Bamboo Fly Rod Blanks for Sale
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ICE SPEARING DECOYS and RELATED PARAPHERNALIA, an ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY and INDEX
ICE SPEARING DECOYS and RELATED PARAPHERNALIA, AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY AND INDEX by Gary L. Miller Copyright 1980 – May 3, 2016 Author’s note: This is intended to be a dual purpose document. It can be used in this digital format (or printed out) as a traditional bibliography or it can be used as a digital index by utilizing your computer’s search function. Either way I think you will find it a very useful tool. BOOKS: Anonymous. The Sportsman’s Portfolio of American Field Sports. Boston: M. M. Ballou, 1855. (Pp.20 and 24 contain illustrations and descriptions of fishing with tip-ups for pike and smelt). Apfelbaum, Ben, Eli Gottlieb and Steven J. Michaan. Beneath the Ice, The Art of the Spear Fishing Decoy. New York: E. P. Dutton and Company in association with The Museum of American Folk Art, 1990. (Basically an exhibition catalog for the exhibit of the same name. Beautifully photographed. Minimal text.) Baron, Frank R. and Raymond L. Carver. Bud Stewart, Michigan’s Legendary Lure Maker. Hillsdale, Michigan: Ferguson Communications, 1990. (228 pages with hundreds of black & white and color illustrations but poor photo editing resulted in many items being chopped off in the pictures. Nevertheless an essential reference for the Bud Stewart collector. An interesting commentary on ice spear fishing and decoys by Bud that curiously is not entirely consistent with the actual decoys). Baron, Frank R. One Fish, Two Fish, Green Fish, Blue Fish. Livonia, Michigan: Frank Baron, 1992. (A homemade booklet comprised of copies of articles and essays by Frank Baron, Harold Dickert and Marcel Salive, most of which were previously published in various periodicals and in Frank’s own decoy sale lists. -
Blanchard's - Lang's Sporting Auction
Blanchard's - Lang's Sporting Auction 1891 Morley-Potsdam Rd Potsdam, NY 13676 Preview: Friday, September 25 – 5:00-7:00pm, Saturday, September 26 - 8:00-9:00am Auction Start: Saturday, September 26 - 9:00am 1 3 Art of Angling Journals 37 3 Boxed Heddon Lures 2 1 Creel and 1 Knife 38 3 Boxed South Bend Lures 3 4 Brass Trout Reels 39 3 Boxed Barracuda Lures 4 5 Vintage Fly Reels 40 5 Denton Trout & Salmon Prints 5 5 Casting Reels 41 5 Atlantic Salmon Journals, 1 Fortune Magazine 6 3 Meisselbach Featherlight Fly Reels 42 3 Hunting/Trapping Paper Items 7 2 Surf Casting Reels 43 4 Tackle Catalogs 8 3 Early Trout Reels 44 6 Early Outdoor Magazines 9 1 Early English Salmon Reel w/ Leather Case 45 10 Early National Sportsmans Magazines 10 4" Hardy Uniqua Salmon Reel 46 7 Early Magazines 11 4 1/2 J. Vom Hofe Salmon Reel 47 7 Early Magazines 12 2 J. Vom Hofe Casting Reels 48 3 Angling Books 13 2 J.W. Young Fly Reels 49 2 Angling Books and 1 Fosters Diary 14 2 Early Saltwater Reels 50 1 Trout Painted Wood Box, Framed Tri-Fold Photos 15 5 Boxed Fly Reels 51 Assorted Jungle Cock Feathers 16 1 Boxed Penn #99 Silver Beach Reel 52 1 Wallet w/ Flies, 3 Carded Flies, Foss Streamers 17 4 Casting Reels and Pennell Reel Case 53 1 Framed Fish Print and 2 Fish Decoys 18 3 Wooden Trolling Reels 54 4 Vintage Surf Casting Reels 19 3 Meisselbach Expert Fly Reels 55 3 Surf Reels 20 3 Meisselbach Symploreels 56 5 Classic Casting Reels 21 7 1/2' Fenwick Boron X 5wt Fly Rod 57 4 Meisselbach Reels 22 3/2 Bamboo Salmon Rod in Formed Case 58 5 Meisselbach Tri-Part Reels -
Fly Rod Building Course
