise funds
for the museum, please contact Rebecca Nawrath at
802-362-3300 or email [email protected] by March 1, 2007.
We would welcome any donations toward our auction
and/or raffle. Please contact Rebecca Nawrath if
you would like to contribute.
CUSTOM LEATHER SPORTING CASES
BY ROBERT COCHRANE
Offering unique designs
hand sewn and cobbled
individually from the
finest in English leather,
all made according to
standards last common
in the early 1900s.
For more information:
www.robertcochrane.com
[email protected]
36
THE AMERICAN FLY FISHER
Atlantic Salmon Anglers
Return to the Penobscot
A
LTHOUGH THE NEWS FROM the Atlantic salmon angling U.S. President William H. Taft. This tradition continued for
community has been bleak over the past twenty years, eight decades and eleven presidents until the harvest of salmon
there are some encouraging signs on our North was suspended because of declining returns.
American rivers that are bringing reason for hope and joy in
As a child growing up in Bangor, I remember the excitement
the hearts of dedicated salmon anglers. Angling reports from associated with the May salmon season. The Bangor Daily
the rugged coastal rivers of Labrador to the mighty Miramichi News always featured the first salmon of the year, and I loved
echo the good news of more and larger fish returning to their reading Bud Leavitt’s outdoors columns on the salmon fishing.
Although I wish I could share a personal tale of hooking
home rivers.
Aggressive conservation efforts—with a focus on wide-scale and releasing an Atlantic salmon on the Penobscot, I am proud
Bill Bullock
to say that I have fished the
catch-and-release, habitat
Penobscot for Atlantic salimprovement, research, and
mon several times. I recall
education—are proving to
how nervous I was when I
be effective in helping inplaced my Fenwick HMG
crease returns of Atlantic
rod in the rotation rack at
salmon to their home rivers.
the Eddington Salmon Pool
Perhaps the most imporfor the first time. I felt the
tant conser vation effort
stares from the liar’s bench
over the past five years has
as they watched every cast,
been the agreement with
sometimes offering enthe salmon fishermen of
couragement but quick to
Greenland that suspended
whistle disapproval if an
their commercial fishery
angler lingered too long in
in exchange for investone spot on his rotation
ments in more sustainable
through the pool.
industry. This joint partLet’s all hope that the
nership with the Atlantic
news continues to be enSalmon Federation, the
couraging on the PenNorth Atlantic Salmon
obscot. The final count of
Fund, and National Fish
salmon and grilse at the
and Wildlife Foundation,
High water at the Bangor Salmon Pool on the Penobscot River.
Veazie Dam counting stawhich began in 2001, has
The Penobscot is the only river in the United States of America
tion in 2006 was 1,046, up
resulted in the increased
where you can legally fish for Atlantic salmon.
slightly from the 985 in
returns to North American rivers. Negotiations are under way to extend this critical 2005. The past five years have shown a moderate increase in
returning salmon but fall well short of the successful returns in
agreement beyond 2006.
Another piece of great news to Atlantic salmon anglers and the 1980s and 1990s; in 1986, 4,541 salmon were counted at the
the history of the sport was the opening of a monthlong catch- Veazie fish trap.
The Penobscot River Restoration Trust, a remarkable partand-release season in September 2006 on Maine’s Penobscot
River. Closed since 1999 to salmon angling, the Penobscot was nership of key stakeholders and conservation organizations,
has created a plan to remove two dams on the lower river with
once again hosting anglers from all over the world.
The Penobscot has always been the center of Atlantic the goal to restore self-sustaining populations of Atlantic
salmon angling lore in the United States. Ed Baum’s wonderful salmon through improved access to more than 500 miles of
book, Maine Atlantic Salmon: A National Treasure, details the historic habitat. This project deserves the support of anglers
rich history of this river, recounting the first salmon caught on far and wide (www.penboscotriver.org).
Increased runs of returning Atlantic salmon will welcome a
a fly in the 1860s and the subsequent recreational fishery that
gained an international reputation. According to the new generation of anglers to experience the rich history of fly
Penobscot River Restoration Trust, Hiram L. Leonard and J. F. fishing in Maine. I look forward to including my three children
Leavitt reported catching the first Penobscot salmon on a fly at in this tradition in the coming years.
the mouth of the Wassataquoik Stream in 1880. In 1883, the
BILL BULLOCK
first salmon club in the United States was founded on the river.
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
As the fishery grew in popularity, so did its traditions. In
1912, the first Atlantic salmon caught in the spring was sent to
The American Museum
of Fly Fishing
Box 42, Manchester,Vermont 05254
Tel: (802) 362-3300 • Fax: (802) 362-3308
E-MAIL: amff @ amff.com
WEBSITE: www.amff.com
THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF FLY FISHING,
a nationally accredited, nonprofit, educational institution dedicated to preserving
the rich heritage of fly fishing, was founded in Manchester, Vermont, in 1968. The
museum serves as a repository for, and
conservator to, the world’s largest collection of angling and angling-related objects.
The museum’s collections and exhibits
provide the public with thorough documentation of the evolution of fly fishing
as a sport, art form, craft, and industry in
the United States and abroad from the
sixteenth century to the present. Rods,
reels, and flies, as well as tackle, art, books,
manuscripts, and photographs, form the
major components of the museum’s collections.
The museum has gained recognition as
a unique educational institution. It supports a publications program through
which its national quarterly journal, the
American Fly Fisher, and books, art prints,
and catalogs are regularly offered to the
public. The museum’s traveling exhibits
program has made it possible for educational exhibits to be viewed across the
United States and abroad. The museum
also provides in-house exhibits, related
interpretive programming, and research
services for members, visiting scholars,
authors, and students.
JOIN!
Membership Dues (per annum)
Associate
$40
International
$50
Family
$60
Benefactor
$100
Business
$200
Patron
$250
Sponsor
$500
Platinum
$1,000
The museum is an active, member-oriented nonprofit institution. Membership
dues include four issues of the American Fly
Fisher. Please send your payment to the
membership director and include your
mailing address. The museum is a member
of the American Association of Museums,
the American Association of State and
Local History, the New England Association
of Museums, the Vermont Museum and
Gallery Alliance, and the International
Association of Sports Museums and Halls
of Fame.
SUPP ORT!
As an independent, nonprofit institution,
the American Museum of Fly Fishing relies
on the generosity of public-spirited individuals for substantial support. We ask that
you give our museum serious consideration when planning for gifts and bequests.