316 APPENDIX. 



the inner consciousness of the tackle-maker. For the 

 smaller streams in the Middle and Eastern States, the 

 coachman, royal-coachman, grizzly-king, Abbey, Mon- 

 treal, Imbrie, brown-hen, white-miller, orange-miller, 

 yellow-sally, black-gnat, great-dun, queen of the water, 

 Hooker, golden-spinner, Cahill, silver-black, professor, 

 march-brown, jenny-spinner, red or dun fox, silver- 

 brown, hare's-ear or dark-fox, blue-dun, dusty-miller, 

 coch-y-bon-dhu or marlow-buzz, gray-gnat, cow-dung, 

 Beaver-Kill, grannom,Ronald's stone, brown-stone, and the 

 various colored hackles. On some waters the addition of 

 jungle-cock's feathers to the above will prove very killing. 



On Long Island waters the favorites are the cow-dung, 

 scarlet ibis, Cahill, Imbrie, yellow-sally, great-dun, hare's- 

 ear, queen of the water, black and gray gnats, golden- 

 spinner, silver-black, grizzly-king, professor, Abbey, Mon- 

 treal, and the different colored hackles. Hooks for the 

 above lists should be numbers 8 to 12. 



For the Adirondacks, Maine, and the Canadas, light and 

 dark Montreal, Abbey, scarlet-ibis, professor, great-dun, 

 brown-hen, Brandreth, cock-robin or Murray, silver-doctor, 

 Parinacheeny belle, St. Patrick, McAlpin, Lawrence, Hol- 

 berton, Rangely, Molechunkamunk, Mooseluck-rnaguntic, 

 Beatrice, ]STo. 8, Round-lake, Bemes, tinselled-ibis, Elliot, 

 Megalloway, silver-black, Canada,- blue- jay, Jenny-Lind, 

 and the hackles. Also any of the above, w^ith the feathers 

 of the jungle-cock added. They are to be tied on hooks 

 numbered from 3 to 5, and may be reinforced by a short 

 piece of gut tied in alongside of the other and extending 

 above the hook, making the snell double for half an inch 

 beyond the head of the fly. 



For black-bass any of the large flies previously named 