Fly Rod Building Course Authors Albert Wood, Ed Casteel, Cliff Daniel, John Tindall, Tommy Shropshire July 1, 2011 Table of Contents Module Hours Title Page 1 1.0 Introduction: Course overview 1 2 1.5 Prerequisites: Preparations for beginning the course 3 3 6.0 Developing a plan to build your fly rod 5 Rod (graphite blank) selection 5 Reel seat selection 7 Grip selection 9 Guide and tip top selection 10 Thread selection 11 Materials/supplies and tools 12 Order form 19 4 4.0 Reel seat assembly and guide preparation 21 5 2.0 Reel seat installation 23 6 2.0 Guide placement 25 7 2.0 Grip installation 27 8 2.0 Guide and tip top installation 29 9 4.0 Flex coating 31 10 0.5 Lessons learned: Course evaluation 34 Glossary 35 A guide size and spacing chart 37 Course evaluation form 38 Estimated total time required is 25 hours. Module 1 Introduction: Course overview Time required: 1 hour Instructor’s notes: This is an open discussion session with a few visual aids. Instructor’s teaching aids: o One or more custom-built fly rods Recognition should be given to the Club members who designed and developed the modules for this fly rod building course: Albert Wood, Cliff Daniel, Ed Casteel, John Tindall, and Tommy Shropshire. The instructors and students should be introduced and each should share their reasons and expectations for taking or teaching this course. We also encourage students to work together in small teams so that supplies may be shared and therefore everyone will not have to bring all their supplies to each session. -
Fish & Fishing Session Outline
Fish & Fishing Session Outline For the Outdoor Skills Program th th 7 & 8 Grade Lessons I. Welcome students and ask group what they remember or learned in the last session. II. Fish & Fishing Lessons A. Activity: Attract a Fish B. Activity: Lures and Knot Tying C. Activity: Tackle Box and Fishing Plan III. Review: Ask the students what they enjoyed most about today’s session and what they enjoyed the least. (Another way to ask is “what was your high today, and what was your low? As the weeks progress this can be called “Time for Highs & Lows”.) The Outdoor Skills program is a partnership with Nebraska Games & Parks and the UNL Extension/4-H Youth Development Program to provide hands-on lessons for youth during their afterschool time and school days off. It provides the opportunity to master skills in the areas of hunting, fishing, and exploring the outdoors. This educational program is part of the 20 year plan to recruit, develop and retain hunters, anglers, and outdoor enthusiasts in Nebraska. Inventory Activity: Fishing Lures Curriculum Level: 7-8 Kit Materials & Equipment Feathers Waterproof glue Fish anatomy poster Pliers Fish models (catfish, bluegill, crappie, Tackle box with “filling your tackle & bass) box” components ID/habitat cards Laminated copy of “Awesome Lures” Lures displays Cabela’s Fishing Catalog Supplies Instructor Provides (15) Nebraska Fishing Guide Paperclips (15) NGPC Fish ID Book Pop cans Trilene line Scissors Knot tying cards Masking tape Knot tying kit (6 shark hooks & 6 lengths of rope) Copies of “Plan Your Trip” worksheet (15) Knot-testing weights Treble hooks Duct tape Materials to be Restocked-After Each Use (15) Nebraska Fishing Guide (15) NGPC Fish ID Book For information on restocking items contact Julia Plugge at 402-471-6009 or [email protected] All orders must be placed at least 2 weeks in advance. -
Fly Fisher Journal of the American Museum of Fly Fishing
The American Fly Fisher Journal of the American Museum of Fly Fishing FALL 2000 VOLUME 26 NUMBER 4 Time Flies Arhor-Hoch T ' s M I D -AU G u s T as I write this, and for once I don't have the ouvortunitvL L to revrint some of the articles from that series. to imagine what fall feels like-today it's here. The tempera- and I intend to do so from time to time. In this issue, we're Itures have dropped, and this morning it feels like late pleased to include "Fly Lines and Lineage." Betts argues that September. As I prepare for a canoe camping trip, I wonder if the evolution of the forms of dry and wet flies is a direct I'll be warm enough. This Vermont summer couldn't have been response to changes in tackle. As fly line changed, the rods more different from the one our western readers had. needed to cast the line changed, and new casting techniques So fall is here, and in keeping with the anticipation that had to be learned: all of which meant that flies cast such a dis- tends to accompany that initial chill in the air, this issue brings tance had to be designed to either float on their own or to sink you news of some of the exciting happenings at the Museum appropriately. Betts focuses the bulk of his discussion on fly over the last year. After months of preparation, our traveling line and wet flies. His article begins on page 17. -
