Fly Fishing
The Fly Fishing Bait - An Artificial FlyFly fishing is the sport of catching fish with hooks tied with fur, feather and other artificial materials. Fly fishing is the art of presenting an articifical fly, terrestrial insect initation or fish to a trout, salmon, sea trout or other fish. Artificial fly fishing flies are created by tying hair, fur, feathers, or other materials, both natural and synthetic, onto a hook with thread. The first fly fishing flies were tied with natural materials, but synthetic materials are now extremely popular and prevalent. The fly fishing flies are tied in sizes, colours and patterns to match local terrestrial and aquatic insects, baitfish, or other prey attractive to the target fish species.
Fly Fishing - An Art FormIn fly fishing, fish are caught by using artificial flies whuch are hand tied that are cast with a fly rod and a fly line. For fly fishing the fly line (today, almost always coated with plastic) although you can purchase incredible fly tishing silk fly lines still. For fly fishing the fly line is heavy enough in order to send the fishing fly to the target fish. This is one of the main differences between spinner and bait rods, which use heavy weight on the line to cast lures, bait, etc. Artificial fly fishing flies can vary dramatically in all morphological characteristics (size, weight, colour, etc.). Unlike other casting methods, fly fishing can be thought of as a method of casting line rather than lure. Non-fly fishing methods rely on a lure's weight to pull line from the reel during the forward motion of a cast. By design, a fly fishing fly is too light to be cast, and thus simply follows the unfurling of a properly cast fly fishing line, which is heavier and tapered and therefore more castable than lines used in other types of fishing. Fly fishing is an art form. Casting a single fly of team of 2 or 3 fly fishing flies is not as easy as it looks. Rolling a fishing fly so it lands on the water perfectly in front of a hungry trout is the true art of the fly fisherman. Fly Fishing FliesIn broadest terms, fly fishing flies are categorized as either imitative or attractive. Imitative fly fishing flies resemble natural food items. Attractive fly fishing flies trigger instinctive strikes by employing a range of characteristics that do not necessarily mimic prey items. Fly fishing flies can be fished floating on the surface (dry flies), partially submerged (emergers), or below the surface (nymphs, streamers, and wet flies.) A dry fly is typically thought to represent an insect landing on, falling on (terrestrials), or emerging from, the water's surface as might a grasshopper, dragonfly, mayfly, ant, beetle, stonefly or caddisfly. Other surface flies include poppers and hair bugs that might resemble mice, frogs, etc. Sub-surface flies are designed to resemble a wide variety of prey including aquatic insect larvae, nymphs and pupae, baitfish, crayfish, leeches, worms, etc. Wet flies, also known as streamers, are generally thought to imitate minnows, leeches or scuds. Fly Fishing - HistoryFly fishing has been about for over 2000 years. In his book De Natura Animalium, Claudius Ælianus (170-230 A.D.), often called Ælian, mentioned fly fishing for trout for the first time. He explained that fly fishing was practiced on the river Astræus in Macedonia. Fly Fishng in the UKModern fly fishing is normally said to have originated on the fast, rocky rivers of Scotland and northern England. Other than a few fragmented references, however, little was written on fly fishing until The Treatyse on Fysshynge with an Angle was published (1496) within The Boke of St. Albans attributed to Dame Juliana Berners. The book contains, along with instructions on rod, line and hook making, dressings for different fly fishing flies to use at different times of the year. The first detailed writing about the fly fishing comes in two chapters of Izaak Walton's Compleat Angler (1653), which were actually written by his friend Charles Cotton, and described the fishing in the Derbyshire Wye. British fly fishing continued to develop in the 19th Century, with the emergence of fly fishing clubs, along with the appearance of several books on the subject of fly tying and fly fishing techniques. In southern England, dry-fly fishing acquired an elitist reputation as the only acceptable method of fishing the slower, clearer rivers of the south such as the River Test and the other chalk streams concentrated in Hampshire, Surrey, Dorset and Berkshire (see Southern England Chalk Formation for the geological specifics). The weeds found in these rivers tend to grow very close to the surface, and it was felt necessary to develop new techniques that would keep the fly fishing fly and the line on the surface of the stream. These became the foundation of all later dry-fly developments. However, there was nothing to prevent the successful employment of wet flies on these chalk streams, as George Edward MacKenzie Skues proved with his nymph and wet fly techniques. To the horror of dry-fly purists, Skues later wrote two books, Minor Tactics of the Chalk Stream, and The Way of a Trout with a Fly, which greatly influenced the development of wet fly fishing. In northern England and Scotland, many anglers also favored wet-fly fishing, where the technique was more popular and widely practiced than in southern England. One of Scotland’s leading proponents of the wet fly in the early-to-mid 19th century was W.C. Stewart, who published "The Practical Angler" in 1857. In Scandinavia and the United States, attitudes toward methods of fly fishing were not nearly as rigidly defined, and both dry- and wet-fly fishing were soon adapted to the conditions of those countries.
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Quality Fly Fishing Flies
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