382 



AMERICAN ANGLER'S BOOK. 



Little Saguenay 

 St. John's (e)i haul) 



Considerable stream, now affording no fishing. Mill- 

 dam inside, not in use. 



Do. do. 



Black, or Salmon 

 Murray 

 Du Gouffre 

 Ste. Anne 

 Montmorenci 



"(•Jacques Cartier . 



Discharge into River St. Lawrence. 



Formerly good fishery. Affords no fly-fishing. 

 Flows down beautiful valley. Yields Salmon. 

 Much deteriorated. Needs recruiting. 



Do. Do. 



Cataract at mouth. The upper water swarms with 



(river) Trout. 

 Excellent Salmon-stream. Not a Crown river. 



*Du Sud . 

 *Ouelle 

 *Grand Metis 

 *Matanne . 

 *St. Ann . 

 *Mount Louis 



*Magdelaine 

 *Dartmouth 



*York 



*St. John's {du Sud) 



*Grand River 



South Shore. 



Much deteriorated. Mill-dam and fishway. 



Do. Has three mill-dams. 



Do. Large stream. Has dams. 



Do. Has dam, and Salmon-pass. 



Formerly good. Mill-dam across. 

 Important stream. More noted of recent seasons 



for Sea-Trout than Salmon. Untried. 

 Salmon-river. Untried with fly. 

 First-class stream, flowing into Gasp6 basins 

 Untried with fly. 



Do. do. do. 



Do. do. do. 



Mill-dam above. Untried with fly. 



*G. Pabos . 

 *G. Bonaventure 



*Cascapediacs 



*Nouvelle . 



Skeminac . 



fMatapediac 



*Ristigouche 



*Patapediac 

 *Mistouche 



Discharge into Bay of Chaleurs. 



Salmon-fishery. Superior station. Untried with fly. 



Large and valuable stream. Many tributaries. 

 Formerly abounding >with Salmon. 



Both the little and great Cascapediacs yield num- 

 bers of Salmon. 



Good Salmon-fishery in bay. Untried with fly. 



Good Trout-river. 



Formerly abounded with Salmon, but needs re- 

 cruiting. 



Noble river. Has fine tributary streams. Salmon 

 frequent it in large numbers, and of heavy weight. 

 Head of Bay Chaleurs. 



Branch of Ristigouche. Salmon ascend it about 

 forty miles. 



Feeder of Ristigouche. Salmon-river. 



"Nearly all the rivers described in the foregoing schedule 

 are tidal streams, and most of them have stationary Salmon 

 and Trout fishei'ies within the embouchure, and at bays, 



