382 



AMERICAN ANGLER'S BOOK. 



Little Saguenay 



St. John's (en haul) . 



Considerable stream, now affording no fishing. Mill- 

 dam inside, not in use. 



Do. do. 



Black, or Salmon 

 Murray 

 Du GouflFre 

 Ste. Anne 

 Montmorenci 



f Jacques Cartier . 



Discharge into River St. Lawrence. 



Formerly good fishery. Afi'ords 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 



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 

 Untried with fly. 



Do. do. 



Do. do. 



Mill-dam above. Untried with fly. 



basin. 



do. 

 do. 



*G. Pabos . 

 *G. Bonaventure 



*Cascapediacs 



*Nouvelle . 



Skeminac . 



fMatapediac 



*Ristigouche 



*Patapediac 

 *Mi3touche 



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 fisheries within the embouchure, and at bays, 