By RAMYLEO T. PELAYO Special Project Report in Partial Fulfillment
THE PHILIPPINE FISHERIES SYSTEM: A MANAGEMENT PLANNING PERSPECTIVE by RAMYLEO T. PELAYO Special Project Report in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science Marine Resources Management Program College of Oceanography Oregon State University Corvallis, Oregon 1983 For Lilia and Janice ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS My study grant for a masteral program in Marine Resources Management (MRM) came from the Philippine Governments agricul- tural loan project with the United States Government. I am therefore thankful to the officials and staffs of the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the projects coor- dinating agencies for their respective governments, and the Phil- ippine Council for Agriculture and Resources Research and Deve- lopment (PCARRD), the agency I work for. I am particularly indebted to Dr. Elvira 0. Tan, PCARRD Director for Fisheries Research, for recommending me for a fel- lowship. In the end, I appreciate the favorable appraisal of my graduate committee: Dr. Victor T. Neal, MRM Program Coordinator and project adviser; Prof. Robert Schoning of the Department of Fisheries and Wildlife; and Dr. William Pearcy of the College of Oceanography. Among my professors, I should thank Dr. Charles Warren for providing me with a fresh lens for viewing resource science and management. My deepest gratitude goes to Olga and Bruce Sutherland without whose generosity and friendship my experience here would not have been as meaningful and fruitful. I also give my thanks to several other people who helped me in different ways during the making of this report, especially Kathryn Boeckman, Peter Howd, Heather Fawkes, Gary Braun, Federico and Emma Valerio, Anne-Marie Fagnan, Tish Parmenter, Mark Solon, Peter Ochumba, Gustavo Montero, Taka Hirai, Bill Ratliff, and my co-workers in PCARRD, Cesar Pagdilao, Rachel Baguilat, and Ester Cortes. -
Ascension Bay - Punta Allen, Mx
TRAVEL | GEAR | LODGING | CONTACT INFO | MORE PALOMETA CLUB ASCENSION BAY - PUNTA ALLEN, MX. PRE-TRIP PLANNER & OUTFITTING GUIDE TEXAS’ FLY SHOP TAILWATERSFLYFISHING.COM NEED TO KNOW GRATUITIES (SEE MORE DETAILS ABOUT GRATUITIES ON PAGE #15) COMMONLY ASKED QUESTIONS Please see page #15 for a detailed breakdown and further instructions about gratuities for shorter week trips, extra tips for a specific guide(s) as well as how and when to distribute gratuities. Don’t forget to tip your drivers This pre-trip planner & outfitting guide is your go-to resource for questions about your trip from now until you to and from Cancun! Recommended tip is $15-20 per person. If your van load is light with passengers, please return home safely. It is loaded with information about travel, lodge policy, sample itinerary, and of course lots of consider giving a bit larger tip to your driver for good service. clothing, gear, and tackle recommendations. Feel free to contact us anytime with questions or concerns, but know All tips should be given in U.S. Currency - CASH ONLY. No Credit Cards or Checks for Gratuities. this is a great reference to keep handy. GRATUITY RECOMMENDATIONS $450-$500 per person / week (based on shared room / boat) $650-$750 per person / week (based on private room / boat) LOCATION EXTRA EXPENSES & CHECKING OUT OF THE PALOMETA CLUB The Palometa Club is located on the Yucatan Peninsula, approximately 56 kilometers south of Any extra charges including gifts / souvenirs, rod and reel rentals, hats, shirts, Buffs, flies and terminal tackle as Tulum in the sleepy fishing village of Punta Allen, well as any massages will be billed to your room account. -
Ted Towendolly and the Wintu Origins of Short-Line Nymphing on The
