Friday, July 4, 2014

How to Fly Fish Vintage Ebook - Amazon Kindle

Hey everyone! We just posted a kindle ebook on Amazon.com titled "Fishing with Floating Flies" by Samuel Camp. It is a vintage ebook from the early 1900's and teaches techniques associate with fly fishing. It is perfect for beginners and experienced fly fisherman in that it teaches historical techniques of catching fish in various streams. We'll post a quick preview below so you guys can get a taste of what is in the Ebook. The book is priced very low at $0.99 on Amazon.com and Kindle. If you wish to have a PDF of this ebook, please leave a comment in the comments section and we will absolutely help you out! Enjoy the content below and click the link below that if you want to purchase the full Ebook.



 Preview of "Fishing with Floating Flies" Amazon Kindle Ebook

 For attaching eyed-hooks to the leader or snell there are several different knots; one of the best of these, and the simplest, is shown in Fig. 1. The gut must be rendered perfectly pliable by soaking in water before tying on the fly. Pass the end of the gut through the eye of the hook, bend it back and make a slip-knot[46] or half-hitch around the gut; draw the slip-knot nearly tight and slide it up to and over the eye of the hook, and pull tight. This forms a jam-knot easily upset but impossible to disengage by a straight pull. After making the knot, cut off the superfluous end of the gut. For cutting off gut ends after changing flies at the stream-side nothing is handier to carry or use than an ordinary fingernail clip.


  
 Figure 1.

In Fig. 2 is shown the method of knotting together two strands of gut in tying a leader or making repairs in one. The two half-hitches should be pulled perfectly tight and then drawn together.


 Figure 2.

For attaching the leader to the line use the jam-knot shown in Fig. 3.


Figure 3.

 If you wish to attach a dropper fly to a dry-fly leader without loops use the method shown In Fig. 4, attaching at a point where two strands are knotted together.


Figure 4.

So many intricate details are connected with the subject of artificial flies, and with dry or floating flies particularly, that in order to reduce the discussion of the matter herein to a not inordinate length many points must of necessity be merely touched upon. In later chapters, the efficiency of various patterns, as well as how and when to use them, will be discussed; at this point we are concerned chiefly with the purely material details of the "floater." The construction of the dry fly differs considerably from that of the wet, but as this is a matter pertaining rather to the art of the fly dresser the subject need not be considered as imperatively within the province of the present discussion. It has previously been noted that at present the larger part of the dry flies obtainable in this country are imported from England. The tendency of the tackle dealers is to furnish comparatively few of the familiar American patterns tied dry. The dry fly is, of course, dressed with the purpose of causing it to float as well as may be, and this is effected—although the method of construction varies to some extent with various patterns—by dressing the fly with double or "split" wings tied at right angles to the body (called "erect" wings) and with the hackling arranged to stand out well from the shank of the hook. The body of the fly is dressed very lightly and in some instances is of cork, straw or quill. In the case of some of the latest patterns horsehair is used for the body material. As a rule dry flies are dressed upon small hooks, number twelve and smaller, and the hooks are of light wire. A list of floating flies which have been found effective on American trout streams is given in a later paragraph. Almost without exception floating flies are dressed on eyed hooks; that is, without gut snells whipped to the shank of the hook, following the time-honored American custom, but with an eye or ring at the end of the shank by means of which the fly is attached directly to the leader. If space permitted the practical advantages of the eyed hook could very well be emphasized in detail; at present I can only urge every fly fisherman to adopt the use of the eyed fly for either dry or wet fly-fishing. If for no other reason than that of economy, the use of the eyed hook justifies itself: the feelings of the angler, who when looking over and testing his tackle for the approaching trout season pulls the snells without difficulty out of an even two dozen of the old-style trout flies which have never even been once used, are best left to the imagination.


http://www.amazon.com/Fishing-Floating-Flies-Samuel-Camp-ebook/dp/B00LIBMAZI/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1404471576&sr=1-1&keywords=FISHING+WITH+FLOATING+FLIES



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