by Jurgen F. Preylowski - American Museum Of Fly Fishing
Transcription
by Jurgen F. Preylowski - American Museum Of Fly Fishing
The Thirtieth anniversary limited edition lithograph from original watercolor, The Bubble, by fly tyer and artist John Betts, 4 " x 16% ", with ample margins designed for museum-quality framing. Available in Anniversary Edition (edition of300 prints signed and numbered by the artist, unframed, $75) and Celebration Edition (edition of thirty prints in a shadowbox framing that includes the signed, numbered, and remarqued print as well as a fly tied by Betts that reflects the mayflies in the print, $25o-twelve of these will be offered at Museum dinner/auctions, leaving only eighteen available here). Order by phone (802) 362-3300 or by mail: AMFF, PO Box 42, Manchester, VT 05254. Shipping and handling is $5 for the Anniversary Edition, $12 for the Celebration Edition. VISA, Mastercard, and AmEx accepted. An International Cast F LY F I s H I N G . People all over the world indulge in this sport. Some even think about its history and want to share their findings and knowledge in The American Fly Fisher. This Spring 1998 issue is the most international I've had the pleasure to work on. First, Alvaro Masseini of Italy brings us "Fly Fishing in Valsesia, Italy: An Ancient Technique." In his article, Masseini discusses a fly-fishing technique found in the valley of the Sesia River in northern Italy. He explains its equipment and history-a history that has basically been passed on orally, not in written form. Then, in "A Fourth-Century European Illustration of a Salmon Angler:' Frederick Buller of England follows a lead to a bronze plate that was engraved with a representation of a fisherman during the Roman occupation of Britain. Jiirgen F. Preylowski of Germany is back with a photo essay culled from his collection of historic fly-fishing photographs. The text, "He Avoids Fashionable Costume:' was originally published in the February 1985 issue of Fliegenfischen. Richard C. Hoffmann of Canada translated the article for us, which addresses clothing and equipment deemed appropriate in Europe in the early part of this century. (Every spring journal needs a fashion section!) Some of the images were taken by Alexander Behm (see Winter 1998, vol. 24, no. 1, pp. 20 to 23), the others by an unknown photographer. My favorite appears on page 17, highlighting the camaraderie of Julie Helene Brehm, Horst Brehm, and Baron von der Ropp. Here in the United States, we're celebrating the thirtieth anniversary of the American Museum of Fly Fishing. On page 20, Board of Trustees President Richard G. Tisch highlights recent accomplishments, goals, and our appreciation of member support in "The Museum Reaches 30.'' We're also proud to have honored Trustee Gardner Grant with the Museum's Heritage Award this year at our successful benefit dinner in New York City (see Museum News for story and photos). As part of celebrating our thirtieth birthday, two artists have made their art available to the membership in limited edition prints. Pictured above is The Bubble, a watercolor by John Betts that turned out to be the most coveted piece in his art show last summer. The other, The Pool by Brett James Smith, is pictured on the inside back cover, where Executive Director Gary Tanner tells you more about both of them. Happy wading. KATHLEEN ACHOR,EDITOR Preserving the Heritage of Fly Fishing T R U S T E E S E. M. Bakwin Walter T. Matia Michael Bakwin Janet Mavec Foster Bam Wayne Nordberg Paul Bofinger Michael B. Osborne Donn Byrne, Sr. Allan K. Poole Pamela B. Richards James H. Carey Roy D. Chapin, Jr. Tom Rosenbauer Peter Corbin Robert G. Scott James Spendiff Thomas N. Davidson Charles Ferree Arthur Stern Reed Freyermuth John Swan Duncan Grant Richard G. Tisch David H. Walsh Gardner L. Grant Richard J. Warren James H. Hunter Woods King I11 Joe Wells James C. Woods T R U S T E E S E M E R I T I G. Dick Finlay David B. Ledlie Leon L. Martuch W. Michael Fitzgerald William Herrick Keith C. Russell Robert N. Johnson Paul Schullery Stephen Sloan O F F I C E R S President Vice Presidents Treasurer Secretary Journal of 4the American Museum of Fly Fishing SPRING 1998 VOLUME 24 Fly Fishing in Valsesia, Italy: An Ancient Technique. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Alvaro Masseini 2 . . . . . . . . . . .2 A Fourth-Century European Illustration of a Salmon Angler. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Frederick Buller He Avoids Fashionable Costume. . . . Jiirgen F. Preylowski (translated by Richard C. Hoffmann) NUMBER . . . . . . . . .6 . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 The Museum Reaches 30 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20 Richard G. Tisch Honoring Our Membership. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21 Museum News. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24 Contributors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28 Richard G. Tisch Arthur Stern Pamela B. Richards David H. Walsh James H . Carey James C. Woods oN T H E c o v E R : From the files of Jiirgen F. Preylowski, a photograph by Alexander Behm, dates uncertain. Preylowski documents angling dress in his photo essay, which begins on page 14. S T A F F Executive Director Administration Events eS- Membership Gary Tanner Marianne Kennedy Paula M. Welch T H E A M E R I C A N FLY F I S H E R Editor Design eS- Production Copy Editor ConsultingEditor Contributing Editor Kathleen Achor Randall Rives Perkins Sarah May Clarkson Margotpage Paul Schullery T h e American Fly Fisher is published four tlmes a year by the Museum at PO. Box 42, Manchester, Vermont 05254. Publliation dates are winter, spring, summer, and fall. Membership dues include the cost of the ~ournal($30) and are tax deductible as provided far by law Membership rates are listed in the back of each issue. All letters, manuscripts, photographs, and rnater~als intended for publication in the laurnal should be sent to the Museum. The Museum and journal are not responsible for unsallcltcd manuscripts, drawings, photographic material, or memorabilia. The Museum cannot accept respansiblllty for statements and interpretations that are wholly the author's. Unsolicited manuscripts cannot be returned unless postage is provided. Cantrlbutions ta The American Fly Fisher are to be considered gratuitous and the property of the Museum unless otherwise requested by the contributor. Articles appearing in this journal are abstracted and mdexed m Htstorical Abstracts and America: History and Lzfe. Copyright D 1998, the American Museum af Fly Flshing, Manchester, Vermont 05254. Original mater~alappearing may not be reprinted w~thoutprior permission. Second Class Permit pastagc p a d at Manchester Vermont 05254 and addltlonai offices (USPS 057410). The Amencan Fly Fisher (ISSN 0884.3562) POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Amencnn Fly Fisher, PO. Box 42, Manchestcr, Vermont 05254. SPRING 1998 1 Fly Fishing in Valsesia, Italy: An Ancient Technique by Alvaro Masseini I that our contemporary fly-fishing techniques originated in England at the beginning of the sixteenth century. It is also well known that during the same period, similar techniques spread in northern Spain, although historians do not agree whether these techniques originated in Spain or were imported by foreign pilgrims during their trip to the sanctuary of Santiago Compostelo. Many fly-fishing historians agree that even in ancient Greece, some species of fish were caught with artificial flies made of feathers. But only a few people are aware that T IS C O M M O N KNOWLEDGE Fishing with the classical Valsesiana rod: two pieces of natural reed with the bamboo top (thefisherman is Arturo Pugno, an expert of this technique, the president of the local association of anglers). ABOVE: 2 T H E A M E R I C A N FLY F I S H E R in addition to the classic Anglo-Saxon traditions, other methods developed independently in geographic areas located far from the great arteries of European communication. In these culturally "closed" areas, a fishing tradition grew based on the use of artificial flies, but these methods were rather different from the "English technique." One of these areas is the valley of the Sesia River in northern Italy. The typical fly-fishing technique there is called Valsesiana. I became aware of the Valsesiana technique and its variation, pesca a frusta, when I saw anglers using them and when I read about them in Italian fishing manuals published before the 1970s. Since then, one can seldom find articles on the Valsesiana technique in specialized magazines, and there is no information published at all about the pesca a frusta. The Sesia River valley, located in northwest Italy near the city of Vercelli in the Piedmont region, covers a surface area of 1,000 square kilometers. The Sesia River springs from the