Ted Towendolly and the Origin of Short-Line Nymphing on the Upper Sac: How the Wintu Indians, the 49ers, Ted Fay, and Joe Kimsey Impacted Modern-day Nymphing with a Fly. BY ERIC PALMER October, 2017 A shorter version of this article first appeared in the April 2015 “California Fly Fisher”. The following is an expanded version of that article. It’s known by many names: Tight-line nymphing, short-line nymphing, high-stick nymphing, pocket water nymphing, and even Czech Nymphing. But in the end, they are all the same deadly nymphing technique that was first fished on the banks of Northern California’s Upper Sacramento River as far back as the 1920s at the hands of Wintu Indian Ted Towendolly. So for simplicity’s sake, let’s just agree to call it “short-line nymphing” since we’re trying to catch a trout that’s virtually at our feet with no more than a fly rod’s length of leader extended beyond the rod tip — a “short-line”. But, how the heck can we catch trout while standing right on top of them without spooking them? It’s easy. Short- line nymphing is a pocket water technique; that highly agitated water just below large rocks and boulders with the boiling, frothy dense cover fish crave. It provides safety and security from predators in a zone with abundant oxygen, cold temps and an infinite conveyer belt of food drifting right by The short-line nymphing lob — not pretty, but very effective. their nose. What’s not to love about that if you’re a trout? If they only knew what clever schemes fly fishermen have contrived to fool them. -
Barfly ------Page 5 2361 N Frederick Pike Support Our Local Outfitters ------Page 5 Winchester Well-Schooled Angler ------Page 6
Page 1 of 13 Lateral Lines The Monthly Journal of Winchester Trout Unlimited Chapter #638 “Give ‘em a break. Bend down your barbs.” C.A.R. January 2018 Volume 23, Number 1 In This Edition Next meeting is Thursday, Tom Carroll: January Featured Speaker ---- Page 1 January 4, 2018 2018 WTU Speaker Schedule ------------------- Page 2 Bud on the Run ------------------------------------- Page 3 5:30 p.m. Dinner TIC Brookies at the Discovery Museum ---- Page 4 Donato’s Touch of Italy BarFly -------------------------------------------------- Page 5 2361 N Frederick Pike Support Our Local Outfitters ------------------- Page 5 Winchester Well-Schooled Angler ----------------------------- Page 6 Angler Reflections: Steelhead in the Snow -- Page 7 7:00 p.m. Meeting Terry Lay: WTU Person of the Year ---------- Page 9 Winchester Red Cross Conservation Film Festival ---------------------- Page 10 561 Fortress Drive Poet’s Corner: Mad River ------------------------ Page 11 Winchester Trees for Clean Water ----------------------------- Page 11 Winchester TU Archives: Seneca Creek ----- Page 12 See you at the meeting on Thursday, January 4, 2018 Bill Prokopchak, Newsletter Editor Winchester TU Calendar ------------------------- Page 13 540-722-2620 Tom Carroll of Cherry Log Rods is our Featured Speaker in January Biomechanics and the Fly Rod: Will a Custom Built Fly Rod catch more fish ? Probably not! But a fly rod that is built to consider your particular casting style and/or your biomechanic limitations will make fly casting easier and more accurate and less fatiguing after a long day on the water. I will show you how custom rods are different in design and materials from “off the shelf” fly rods. We can also talk about “How to break a fly rod” if there is time.. -
Jann's Netcraft 2008 Catalog
