4S 



FOREST AND STREAM. 



|Arr,rsT Iff, If 83, 



grouse. Aug. 1- April 1; mountain goat. Aug. 1-Dee, 1 ; sandhill 

 crane, plover, yellow hammer, bitten. Sept. I -April 1. 

 Prairie chicken and Bharp-tatted grouse seasons apply to 



Humboldt, Elko, Eureka end I ■■": i el. : . = I , reason in Flint 

 counties Aug. H'-Mareli 15. Prairie i •!• el; en and sharp-tailed 

 grouse m Esmeralda, Douglas, Ormsbv, Lyon, Storey. 

 Churchill and WaShoe, protected to Sept. f. 1883. 



New Brunswick. 



Buffed "Toil's", Oct. 1-Jan. 1 : woodcock, Aug. 1-March 1: 

 wildfowl, Aug. 1- April 1; snipe, Aug. 1-March I; rabbit (hare), 

 Oct. 10.la.ruh l; caribou and mwsn, Sep'. 15-Jan. al: salmon. 

 Feb. 1-Sept. 15. 



For non-resident law see Nova Scotia. 



New Hampshire. 



Ruffed grouse and n,:iail, Sept. 1-Feb. 1 ; woodcock and -wild- 

 fowl, Aug. 1-Feb, 1: deer. Sept. 1-Dee. 1: caribou and moose, 

 Sept. 1-Dee. 1: squirrel. Sept. 1-Jau. 1: rabbit (hare), Sept. 1- 

 Aprill; rail and plover, Aug. 1-Fe.h. 1: black bass, June 15- 

 April 80; white and pike per. h. July 1-May 1; grayling, mus- 

 callonge. pike and pickerel, June 1- April 1; speckled and lake 

 (salmon) trout and land-locked salmon, April eO-Sept. 30; 

 Salmon, June 14. 



Yellow-legs, sandpipers, Aug. 1-Feb. Is raccoon or 'coon. 

 Sept, 1-Jan. 1. Lake trour may he taken ,: with single hook 

 and line only," Jan. 1-April 1. Fisli introduced by Commis- 

 sioners protected tor live years. Fish and Uame Cemmiasibn- 

 ers: Ed. Spalding. Nanus.; Luther Hayes. Milton; A. H. 

 Powers. Grantham. 



New Jersey. 



Ruffed grouse and quail, Nov. 1-Jan. 1: woodcock, July 1- 

 Aug. l,and Oct. 1-D?c. hi: pinnated grouse, Oct. la-Dec. lj 

 deer protected to Oct. 31, 1884; rail, Sept. 1-Dee. 1: reed bird 

 (marsh hen) Aug. '35-Dec. 1: upland plover., Aug. 1-Jan 1: 

 summer duck, Sept. 1-Jan. 1; squirrels. Sept. 1-Jan. 1: rabbit, 

 Nov. 1-Jau. 1; salmon trout, March 1-Oct. lj brook trout, 

 March 1-Oct. 1; black bass, June 1-Noy. 1. 



Non-residents must take out license. New Jersey Fish and 

 Game Protective Society has jurisdiction over entire State. 

 Fee, IS. Secretary. Win. L. Force. Plamlicld, N. J. Or, non- 

 residents to shoot or fish in Camden. Gloucester, Atlantic, 

 Salem, Cumberland and Cape May counties, may obtain 

 membership cert itieate of West Jersey Game Protective So- 



ciety. Fee, $5 first year. 

 Win, T. Miller, 196 Market stn 



uallv" the 

 ndei 



•t, I 



Secretary, 



uaii, wild tur- 



nountain sheep, 



. April 1-Dec. I. 



Pr ' 



New Mexico. 



Ruffed, dusky, sage and sharptail grouse, 

 krv, ptarmigan ( -white quail"'), antelope, elk 

 deer and buffalo, Sept. I-Mavl: speckled troi 



••Trout," ''speckled trout," May 1 to Dee. 1 

 speeding large game shall not be applicable to persons in camp 

 "whom necessity may compel to kill one or two animals for 

 their subsistence." 



New York. 

