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    <title type="html">The Contemplative Angler</title>
    <subtitle type="html">&quot;The charm of fishing is that it is the pursuit of what is elusive but attainable, a perpetual series of occasions for hope.&quot; - John Buchan</subtitle>
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    <updated>2008-12-11T12:38:37Z</updated>
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    <entry>
        <link href="http://overmywaders.com/cblog/archives/100-What-is-Blue-Dun.html" rel="alternate" title="What is Blue Dun?" />
        <author>
            <name>Reed F. Curry</name>
            <email>nospam@example.com</email>
        </author>
    
        <published>2008-12-09T19:16:04Z</published>
        <updated>2008-12-11T12:38:37Z</updated>
        <wfw:comment>http://overmywaders.com/cblog/wfwcomment.php?cid=100</wfw:comment>
    
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            <category scheme="http://overmywaders.com/cblog/categories/4-Fishing-Facts-and-History" label="Fishing Facts and History" term="Fishing Facts and History" />
    
        <id>http://overmywaders.com/cblog/archives/100-guid.html</id>
        <title type="html">What is Blue Dun?</title>
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<p style="line-height: 140%;">The colors we find in fly tying literature are baffling to us today. Where, for example, did they come up with the term &quot;blue dun&quot; or &quot;golden dun&quot;? <br /><br />
Examining the dictionary definition of &quot;dun&quot; gives us a starting point. 
&quot;of a horse : having a grayish-yellow coat with black mane and tail&quot; (Merriam-Webster Online)
<br /><br />
The use of the term &quot;blue dun&quot; in fly tying predates the common use of the automobile. Needing a color description, it seems that the tiers turned to what would be most commonly understood and used horse colors as reference points. Thus, when documenting a fly pattern, &quot;dun&quot; would be broadly understood as being a &quot;grayish-yellow.&quot; If in doubt, one only had to look out the window at horses going by in the street to understand the tier's intent. 
<br /><br />
Here then are some examples of duns:
</p><center>
<br />
Dun<br />
<img src="http://overmywaders.com/images/Dun.jpg" alt="Dun" title="Dun" />
<br /><br />

Light Blue Dun<br />
<img src="http://overmywaders.com/images/lightbluedun.jpg" alt="Light Blue Dun" title="Light Blue Dun" />
<br /><br />

Blue Dun<br />
<img src="http://overmywaders.com/images/BlueDun.jpg" alt="Blue Dun" title="Blue Dun" />
<br /><br />

Medium Blue Dun<br />
<img src="http://overmywaders.com/images/MedBlueDun.jpg" alt="Medium Blue Dun" title="Medium Blue Dun" />
<br /><br />

A herd of Blue Dun from Light to Dark<br />
<img src="http://overmywaders.com/images/KonikBlueDuns.jpg" alt="A Herd of Blue Duns" title="A herd of Blue Duns" />
<br /><br />

A Pale (Champagne) Blue Dun<br />
<img src="http://overmywaders.com/images/PaleBlueDun.jpg" alt="Dun" title="Dun" />
<br /><br />

A Dark Blue Dun<br />
<img src="http://overmywaders.com/images/DarkBlueDun.JPG" alt="Dun" title="Dun" />
<br /><br />

and <a href="http://www.seaspiritoftheforest.co.uk/equine/DunAndUnDun.html"><font color="blue">here</font></a> is a link with yet more Dun colors.
</center><br />
<p><span style="font-family: times; font-size: 13pt;">© 2007 Reed F. Curry<br />
</span></p> 
            </div>
        </content>
        
    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://overmywaders.com/cblog/archives/98-Traditional-Fly-Fishing-Only.html" rel="alternate" title="Traditional Fly Fishing Only" />
        <author>
            <name>Reed F. Curry</name>
            <email>nospam@example.com</email>
        </author>
    
        <published>2008-11-17T16:35:45Z</published>
        <updated>2008-11-17T21:50:47Z</updated>
        <wfw:comment>http://overmywaders.com/cblog/wfwcomment.php?cid=98</wfw:comment>
    
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            <category scheme="http://overmywaders.com/cblog/categories/4-Fishing-Facts-and-History" label="Fishing Facts and History" term="Fishing Facts and History" />
    
