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  2. Cosseboom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosseboom

    Cosseboom is a type of artificial fly, commonly used in fly fishing to catch salmon.It was created by the American angler John C. Cosseboom of Woonsocket, Rhode Island in around 1923, for use on the Margaree River in Nova Scotia, Canada.

  3. Snagging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snagging

    Snagging chinook salmon. Snagging, also known as snag fishing, snatching, snatch fishing, jagging (Australia), or foul hooking, is a fishing technique for catching fish that uses sharp grappling hooks tethered to a fishing line to externally pierce (i.e. "snag") into the flesh of nearby fish, without needing the fish to swallow any hook with its mouth like in angling.

  4. Tube fly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tube_fly

    The use of tube flies for casting to salmon and steelhead in the Puget Sound region was first documented in Fly Fishing for Pacific Salmon (Ferguson, Johnson, Trotter, 1985). [ 3 ] Sometime in the late 1960s and early 1970s, American anglers began introducing the tube fly style to surface poppers, sliders and other floating patterns for both ...

  5. Make a Homemade Fly Trap: Soda Bottle. Once you finish a soda, turn the bottle into an effective fly trap. The goal: Flies smell the bait and fly into the bottle to get to it. Once inside, they ...

  6. Carrie G. Stevens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrie_G._Stevens

    Carrie Gertrude Stevens (1882–1970) was an American fly fisher and fly lure tier from Madison and Upper Dam, Maine, and the creator of Rangeley Favorite trout and salmon flies. Self-taught in the art of fly tying, Stevens invented the Grey Ghost Streamer , an imitation of the Smelt , Osmerus mordax .

  7. Fly fishing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fly_fishing

    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 ...

  8. Fly tying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fly_tying

    Frederic M. Halford, 19th-century English fly tyer. Fly tying (also historically referred to in England as dressing flies) is the process of producing an artificial fly used by fly fishing anglers to catch fish. Fly tying is a manual process done by a single individual using hand tools and a variety of natural and manmade materials that are ...

  9. Blacker's Art of Fly Making - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blacker's_Art_of_Fly_Making

    Blacker's Art of Fly Making - comprising angling and dyeing of colours with engravings of Salmon and Trout flies shewing the process of the gentle craft as taught in the pages with descriptions of flies for the season of the year as they come out on the water is a work of fly tying literature with significant fly fishing content written by William Blacker, a London tackle dealer and first ...