 _ Ruffed and pinnated grouse, Sept. 1-Jan. 1; quail, Nov, 1- 

 Jan. 1; woodcock, Aug. 1-Jau. 1; wildfowl. Sept. 1-May 1: 

 I. it. .. ! : 1-Dec. 1; robin, meadow lark, starling, Oct. 1-Jau. 1 : 



rabl I v 1-Feb, I; squirrel, Aug. 1-Feb. 1; speckled 



trout. April 1-Sept. 1; California trout. Sept. 1-May 15; black 

 bass, Oswego bass, June 1-Jau. 1 ; salmon (lake) trout, Ap: ill- 

 Oct. ' 



Unlawful at all times u 



him 



t deer 



with dogs 



in Sr Law- 



lull fawn i'ii "spotted coo 



v. he 



e An 



E, l.'.-Xov. 1; 



unlawful to 

 ring-gun, or 













Long Island wa1 











as are habit uallv lired fro 































tw.-ntv rods from shore 





id. pet, snare 



or i ran. unlawful. Blac 







Lake Maho 



lac, Dutchess 



county. Schroon lake n> 







uradox Lak 



•. July in to 



Jan. 1; Lake George, Ji 



ill '■ 



) to i 



an. 1. Tin 



awfid to kill 



striped hass.of 1. is than 



: poi 



nd u< 



ight. Tibial 



vlul to catch 



anv lish within eight v ro 



Is of 



lishwi 



v. Sundav 



shooting and 



fishing forbidden. Unlav, 



fui t 



o expt 



rt game fr 



an Dutchess 



county. Salmon or lake 









,v 1 tO Oct. 1, 



The State game protect 









Suffolk, and 



Richmond counties— Ge< 









mpton; New 



ington. and Wan - 

 Warren CO.; Essex, Clinton. 

 Elizabethtown, Essex co,; St. 

 M. Griffin, Fine. St. Lawrenci 

 gomerv. and Ucikiue i Thou 

 c..,.; Oneida, Lewis, and Oswej 

 Oneida co. : Broome. Chenangi 

 Onondaga— Wflliain H. Lin 1 

 Cayuga, Wayne, Ontario, 2a1 

 mung, and Seneca — Aaron M 

 Monroe, Orleans. Livingston, 

 and Alleghany— G 



Liberty, 

 n— Albert 

 on, Mont- 

 iiL FultoD 



M-lieste 



Cattaraugus, Erie, and Niagara— Stephen A. Roberto, Buffalo. 

 North Carolina. 



* Ruffed grouse, quail and wild tin-key, Oct. 1-Jau. 1; deer. 

 Aug. 15-Feb. 15; doves and robin, Oct. 1-April 1; speckled 



Seasons for biirls applv to counties of Davison, Randolph. 

 Vnson. Rowan, Wan en, (tuihord. Rockingham, Orange, 

 Caswell. Kdgeoomb.-, Meklenbnrg, Cabana-. Unlawful to 

 export quail or partridge, dead or alive, from couuties of 

 Catawba, Rowan, Guilford, Alainanee. Rockingham, Grange. 

 Iredell. Davie. GastOD. Columbii-, Davidson, Anson and Fnr- 

 sytho. Deer law applies to counties of Clay, Cherokee, Masou, 

 Jackson, Hayward, Transylvania, Randolph, Stokes. Forsythe, 

 Surry, Yadsin, Rockingham, Craven. Greene, Lenoir. Troul 

 law applies to counties west of the Blue Ridge, except Yancy, 

 Henderson. Traii-vlvania. Buneome. Macon. Wildfowl shoot- 

 ing on Sabbath, or between sunset and sunrise of anv day of 



Un 



wful i 



ick and Dare counties; re- 

 Carterei county, Pamlico 

 ng forbidden in the three 



of anv wood deeovs. ducks in- 





or live ducks o 



• geese. 



fer decors, in any of the w; 







for the 



purpose of killiug or take- v 



seetion shall not apply to such l 



of Currituck Sound for t 







it this 







to the 



lie pu 





g game 



as sportsmen, and who shoot 





r on lands or i 



l.ll'SUes 



owned or leased by them, and 





o not kill gan 



e for a 



ford n market; And provided 





\ It shall not 



n 



strued lo limit, abrel-.---. or imp. 



drtl.c 



'-or land- m'?!. 



egeg £ 



bias of Currituck, or Da n 







obtain 



the consent or permission of sue 







occupy 









-idem- 



Nova Scotia. 