Monte Rosa, which, at 13,899 feet, is one of the highest mountains in Europe. It runs through the provinces of Vercelli and Novara and flows from the north into the great Po River. A mountain and high-hill area, Valsesia is characterized by meadows and forests in the north and wineries in the south. Umberto Eco wrote in The Name of the Rose that during the Middle Ages the impervious territory of the high valley of the Sesia River, almost inaccessible, sheltered the followers of the heretic monk Fra Dolcino. This large group of people was persecuted and slaughtered at Varallo in 1307 by the papist troops of the Bishop of Vercelli. The Sesia River is a large-size alpine stream in which grayling and brown and marble trout find the best environment. The latter species-the Salrno I I trutta m a r r n o r a t u ~ i sa biotype exclusively found in Italian alpine and Slovenic rivers that can reach a weight of more than 20 pounds. This secluded environment of alpine valleys produced a peculiar fly-fishing technique. The first written evidence of this technique is found in a cadastral map of lands located in the municipality of Valmuccia, dated 1775. It shows the icon of a fisherman whose posture and rod represent use of the Valsesiana technique. No other written sources have been found so far to reconstruct the history of this indigenous fly-fishing technique. To study its origins and development, the historian has to rely on an oral tradition passed down for centuries through the generations. Its inventors belonged to those populations who seldom leave written records of their material and spiritual life (bear in mind that until World War I, more than fifty percent of the Italian population was illiterPhotographs by Alvaro Masseini ate). Even today, no current book exists to illustrate this technique: it was taught, and learned, through experience. It is clear that this technique was not affected by any external influence. Angelo Bruni's book, I1 libro pratico del pescatore all 'amo in acque dolci (1934; The Practical Manual of the Fresh- Water Fisherman with a Hook, one of the first manuals of fishing in Italy), in its opening chapter on fly fishing reads: "True fly fishing, which was born in England and later successfully spread in Germany, America, France, etc., is practically unknown in our country. I went throughout all Lombard valleys, fished many mountain streams, but I never found any person who knew, at least, the basic elements of this system" (p. 337). In Italy, the English fly-fishing technique became known in the late 1940s and developed along with two preexisting indigenous techniques, the Landscape of the Sesia River near the town of Varallo. Valsesiana and the pesca a frusta (a variation of Valsesiana, using the rod like a whip). The Sesia River's fame for its exquisite trout dates back to the eighteenth century at least. Napoleon was so enthusiastic about the Sesia's fish that he made the river a reserve of the French empire. At the beginning of the nineteenth century, the philosopher Melchiorre Gioa and the historian Vincenzo Cuoco-two republican and pro-French Italian intellectuals actively collaborating with the Cisalpine Republic-in the preface to an ordinance addressed to local people wrote: "Fishing is forbidden at Albertagno, Varallo, Cravagliana, Rinello, Fobello, because the Sesia River belongs to the French Empire. The quality of the trout fish of Sesia is excellent." (This quote is printed in a recent advertising brochure issued by the Valsesia association of local anglers with no reference to the original). SPRING 1998 3 Marble trout, a large type of the Italian and Slovenian alpine areas. In the Piave, Tagliamento, and Isonzo rivers, marble trout of 9 to lo pounds can befished rather frequently. A few weigh more than 20 pounds. R O D . The Valsesiana rod was made of a body of natural reed (Arundo donax) of the Gramineous family. Its length was between 12 and 14 feet, and it had no reel. It was built in three pieces: the first was lo feet long and made in seasoned natural reed; the second piece was made of the same material, approximately 2 feet, 4 inches long; and the top piece was made of thin bamboo. These three pieces, connected by metal rings, constituted a flexible and strong tool. This type of rod is not easily available today. Anglers using the Valsesiana techniques now use telescopic fiberglass, parabolic action rods of similar length. THE T H E L I N E . The