        <id>http://overmywaders.com/cblog/archives/98-guid.html</id>
        <title type="html">Traditional Fly Fishing Only</title>
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                Recently I submitted a petition for a rule change to the New Hampshire Fish and Game Department. This
change, should it be implemented, will radically alter the fishing - both in terms of technique and impact upon the fisheries - of a number of fine streams currently designated as &quot;Fly Fishing Only&quot; in this State. I hope
that the fly fishermen of NH will give it their support; however, I am also curious whether readers in other States and countries find the concept of &quot;Traditional Fly Fishing Only&quot; useful.<br />
<br />
Of course, petitions do not necessarily resemble the final presentation to the public; nor the rule as implemented. However, the substance of the petition is as follows:<blockquote>    <b>Petition for Adoption of Rules – New Rule for Fly Fishing Only Streams</b><br />
   <br />
Pursuant to RSA 541-A:4, the undersigned hereby petitions the State of
New Hampshire, Department of Fish and Game, to modify the regulations
for existing flowing waters currently designated as “Fly Fishing Only”
(<b>FFO</b>) to be upgraded to a new designation of “Traditional Fly Fishing
Only” (<b>TFFO</b>) and to add such additional waters as it determines may
benefit from the new designation.<br />
   <br />
In this brief, we will endeavor to present the myriad benefits of a
different approach to Fly Fishing Only than exists under our current
rules. Through Traditional Fly Fishing, as defined below, large
sections of many of our current FFO designated rivers and streams will
become sanctuaries for large trout - growing trophies and reducing the
need for intensive, and expensive, stocking.<br />
   <br />
  <b>The Concept of Trout Sanctuaries</b><br />
   <br />
Until 1991-1992, the FFO sections of New Hampshire rivers had a
conservation purpose that no other angling type presented. Because no
weight was allowed on line, leader, or fly, the trout in fast water or
deep pools never had the fly presented directly to them, it was always
passing overhead. Even with an intermediate line, the leader and fly
would seldom get deeper than six inches in fast water. Of course, in
some back eddies the fly might go deeper, but for the most part, large
trout had those waters as &quot;sanctuaries&quot;. Lee Wulff, a former member of
the NH F&amp;G Commission and renowned writer, defined and promoted
this concept of trout sanctuary in his book &quot;<i>Lee Wulff on Flies&quot;</i> (Stackpole, 1980):<br />
   <br />
“… we can break fly-fishing down into several classifications,
depending upon technique. The first classification is surface
fly-fishing, with floating lines and no weight of any kind, in the fly
or on the line. The second classification is intermediate fly-fishing,
in which weighted flies or sinking-tip fly lines are used, but no
attached weight, such as split-shot or sinkers. The third
classification is unlimited fly-fishing, in which lead-core sinking
lines, weights and sinkers, and weighted flies (and perhaps spinners)
are used. <br />
  <br />
Of the three classifications of fly-fishing, surface fly-fishing is the
most difficult way of taking trout and all the classifications of
fly-fishing are more difficult than spinning. With surface fly-fishing <i>all</i> the fish have to be brought to the surface for the lure, and <i>all</i>
the deep flowing water is sanctuary for the fish. Any trout caught by
surface fly-fishing leaves the sanctuary of its own volition, and
unless it leaves, it cannot be caught. This eliminates the drifting of
a lure right into the trout’s holding level and almost right into its
mouth, so that simple curiosity as much as hunger may cause it to mouth
the lure. The intermediate fly-fishing classification gives the angler
a greater advantage and allows him to drift his flies deeper in the
flow, where most of the feeding by the trout is done. The unlimited
fly-fishing classification lets an angler have maximum advantage,
allowing him to reach the fish at their holding level, and this is
particularly deadly on big fish.”<br />
 <br />
 <br />
  Thomas McGuane, an internationally famous outdoor writer and novelist, wrote in <i>&quot;Live Water&quot;</i> (Meadow Run Press, 1996):<br />
   <br />
“In a perfect world, fishing with split shot on the leader wouldn't be
fly fishing at all. Neither would monofilament nymphing and maybe even
shooting heads. Lee Wulff said that the fish is entitled to the
sanctuary of deep water. That's where most of us used to set the bar in
trout fishing. We fished on top and tried to devise ways of catching
big fish that way, fishing at night, fishing with greater stealth,
hunting remote places that rarely saw an angler.”<br />
   <br />
   <br />
  John Gierach, a modern writer on the subject of fly fishing and the author of many books, wrote in <i>&quot;Good Flies&quot;</i> (Lyons Press, 2002):<br />
   <br />
“I still do my share of dredging with weight on the leader – sometimes
lots of weight, as much as it takes – but in the past few years I’ve
tried to do it more sparingly. If there’s anything wrong with this kind