Ruffed grouse, Oct. I -Jan. 1 . woodcock. Aug, 1-March 1 ; 



lug. i April i; snipe, Aug. l-Marah l; ' 



caribou, Se.pt, 15-Jan yi; rabbit ihare), Oct. 1-March l;sal- 



tailnwful tor one person to take in one season more than 



two moose and four caribou. Flesh of moose must be carried 

 out of the woods within ten days aftei -killing: none late 

 than Feb. 5. Pheasants protected at all times. Nonresidents 

 must take out a license; fee Wl The secretary of the Game 

 and Inland Fishery Protective Society is A. E. Harrington, 

 Esq., Halifax, N. 8. 



Ohio. 



Ruffed grouse. Sept. 1-Jan. 1: qua.il, Nov. 1-Jan. ^wood- 

 cock. July 4-Jan. 1; wildfowl, Sept. 1-April 1; pinnated 

 grouse. Nov. I. -Jan. 1: wild turkey, Nov. 1-Jan. la: deer, Oct. 

 15 Nov. 20. 



Wildfowl shooting unlawful with ''anv other than a com- 

 mon shoulder gun. 1- Swan protected at all times. Season 

 for wood-duck. Sept. 1 to April 1; blue-winged teal. Sept. 1 to 

 Jan. 1. 



Ontario. 



Ruffed an 

 Jam 1 : woo 

 wild turkey, 

 Sept. 15-Deo 

 1-March 1; a 



15: black bass. May 



1 grouse. Sept. 1-Jan. 1: quad. Oct. 1- 

 r. [-May 1; wildfowl, Aug. lo-May 1: 



. 1 ; deer and elk, Oct. 1-Dec. 15; moose, 

 on, Oct. 1-Dec. 15; rabbit (hare). Sept. 

 15-Juxi. 1; speckled trout. May 1-Sept. 

 15-April 15: muscallonsre and pickerel. 



: lake (salmon) trout. No 



. 10-No- 



■er, elk. l 



ndei 



1. 



al ducks. Aug. 

 light light, for- 

 ne may not be 

 .rbidden to kill 

 caribou." 



Oregon. 



Grouse and quail, July 15-Jan. 1; wildfowl. Sept. 1-April 1 : 

 pinnated an tj ... in. June 15-April 1 ; deer, July 1 -Nov. 

 1; moose, Sept. 1-Feb. 1: dusky, sharptail grouse," Aug. 1- 

 April 1 ; elk, moose, mountain sheep. Aug. 1 Jan. 1 : 'speckled 

 trout, April 1-Nov. 1. 



Female deer protected to 1886. Game may be killed only 

 for food. 



Pennsylvania. 



Ruffed and pinnated grouse, Oct. 1-Jan. 1; quail, Oct. 15 

 Jan. 1; woodcock. July 4-Jan. 1: wildfowl, Sept. 1-May 15 

 wild turkey, Oct, 15-Jan. 1: deer and elk. Oct. l.-Dee. 31 ; 

 plover, July 15-Jan. 1; rabbit (hare), Nov. 1-Jan. 1 : rail and 

 reed bird, Sept. 1-Dec. 1; salmon, specsled trout. April 1-Aug. 

 1 ; lake trout, Jan. 1-Oct. 1 ; black, green, yellow, willow, Lake 

 Erie, grass and rock bass, pike, pickerel, wall-eyed yiike, Sus- 

 quehanna salmon, June 1-Jan. 1. 



Chasing deer with dogs unlawful. Use of ferrets unlawful. 

 Wildfowl shooting unlawful with "other than such guns as 

 habitually are raised at, arm's length and lired from I lie shoul- 

 der:" netting unlawful. Grouse shooting at night unlawful, 

 Wild pigeons protected on nesting ground. Sunday shooting 

 and fishing unlawful. Season for "green bass, j ellow bass, 

 willow bass, rock bass, Lake Erie or grass bass, pike or pick- 

 erel, or wall-eyed pike, commonly called Susquehanna salmon, 

 June 1 to Jan. 1 ; does not apply to Lake Erie waters, save 

 ponds on Erie Harbor peninsula. Speckled or California trout 

 may not be taken less than Sin. in length, nor black, yellow or 

 green bass less than 8in. in length. Pike county: beer Oct. 

 1 to Dec. 1, cannot be. killed in the water, squirrel Sept. 1 to 

 Dec. 15, rabbit Oct. 15 to Dec. 15, wood or summer duck Oct. 