line is tied to the top. Its length-a little longer than the rodvaries according to the angler's height. At the appropriate length, the right hand can keep the rod straight while the left hand holds the hooked fish. The extraordinary thing about this line is that it is made with hair taken from the tail of a white male horse (the 4 T H E A M E R I C A N FLY F I S H E R hair from the tail of a female horse is weakened by urine). The line has a conic shape. At its beginning, the braid is made of twenty horsehairs; it gradually decreases to one to four horsehairs at its end. To allow a perfect floating, the braid must be softly made with the knots not too tight. Although today many Valsesiana anglers use nylon for the last 2 feet, 8 inches of the line, local anglers prefer an end made of only one horsetail hair for a softer fall of the line in the water. Horsetail hair ends are still available in some specialized stores of Valsesia. PAT T E R N s . Far from being imitations of real insects, artificial flies used in the Valsesiana technique are "free" interpretations, giving the impression or suggestion of real insects. They are simple flies with characteristics similar to wet and dry flies. These flies are essentially emergers built with extremely soft feathers, which, for the most part, stay in the water and work just under the surface. This type of dressing is a direct response to the particular characteristics of the streams in Valsesia and in all the surrounding mountain areas. The Valsesiana technique requires the use of three artificial flies at the same time: the first one must be placed at the tip of the line, then the three flies are spaced from 1foot to 1foot, 4 inches apart from each other. F E A T H E R s . Feathers are the most important feature of these special dressings. One to four feathers must be placed around the hook, depending on the characteristics of the river. Feathers are chosen according to the season and the hatch. Strongly bent hooks are used. The body of these tail-less flies is made of unpainted silk thread to allow a light sinking. Colors vary according to the type of fish: for the trout, yellow, hazel, blue, violet, brown, red, and black; for the grayling, a longer color list, including light pink, light blue, light green, and gray. Hooks also vary according to the fish: larger-from number 8 to 14 -for the trout; smaller-number 16 and 17-for the grayling. The fundamental characteristic that makes these flies particularly effective is the softness of the feathers, which must V Valsesiana artificialflies with horsehair line and fiberglass telescopic rod. be carefully chosen from mountain birds with feather barbules that are soft and thin (these barbules provide the bird with excellent protection from the cold weather). For the trout, partridge, great grouse, and light and dark woodcock feathers are used; the grayling dressings are made of thrush, fieldfare, starling, grosbeak, or bullfinch feathers. However. some of these birds are auite rare and' therefore protected unde; the law. In this case. substitute feathers can be used. ~alsesianaartificial flies have no wings. They are built using the same techniques with which spiders and diptera are tied in the English tradition: a light silky body with hackles pushed forward (see photo above). The fundamental principle of the Valsesiana technique is the special relationship the angler establishes with both water and prey. At first, fishing the Valsesiana way may seem simpler than the English technique. Unlike the latter, long castings with short rods are not used. The rod acts like a whip without leaving a mark as it softly places the flies parabolic, no-reel rod with a conic plaswhich, to the fish's eyes, may appear as tic line (two to three times longer than if they have just fallen from the sky, the rod) with a nylon end and two to been transvorted bv the stream. sunken three wet flies (spider type) drifting in lazily, or are jumpy and unreachable like the stream. When the fish is hooked and an evhemeral hatching. Thanks to the won, the long line is taken back by hand rod i n d its slightly logger line, the an- and rewound on the left arm. It is hard gler in the stream can precisely place the to find someone practicing the pesca a flies to every pool or rock where a fish frusta variation of the Valsesiana techmay be waiting for feeding. This type of nique in central Italy today. The English rod also allows the