145 



^ mallard, teal, neck feather, blue and yellow 

 macaw, and a strip or two of wood-duck each 

 side, and a fibre or two of peacock neck and 

 white spotted wing feather, hook C C, B. If 

 these flies are attended to, they will kill when 

 many others fail ; do not lose your sport and 

 time, keep to what I say. 



BALLYSHANNON. 



From Ballyna the angler may proceed to the 

 Erne, at Ballyshannon, by coach, where he 

 will find, on his annval, a beautiful river, and 

 every accommodation he requires ; it is a short 

 running river, with a deep and rapid current, 

 about three or four miles in length ; at the 

 town of Bellick it flows out of the grand 

 expanse of Lough Erne, fifty miles in length, 

 and in some parts twelve in width. 



The salmon leap of Ballyshannon, is a broad 

 body of water falling over a perpendicular rock 

 twelve feet high, up which the salmon run, 

 showing their dark backs through the foaming 

 water, and again falling back into the pool 

 below after many attempts to surmount it; 

 ^ they seldom leap clean up out of the water, 



^^m^' — — ^ — ^m^\ 