 1 toJan. 1, woodcock July 4 to Dee. 15, quail Oct. 15 to Dec. 1, 

 ruffed grouso Sept, 15 to Dec. 15, salmon, speckled trout May 

 1 to Aug. I. pike, pickerel June 1 to Feb. 15. 



Quebec 



Ruffed grouse, Sept. 15-Jan, 1; snipe, woodcock and door. 

 Sept, 1-JPeU 1: wildfowl. Sept, 1-April 15: moose. and caribou. 

 Sept, 1-Feb. 1; rabbit (hare), Nov. 1-Mareh L; -allien. Mav 1- 

 Sept 1; speckled trout, Deo, 81-Oct I; lake (salmon) trout. 

 Dec. 1-Oct. 15; black bass, musealonge and pickerel, Ma> 

 April 15. 



Moose (after Sept. 1, 18S8) Sept. 1 to Feb. 1 ; insectivorous 

 birds. Sept, 1 to March I, non-residents required to pay S20 

 gun lieense. Night shooting wildfowl unlawful. 



Rhode Island. 



Ruffed grouse, Sept. 1-Feb. 1; quail. Oct. 15-Jan. 1; wood- 

 cock. July 1-Jan. 1: wildfowl. Sepl. I -March 1; rabbit (hare), 

 - '-rk (starling), robin, squirrels. Sept. 1-Feb. I ; plover, 

 ■ i 1; black bass. July 15-Maroh 1: speckled trout. 



n, i : "swallow or box 



ck, dusky, duck, blue 



L'h 1. Use of term 

 berland excepted from 



March ! -Au: 



"Grouse or heath hen." > 

 martin" Oct. I to May 1; B. 

 Aug. 1 to April 1: wood, si 

 or green-winged teal, Sep 

 weasel unlawful. Sneaeh I 

 black bass law. 



South Carolina. 



Ruffed grouse, quail, woodcock and wild turkey, Sept. 15 

 March 15; deer, Sept. 1-March 1; doves, Sept. 15-March 15. 



Tennessee. 



Ruffed grouse, quail, woodcock, snipe, meadow lark and 

 deer, Sept. 15-March 1; wild turkey, Sept. 15-May 1. 



Law ouoted applies to counties of llenrv. Dyer, Giles, 

 Maury. Davidson, Madison, Hauiihoii, Bedford, VVffson. In 

 Montgomery and Cheatham counties, quail, grouse, lark, 

 Oct, 15-Maroh 1; woodcock, dove, turkey, Aug. 1-March 1; 

 snipe, plover, duck. Kept. I -May 1. In Robertson, Davidson, 

 Maury, Lincoln counties, turkey, quail, grouse, woodcock, 

 snipe, lark, Sept, 1-Feb. 1. In Shelby county, deer, squirrel- 

 tui kev, woodcock, snipe, lark. Sept. 1-1-Vb. 1 ; quad Oct. i 

 April' 1. Reel foot Lake: Non-residents of Obion and Lak 

 counties, forbidden to kill wildfowl for profit ; citizens ma- 

 kill for own use. Similar restrictions (al) game] 

 non-residents in Cumberland, Fentress, Morgan, Scott. Camp 

 bell, Overton, Putnam, Wnite, Roane, Rhea, Bledsoe, Vao 

 Buren counties. In Payette, Rutherford andTiptoi oountii 

 quail season, Oct. 1-April 1. 



Texas. 



Ruffed grouse. Jnlv 31 -Nov. I; quail. Sept. 1-March 1: pin- 

 naled grouse. July l-Mai-ch 1 ; wild turkey, Sept. 15-May 15; 

 deer, June 1 Dec. I. 



Law applies certain connties only. Deer law applies females 

 onlv. 



Utah. 



Ruffed, dusky, sharptail and sage grouse, and qaaiL Aug. 15- 

 March 15: wildfowl. Aug. 15-April 15: deer, antelope, elk 

 and mountain sheep, Aug. 1-Dec. I; black bass, prohibited to 



Imported quail, protected to 1885. The society is the Ota . 

 Came and Fish Protective Society. Secretary, L. S. Hill, Salt 

 Lake City, I'tah. 



Vermont. 