angler to use his or technique has entirely taken over the old her wrist to make the artificial flv move traditions. The Valsesiana technique still has a and look like a living insect, a trick that is often very effective. In fast water, the number of clever vractitioners who will fish's attack is almost always fast. Conse- pass this tradition to the next generaquently, the angler's strike must be just tions. But the pesca a frusta variation as rapid. lacks historical and cultural background The technique born in Valsesia has -it does not have any future. Pesca a spread to the nearby valleys. Still prac- frusta is less useful than the English ticed today by many passionate local technique. The low price of the rod anglers, a modernized method uses fib- (about $20) seems to be its only attracerglass rods and silk or plastic instead of tive quality. Because of the difficult horsehair lines. As in the past, local manual way of pulling the line back, the dressings are used. The pesca a frusta very long rod, and the extreme length of variation (using the rod like a whip) its always-stretched line casting, it is spread only moderately in the central only useful in large rivers inhabited by regions of Italy since the beginning of chub (Leuciscus cephalus) and impossithe century. It uses a similar 12-foot ble to use in the Appennine streams and long telescopic fiberglass, flexible and brooks where the trout live. - SPRING 1998 5 A Fourth-Century European Illustration of a Salmon Angler by Frederick Buller H SPENT many years studying medieval church wall paintings in my search for early English illustrations of anglers, and subsequently having published my findings in The American Fly Fisher ("The Earliest English Illustrations of an Angler:' vol. 19, no. 3), I was anxious to follow up another lead pointing to a representation of a fisherman that was engraved during the Roman occupation of Britain (which ended circa A.D. 410). My lead was found in a footnote in William Radcliffe's Fishing from the Earliest Times (1921), which refers to a drawing in a book that he attributed to W. King, illustrating "a diadem [crown AVING 6 T H E A M E R I C A N FLY F I S H E R or headdress worn by an officiating priest] of [Romano-British] beaten bronze representing a fisherman with pointed cap. . . in the act of hooking. . . a fine salmon."l My investigation was delayed somewhat, as I discovered that King was not the author in question. The information in Radcliffe's note was culled from the privately printed and rare book Roman Antiquities at Lydney Park, Gloucestershire (1879).~Published posthumously, it was the work of the Reverend William Hiley Bathurst, with additional notes by W. King. ~ u r t h e rinvestigation ultimately revealed a drawing of an engraved bronze plate. The plate was found during excavations in 1805 at Lydney Park in Gloucestershire. It depicted a seated fisherman holding a rod and in the act of landing a salmon (see the right-hand side of the bottom drawing in Figure I, above) and ipso facto was an illustration of a British angler some 600 years earlier than the aforementioned earliest English illustration. The site of the Roman camp at Lyd- F I G U R E 1 . Drawings of bronze fragments, items 1 and 2, from William Hiley Bathurst's Roman Antiquities at Lydney Park, Gloucestershire. By permission of the British Library, shelfmark 7705.J4. A map ofthe southern half of England and Wales (Britannia) showing Lydney in relation to four cities prominent in Roman times (there were more than fify of them). FIGURE 2. 3 . This view across the Severn estuary from Lydney (the site of the Roman camp or watchtower) is commanding, which may account for its being chosen by the invading Celts, who probably arrived from Brittany some zoo years before the Roman invasion. According to Leonard Cottrell in The Great Invasion (1958), "In the late second century B.C. tribes from Brittany settled in Cornwall. . . . Later they moved on to the Cotswolds and may have exploited the iron in the Forest of Dean" (p. 47). By the same token, the Roman lookout on the hilltops of Lydney could scan miles of the river Severn and communicate to other Roman fortresses (Painswick and Selsley Hill) on the opposite shoreline. This drawing first appeared in Roman Antiquities in Lydney Park, Gloucestershire. By permission of the British Library, shelfmark 7705.j4. F I G U RE ney Park on the southern edge of the ancient Forest of Dean