of nymph fishing, it’s that it can be too effective. Lee Wulff once
said that trout deserve the sanctuary of deep water, and I can’t help
thinking about that every time I nip three split shot onto my leader
and dredge up a fish that might have started rising in an hour or two
if I’d left him alone. Maybe there was a time when this didn’t make too
much difference, but with the crowds you now see on popular rivers –
not to mention the beat-up trout you sometimes catch – maybe the idea
of letting the fish hide, rest, or feed undisturbed from time to time
is worth thinking about.”<br />
  <br />
So, the concept of sanctuary for trout is neither new, nor logically
inconsistent as a practice beneficial to the growth and preservation of
large trout. <br />
   <br />
  <b>Benefits of Traditional Fly Fishing Only Designation</b><br />
   <br />
The introduction of Traditional Fly Fishing Only waters will have
sporting, practical, environmental, fiscal, and social benefits to the
State of New Hampshire. These include, but are not limited to:<br />
   <br />
  <ul><li>Free advertising of New Hampshire waters in fishing magazines, journals, and the Internet as sportsmen explore and debate the concept of TFFO.</li><br /><li>Fly shops will realize an increase in sales of flies and fly-tying materials that meet the criteria of TFFO.</li><br /><li>Guide services will flourish as newcomers require guides to instruct them on casting and fishing in the traditional manner.</li><br /><li>Spin fishermen will warmly accept the new regulations. The current FFO regulations allow the use of jigs (Clouser minnows, conehead Muddlers) and other weighted flies which are more safely and easily cast with spinning gear; thus fishermen using a spinning rod justifiably question the fairness of FFO rather than ALO. Since the flies used in Traditional Fly Fishing are too light to cast with spinning tackle, the equity of the new designation will be apparent.</li><br /><li>Trout will grow larger in the safety of their “sanctuaries”.</li><br /><li>The added <i>cachet</i> of TFFO will resonate with new fly fishermen and the similarity to the fishing prior to 1992 will be attractive to the  old-timers.”</li><br /><li>The Department of Fish and Game will save money in stocking, as the number of fish caught per angler day will be less, but the satisfaction with each catch will be greater.</li><br /><li>The fishermen who adopt Traditional Fly Fishing methods will be possessive of their waters and will police them themselves, calling upon Conservation Officers as necessary. Thus no additional enforcement checks will be required.</li><br /><li>Only FFO <u>flowing</u> waters need be altered to TFFO, as ponds and lakes would not realize the same benefits as rivers and streams.</li></ul>   <br />
  <b>Proposed Definitions</b> <b>for Traditional Fly Fishing Only Waters:</b><br />
   <br />
  <b>Artificial Fly for Traditional Fly Fishing</b>
– In waters designated Traditional Fly Fishing Only, a fly shall be
constructed on a single hook with a single point dressed with any or
all of the following: feathers, fur, hairs, wool, cotton and other
grasses, silk, metal tinsel not greater in thickness than five
thousands of an inch, rayon or nylon thread or floss. Resin, gum, and
nitrocellulose varnishes and lacquers may be applied to the thread of
the fly. Epoxy and other synthetic adhesives may not be used. The hook
shall have no additional weight affixed, including but not limited to:
hooks, natural bait, molded weight, beads, coneheads, dumbbells,
spinners, spoons or similar devices. <br />
   <br />
  <b>Traditional Fly Fishing</b>
- A technique for fishing where the weight of the line is used to cast
a very light-weight fly that would not be heavy enough to be cast with
a spinning or casting rod. No additional weight may be affixed to fly,
leader, or line. The line shall be either a floating fly line, or an
intermediate fly line with a sink rate of less than one inch per
second, to which a leader of Nylon or silkworm gut is affixed. The rod
shall be one designed for fly fishing and the reel shall be a
single-action fly reel. The fly shall conform to the definition of
Artificial Fly for Traditional Fly Fishing (above). No more than three
such flies individually attached to the leader may be used. Dropper
flies must be attached to the leader by Nylon or silkworm gut droppers
no less than eighteen inches apart.<br />
   <br /> Clearly, Traditional
Fly Fishing Only will bring attention to the finest fishing waters in
New Hampshire, both from resident fishermen and out-of-state anglers.
The additional challenge and prestige of catching trout under TFFO
conditions will increase angler count on the waters, but decrease
actual angling pressure on the fish.<br />
   <br />
  <font><br />
 </font>  The Petitioner thanks you for your thoughtful consideration of the above and looks forward to your response.<br />
</blockquote>*********<br /><br />
Readers, let me know what you think, either by submitting a comment to this post or by email at <a href="mailto:reedc@overmywaders.com?subject=Discussion of TFFO">reedc@overmywaders.com</a>.<br />
Thank you.
<br /><br />
		