Ruffed grouse nnd woodcock. Sept. 1-Marrh 1; wildfowl, 

 Sept. I-M.-in !: dot-r proti cted to Nov. 1880; black bass. July 

 l-May 15: lake (.-almoin trout, longe. land-locked salmon, 

 Mav'l-Sept. 1; wall-eved pike, Mav -'"-April 'Jo. 



In Lake Champlain and tributaries, within ten miles of 

 mouth of stream, lish may be caught with hook and line at 

 au.\ time. I'-.' of flog in hunting mil, d grouse unlawful. 



Virginia. 



Ruffed grouse, Aug. 1-Feb. 1; quail. Nov. I -Feb. 1: wood- 

 cock, July !-l-Yb. I ; wildfowl, Sept. 1-May 1: wild turkey, Oct. 

 15-Feb. 1: deer. Sept. 1-Jau. 15: robin, >"ov. 1-April 1; speckled 

 trout, April 1-Sept, 15; black bass, July 1-May I. 



Law applies to certain counties only . 



Washington Territory, 

 Ruffed, sharptail, blue and pinnated grouse, deer and elk, 



Aug. 15-Jan. 1: quail, protected at all times; salmon, p ■ I |i i 

 trout, lake (salmon) trout, bulltrout, April 1-Oct. I, 



Law quoted applies to Walla, Walla and Columbia counties, 

 Fish law does not, apply to Columbia River. One person may 

 not kill more than twenty blue, ruffed or pinnated arouse iii 

 day. Elk may not be killed for traffic in hides an n 



West Virginia. 

 Ruffed and pinnated grouse and wild turkey. Sept. 1-Feb. I: 



quail. Oct. 15-Jan. 1; wildfowl, Nov, 1-April 1; deer. Sept. ri 

 Jan. 15; land-locked salmon, Jan. 1-Sept, 1 : speckled trout, 

 June 1-Sept, 1; jack salmon, June 15-May 1. 



AVildfowl shooting forbidden with "other than tie- common 

 shoulder gun." 



Wisconsin. 



Ruffed, sharptail and pill and quad, Wood 



duck, mallard and teal, Aug.. 15-Jan. l;woodcock, July Ht-.lan 

 ; deer. Sept t-Ji i peokled trout, April 13-Sept L5;blacl 



Chasins deer n-lthdoga unlawful: also wihffowl shootiiig 

 rith -'other than a gun ha.bitnsllv raised at arm's length and 

 [Ischarged Erora theshoulder," or by float, sneak boat! sail or 



teaiulioat. Unlawful to kill deer in Door county tor export, 



T for hide Grouse, quail, iu St. Croix count-,, Oct, I to .V.,-. -. 



el to export trout from Monroe i 



Wyoming. 



Ruffed grouse, Aug. 15-Oct, 15; quail, protected to 186?! 

 wildfowl, Aug. 15-Ma.v 15; pinnated, sage and sharptail grouse, 

 July 15-Nov. 15: deer and buffalo, Aug. i-Xov. 15; ptarxmgan 

 (White quail), July 15-Nov. 15; snipe, plover, curlew, Aug," 15- 

 April 1: moose. Aug. 1-Nov. 15; mountain goat and sheep, elk 

 and antelope. Aug. 1-Nov, 15. 



Greehshank, tattler, godwit; avoaet, Aug. 15-April 1. Traf- 

 fic in hides of game forbidden. Unlawful to kill any grouse 

 save for use as food. One person mav not kill niore tb 

 any one species of game birds iu one day. 



H#f and $iher ^Isliing. 



si. 



ANQLWQ RESORTS.— \Yn sIhtII hr r,lm! to haw- for pithh 

 cat hut iioit-N of f/oorl jUhini/ luvulihex. Will iml •■ 



spondents favor tm with notes of desirable points for anyliny 



To innurt' prompt, attention, eoininttnii-iition.i should he rot 

 dressedto the Forest and S/rnim IMbHshing Oo., c.,7 »,,; ',, 

 individuals, in whose absence from the offl 

 portanee are liable to delay. 



A TROUT1NG TRIP. 



FAR away, among the mountains oi Sullivan and Ulster 

 counties, N. V.. many miles Iruni the screeching- rail- 

 roads, lies a beautiful quiet valley, so narrow thai OOlj 

 single wagon road finds room alongside of ilie nuignilicenl, 

 trout stream that winds noisily through it. On either side. 