Pink Colorado Blade Sizing Hammered Brass (101) Smooth Nickel (041) (250) Blue (301) Chartreuse (240) NICKEL BELLY, TINTED BACK Purple DIAMOND COLORADO BLADES (226) Deep cup, tinted diamond back and bright nickel finish belly adds color and flash to any lure. Scale (104) (2,3,4 only) Smooth Brass (042) 10 50 100 Order No. Size (1 pack) (5 pks) (10 pks) 310-467- 3 $3.75 $17.10 $30.90 310-468- 4 4.39 20.30 36.70 310-469- 5 5.75 26.20 47.50 Slasher (108) (2,3,4 only) Hammered Nickel (100) SPINNER BLADES All of our plated blades are stamped from marine grade rustproof brass. Rainbow Firetiger FINISH (078) (265) Chartreuse Blade finish works with the shape of the blade to re- Slasher (108) (2,3,4 only) COLORADO (004) flect light. A smooth finish blade reflects light from only COLORADO BLADES one point of the blade. Hammered blades reflect light CRYTAL BAITFISH SPINNER BLADES from most of their surface. This is by far the most popular style of spinner blade in Prism-like glitter reflects different colors of light as the blade SIZE use. The extra width of our blade assures easy spinning. moves through the water. Especially effective on walleye rigs Works well on either a clevis or swivel. and spinnerbaits. Specify color when ordering. Plays a part in how deep the lure will run. Large blades FINISHES: give more lift to a lure than small blades so large blade 10 50 100 lures will run shallower than small blade lures. -
PH: 717-334-6941 Pennsylvania's Largest Gun Auction Service "Your Professional Firearms Specialist"
REDDING AUCTION SERVICE www.reddingauction.com PH: 717-334-6941 Pennsylvania's Largest Gun Auction Service "Your Professional FireArms Specialist" A NO RESERVE, NO BUYERS PREMIUM AUCTION FACILITY SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2013 at 8:30 AM PLEASE NOTE: -- THIS IS YOUR ITEMIZED LISTING FOR THIS PARTICULAR AUCTION PLEASE BRING IT WITH YOU WHEN ATTENDING 1. PAIR OF PLASTIC “BOONE” NEEDLEFISH TYPE LURES – (BOTH ARE FROG FINISH) 2. BOX OF SIX (6) ASSORTED LURES 3. GROUP OF THREE (3) FISH GIGS 4. PAIR OF PFLUEGER BAIT-CASTING REELS 5. WICKER FISH CREEL – (COMPLETE W/LEATHER SHOULDER HARNESS) 6. LANGLEY “SENATOR” SPINNING REEL – (IN THE ORIGINAL BOX) 7. BOX OF EIGHT (8) ASSORTED LURES AND SPINNERS 8. PAIR OF BOXES LURES – (1-HEDDEN RIVER RUNT SPOOK IN UN-MARKED BOX --- 2-PAUL BUNYAN’S “66” LURE IN LABELED BOX) 9. PAIR OF BOXED LURES – (1-TRUE TEMPER CRIPPLED SHAD IN A BOX --- 2-“THE LUCKY COVE BAY” MINNOW IN THE PICTURE BOX) 10. THREE (3) BAY REELS – (1-“PENN” NO. 65 LONG BEACH --- 2-“4-BROTHER’S” SUNCO NO. 2257 --- 3-“PENN” NO. 78) 11. RHINEHART JINX NO. RBW – IN THE ORIGINAL BOX WITH 2-PAPER INSTRUCTIONS 12. JENSON (FROG LEGS) LURE – IN THE ORIGINAL BOX 13. THREE (3) ASSTD. REELS – (1-JOHNSON CENTURY --- 2-DIAWA J1650 SPINNING --- 3-H-I CONTEST NO. 1915) 14. TIN CIGARETTE TIN – W/ASSORTED HOOKS AND TROLLING SPOON BLADES 15. LG. SALT-WATER POPPER – (BLUE MULLET FINISH – TACK EYES) 16. UNION HARDWARE – METAL ROD W/CASTING REEL 17. PFLUEGER SAL – TROUT REEL – NO. 1558 – (IN THE ORIGINAL BOX) 18. -
Fly Rods from Split Bamboo. with a Hand Plane And
Fly Rods fro1n Split Batnboo With a hand plane and lots of gadgets by L. U. Beitz he anonymous craftsman who in 1859 tried fastening a much from air resistance. A weak rod can't store enough T split-bamboo tip to the butt of a hickory fishing rod energy for decent casts-it merely breaks. The test of started a revolution in rod technology and craftsmanship. strength-for-weight makes bamboo the fi nest natural mate Charles F. Murphy of Newark, N.]., soon became the first rial for fly rods. Its only competition comes from man-made builder to make a complete six-sided split bamboo rod of materials (fiberglass and graphite) that closely imitate its Calcutta cane. Previous rods were turned and shaved from the structure-long, stiff fibers in a binding matrix. springiest woods available: lancewood, greenheart, ash, Rodmakers since Murphy's day have refilled their tech hickory. They were heavy by any standard, up to 15 or 20 niques and their concepts of what a good fly rod should be. ounces, and positively limp compared with bamboo. The old rods were long: 12 ft. to 15 ft . was not uncommon. A rypical flyfishing rod before bamboo was about 12 ft. Length, in a wooden rod, compensated for weakness-if you long, consisting of two or three sections connected by thread couldn't make a long cast, the rod got you halfway there any wrappings or metal ferrules. The rod would have been turned way. The early bamboo rods were nearly as heavy as wooden round to about %-in.