 
            </div>
        </content>
        
    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://overmywaders.com/cblog/archives/97-Trout-Sanctuaries.html" rel="alternate" title="Trout Sanctuaries" />
        <author>
            <name>Reed F. Curry</name>
            <email>nospam@example.com</email>
        </author>
    
        <published>2008-11-12T10:50:50Z</published>
        <updated>2008-11-13T21:56:07Z</updated>
        <wfw:comment>http://overmywaders.com/cblog/wfwcomment.php?cid=97</wfw:comment>
    
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            <category scheme="http://overmywaders.com/cblog/categories/4-Fishing-Facts-and-History" label="Fishing Facts and History" term="Fishing Facts and History" />
    
        <id>http://overmywaders.com/cblog/archives/97-guid.html</id>
        <title type="html">Trout Sanctuaries</title>
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<p style="line-height: 125%;" class="MsoNormal"><b>The Concept of Trout Sanctuaries<o:p /></b></p>

<p style="line-height: 125%;" class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p></p>

<p style="line-height: 125%;" class="MsoNormal">Until 1992, the &quot;Fly Fishing Only&quot; rivers and streams
in Maine and <st1:place w:st="on"><st1:state w:st="on">New Hampshire</st1:state></st1:place>
had a conservation purpose that no other angling type presented. Because no
weight was allowed on line, leader, or fly, the trout holding in fast water or the bottoms of deep
pools seldom had the fly presented directly to them, it was always passing
overhead. Even with an intermediate line, the leader and fly would seldom get
deeper than six inches in fast water. Of course, in some back eddies the fly
might be drawn deeper, but for the most part, large trout had those waters as
&quot;sanctuaries&quot;. Lee Wulff, a former member of the NH F&amp;G
Commission and renowned writer, defined and promoted this concept of trout
sanctuary in his book &quot;<i>Lee Wulff on Flies&quot;</i> (Stackpole, 1980):</p>

<p style="line-height: 125%;" class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p></p>

<p style="margin-left: 0.5in; line-height: 125%;" class="MsoNormal">“… we can break
fly-fishing down into several classifications, depending upon technique. <span>The first classification is surface fly-fishing,
with floating lines and no weight of any kind, in the fly or on the line. The
second classification is intermediate fly-fishing, in which weighted flies or
sinking-tip fly lines are used, but no attached weight, such as split-shot or
sinkers. The third classification is unlimited fly-fishing, in which lead-core
sinking lines, weights and sinkers, and weighted flies (and perhaps spinners)
are used.</span> </p>

<p style="margin-left: 0.5in; line-height: 125%;" class="MsoNormal"><br />
Of the three classifications of fly-fishing, surface fly-fishing is the most
difficult way of taking trout and all the classifications of fly-fishing are
more difficult than spinning. With surface fly-fishing <i>all</i> the fish have to be brought to the surface for the lure, and <i>all</i> the deep flowing water is <i>sanctuary</i>
for the fish. Any trout caught by surface fly-fishing leaves the sanctuary of
its own volition, and unless it leaves, it cannot be caught. This eliminates
the drifting of a lure right into the trout’s holding level and almost right
into its mouth, so that simple curiosity as much as hunger may cause it to
mouth the lure. The intermediate fly-fishing classification gives the angler a
greater advantage and allows him to drift his flies deeper in the flow, where
most of the feeding by the trout is done. The unlimited fly-fishing
classification lets an angler have maximum advantage, allowing him to reach the
fish at their holding level, and this is particularly deadly on big fish.”<br />
<!--[if !supportLineBreakNewLine]--><br />
<!--[endif]--></p></o:smarttagtype></o:smarttagtype> <br /><a href="http://overmywaders.com/cblog/archives/97-Trout-Sanctuaries.html#extended">Continue reading "Trout Sanctuaries"</a>
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    <entry>
        <link href="http://overmywaders.com/cblog/archives/96-Replacing-the-Fishing-Vest.html" rel="alternate" title="Replacing the Fishing Vest" />
        <author>
            <name>Reed F. Curry</name>
            <email>nospam@example.com</email>
        </author>
    
        <published>2008-08-01T15:49:20Z</published>
        <updated>2008-10-02T19:52:46Z</updated>
        <wfw:comment>http://overmywaders.com/cblog/wfwcomment.php?cid=96</wfw:comment>
    
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            <category scheme="http://overmywaders.com/cblog/categories/3-Fishing-Humor" label="Fishing Humor" term="Fishing Humor" />
    
        <id>http://overmywaders.com/cblog/archives/96-guid.html</id>
        <title type="html">Replacing the Fishing Vest</title>
        <content type="xhtml" xml:base="http://overmywaders.com/cblog/">
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<p>My fishing vest must weigh thirty pounds. It contains enough aircraft-aluminum fly boxes that, in need, I could flatten them and assemble a Boeing 747, with enough left over for a Cessna or two. Add to that my Oxygen tank and you understand my ads in the <i>Pennysaver</i> for three on-call Gillies or one Sherpa-lite.</p><br />
<p>Well, thanks to the folks at DARPA (whose last known useful invention was the Internet -- and we know how that turned out) and Boston Dynamics, my Uber-Gillie is now available.</p><br />
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