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Dry Fly on the Sourdnahunk 
(Continued from page 263) 
wishes, having been blown out evident- 
ly during a flight. Dark flies, Nos. 10’s 
and 12’s, were then taken with avidity, 
and having no large fiy shaped like an 
ant, I tried Milward’s Butcher, the 
Harlequin, the Alder and the Jungle 
Cock, and found them all very effective. 
Colorists, take note! 
Often on Daicey before sunrise, and 
sometimes on Kidney in the forenoon, 
were found duns of No. 12 size having 
grey bodies, three setae, and translu- 
cent wings with brown-spotted costal 
margins. We called them the “Cahill” 
duns, which of course they were not 
(they were the Ephemera varia), but 
It will identify you. 
the Grey Cahill, No. 10, dry, was so 
close an imitation of the body—color, 
shape and size—that they were well 
taken while the No. 15 was not touched 
at all. This may please the formalists. 
Personally, I believe that the manner 
of presentation is a far more material 
factor than color or form, except per- 
haps when the trout are rising wildly 
to a profuse hatch or fall, when a 
fairly exact imitation is essential; and 
after witnessing considerable splash- 
work with short heavy leaders, all the 
muscles of the back and shoulder going 
into the cast, although a good rod will 
do its own casting if not interfered 
with too much, and observing the lack 
of results therefrom, except occasional 
flukes—I hazard the opinion that one 
who fishes “fine and far off,” as 
Charles Cotton called it, and can cast 
lightly a line terminating in a nine or 
ten foot leader tapering down to 3-x or 
4-x drawn gut with a single small eyed- 
fly, wet or dry, will rise sizeable trout 
if the single small eyed-fly, wet or dry, 
aforesaid, bears the slightest resem- 
blance to any one of the 900,000 hexa- 
poda. 
Daicey had its Plecoptera or stone 
flies this past June. Last year I missed 
them, but found some of their exuviae 
on Lost Pond. For example, Perla 
postica, Walker, sometimes came up— 
grey body, head black and yellow 
striped, grey wings folded down on the 
back. The trout seemed to like them, 
and also the Grey Hackle, dry, No. 10, 
that we used when these perlids were 
on. There was also another perlid 
which appeared in July, called, locally, 
the “Salmon Fly,” 1% inches long, 
body and wings grey. Floating Grey 
Hackles killed well when this fly was 
up, but the fly was as large as a No. 4 
hook, and who but a _ butcher carries 
such a mass of steel in his fly box? 
Four different sedges (Trichoptera) 
appeared in numbers during July, be- 
side the “grannom” already mentioned: 
(1) grey body, yellow underneath, 
greyish-brown triangular wings, No. 
12 size, (2) dark body, yellow and black 
head, brownish triangular wings, No. 
10 size, (3) greyish-green body, ringed 
grey, grey triangular wings, No. 12 
size, (4) body grey from thorax to mid- 
dle, green from middle to last ring, tip 
ring brown, grey mottled triangular 
wings, No. 10 size. I’ll let Louis Rhead 
name these “duns.” Various other 
members of this family whose name is 
legion were often seen. The Wickham 
and the Sand Fly did very well when 
the sedges were about, but I didn’t have 
much luck with the three Halford 
sedges. If the sedges are on “when in 
doubt use a Wickham.” 
Once while fishing Jackson Pond, 
which I always found hard to fish, with 
that past-master of long-distance fly- 
casting, Mell Scott, A. C., M. W., U. of 
Page 306 