 Ihe forest-clad liills rise abruptly from Ilie v.iilcv, and with 

 the exception of an occasional saw-mill, then- are little [an 

 of civilization. 



Lute one afternoon in the latter part of May, a pan y of 

 fishermen could have been seen slowly driving ft 1 i ■ 

 over the wild rough corduroy load. The. , 



in.g from their travel-stained appeiiriince, a lotojj waj 

 nolhwithstanding, were jolly and well pleased with Ihe near 

 approach to their destination. Suddenly, ut a sha 



of (he road, they eame to a magnificent Spring sp 



of a little fissure iu the solid rock some rtrc 1 i 

 ground, and here the way-worn travelers slaked Ihe'u lliir-l 

 with praises of its purity and coolness This dul_\ per- 

 formed, the quartette, with a longing glance at the uuifnili- 

 ceni pools below, started again on their lone and dusty ride. 



The sun had now dropped behind the hills and the air 



M ol and fresh down the valley. Hie tinl<lin^- of W>W 



hell in the distance gives u sign of a near approach to civili 



zatiou, Presi-iitly the valley widens, giving n: i to a small 



farm, .a saw-mill and a cluster of dwellings. This is our 



home for the next few days, and with a cheei,\ slaml WO 

 dtivc up to the gale, scattering the ducks and chickens, and 

 exciting the house dog to loud and contimion 



i are soon unpacked and transferred to Our quarters, 

 and hurried preparations made for our plain but subsfaiili d 

 supper, which latter is soon over and w ar 

 of the house enveloped in a cloud of fragrant tobacco 

 smoke. What a change 1 rum the hot, noisy city! The air 

 feels cool and crisp, and the smoke- from the chimney rise- 

 straiaht up in flic yellow twilight. The whip-poor will is 

 calling in the woods up on tile hill, and tin- rapid -Imam 

 cat) be heard near by as it rushes over its rocky bed. Tired 

 out from our long drive, we soon turn in to dream ol im- 

 possible trout, and anxious for the morrow. 



The second flay opened bright aud pleasant, and we were 

 up early and eager for the fishing, arrayed in curious Bud 

 trampish-looking garments, and shod in hob-nailed wading 

 .--noes, we presented a queer appearance al tie 

 table, wliete we dispatched a soiid meal of flapjacks and 



baplc Sirup, trout, fried ham and potatoes. -.--' i. I n- 1 1 .. i 

 downward course by first-rate coffee aud rich milk. 



.Jointing our rod's and slinging our creels we divided olll 

 forces for the day, two going up and two down stream. Ai 

 last lam in the cold waters" of a trout brook, a. moment 

 looked forward to for many wenry months. PgM bow 

 chilly the water feels, and iow slippery tlie stom lui 

 otic soon gets used to it, and I carefully woik my way down 

 st ream, casting right ami left. The trout do mil "- ' 



very tungl-v, or perhaps they are on the ripples. I'n> 



entiy I reach a long, still si r.'tch, with deep wale, on one 

 slide', overhung by wdllows. Cautiously castiiu! 

 vance, inch by inch. 1 uiia-i bj - I rise, but miss him. 



Once more I drop my Hies close to the bushes, and will, ti 

 splash a line trout takes the strclclici, a lleaveikill. A 

 sharp struggle and 1 slip my little net under a P n-ineh fish 

 Then 1 catch two or threi 'lingei limes which I throw back 

 log! - and miss another line' one. To give thOB) a rest I 



wade i bi re and Ught a pipe. Silting on a mossy log! watch 



tin -i In -ineike cui-Iiiig up among the" herna m 



thi -lr:ia of the clouds swiftly I'luising one another over 



the purple, mountains. The spla'-h ■ ' i 



business, and once more I carefully lish flic still stretcll and 

 am rewarded by a couple of nice lish. 



angling down the hi.autil'ul river, enjoying every 



excepting when my leader gets fast up 



admiring the ferns and wild flowers, and listening (0 the 

 wild songsters along the .stream, Toward noon I u-adi a 

 splendid pool against flu mountain, the reflections from Ihe 

 trees giving it (I beautiful vivid green appearance, which 

 made a wonderful contrast to the clean 



(his side. Sti.nding back where I could not la ; 



my first cast in the riffle where it empties into the pool. 

 and then work mv way down toward the still water. I had 



