1 86 MAKING A FISHERY. 



in my own presence, a single grayling, the 

 weight of which I estimated at fib., was again 

 taken in the same place, and I thought it 

 prudent to transfer this fish to the lower water. 

 The point at which this fish was thus taken in 

 two consecutive years was one mile and 750- 

 yards above the place where the Andrews two- 

 year-olds had been turned in, and all the 

 grayling from Hungerford had been put in 

 much lower down the river. Hence, it is fair to> 

 infer that it was one of the Andrews grayling. 

 To make its way from the bridge where they 

 were originally introduced into the stream, to 

 the place where it was netted, it had not only to 

 work one mile 750 yards up stream, but to 

 thread its way through a complicated series of 

 carriers and over three large sets of hatches. 

 Here is a most undoubted case of a grayling 

 working up-stream. 



