430 
THE FISHING GAZETTE 
[June 10, 1893 
No. 1 .—Mr. G. Yaede, and Lewis and the Keeper looking at No. 2. 
his nose out of water, sometimes making a sudden rush as if after a 
minnow, or driving another fish away; the difficulty is to get your fly 
ju t in front of a fish bulging about in this way, and when you do 
10 to 1 if he will look at it. I was walking past this fish one day to try 
for another as big in the stream below, when I saw him move, and 
thought I would try him again. I had an oiled Gr.O.M. May-fly on. It 
floated down, supported entirely by the hackle, with both wings well out 
of the water, and to my surprise he made a bulge at it, was hooked, and 
after a fine fight killed. A beautifully shaped fish, but not so big as we 
had put him down to be—not quite 21b. 
No. ti picture shows a bit of Itchen, where the water runs very deep 
clo>e to the bank, and shallows off towards the other side. Great slices 
of the bank fall in from time to time from the undermining action of the 
water, and these lumps, lying one on another as they happen to fall, form 
splendid shelter for big trout, and by keeping well down and casting 
up to him I have killed many a good '• banker, ’ now and then getting 
No. .L—Mu. G. Yabpe trying a Dry-ply in Rough Water. 
No. 2.—The “Amateur Angler” Wading a Stream. 
No. 7.—Above the Hatches. 
No. 5 . — Mb. C. a. Payton (“ Sareello” of the Field) looking along the bank 
(No G) for a rising pish. 