is about a mile and a half from the western bank of the river Severn and about nine miles above its confluence with the river Wye. The city of Gloucester is twenty miles upriver (see Figures 2 and 3). The Roman remains were first noticed when Roman coins and other antiquities were recovered after Benjamin Bathurst-a forebear of both William H. Bathurst and the present owner, the third Viscount Bledisloe-purchased the estate in 1723 and the details of these and other finds were published by Major Hayman Rooke in Arch~ologia (1777, p. 207).3When in 1805 Benjamin's SPRING 1998 7 grandson, the Right Honorable C. Bathurst, was having some holes dug on the estate in order to plant trees, he found the extensive foundation walls of a temple together with a whole range of Roman buildings. Included in these remains were mosaic pavements, hypocausts, and painted stucco adorning the walls. Most significantly, the series of coins that were found-representing the reigns of many Roman emperors-pointed to an occupation by Romans for the whole period of their dominion in Britain. Such a long occupation accounts for changes in the character of artifacts from those associated with a military station to artifacts associated with a temple where citizens hoped to be cured of both physical and mental ills. Many representations of dogs in stone, bronze, and bone and other votive offerings have been found.4 These include the famous Lydney dog, a miniature of a wolfhound, which is one of the finest surviving pieces of Romano-British sculpture. It is on display in the museum room at Lydney Park, which is open to visitors during the summer months. The Romans were not the first to use the five-acre hill site at Lydney. In 1928, Sir Mortimer Wheeler, Britain's most famous archaeologist, reexcavated the site (fortunately, the previous excavators had stopped at the Roman level) and established proof of an earlier Celtic occupation of the hill fort. The Celtic tribes (called Silures by the Romans) mined iron ore. Doubtless they continued to do so after the Roman occupation, but probably as slave workers. Marks on the mine walls made by the miners' picks at Lydney-in what is now the only surviving Roman mine in Britain-are still discernible. The mixing of cultures is exemplified by the Roman temple built on this site during the late fourth century by the fleet supply depot commander Titus Flavius Senilis. It was dedicated to the Celtic god Nodens (the greatest god of F I G U R E 4 . Sadly, the already damaged tessellated pavements at Lydney revealed and drawn in the last century were not conserved at the time of their uncovering because of crippling cost estimates. The drawing reproduced here is the cella pavement within the temple (the only one that was conserved because it was covered over again). The frieze is made up of the images of normal fish and two sea serpents that are not unlike paleontologist? Ichthyosaurids (wrongly identified as dolphins by Sir Mortimer Wheeler) with pectoral paddles or flippers. The dedication to Nodens, "God of the deeps," despite the fragmentary state of the pavement, has been patiently but conjecturally formulated by Wheeler: "To the god Nodens, Titus Flavius Senilis, oficer in charge of supply-depot of the fleet, laid this pavement out of money offerings; the work being i n charge of Victorinus, interpreter on the governor's staff" Photograph courtesy of the British Library. By permission of the British Library, shelf mark 7705.j4. the Silurians) and marked a local upsurge in paganism at a time when Christianity was widely established as the official religion of the Roman Empire.5 The temple was part of a building complex designed to house staff and visitors, embracing ten chapels-some with mosaic pavements (Figure 4)within an arcaded and paved cella (central area) that was surrounded by a processional corridor (ambulatory). Doubtless it was not only used by local dignitaries and important visitors, who would have enjoyed the lavish centrally heated accommodation and the ritual baths, but as Wheeler thought probable, "Fishermen from the Severn must have toiled up the narrow rocky path to this shrine," especially since Nodens, "God of the deeps," was supposed to have powers over the sun and the sea.6 Having viewed Bathurst's book at the British Library and Wheeler's papers courtesy of Sue Byrne, archaeology officer of Gloucester's City Museum and Art Gallery, I sought permission to view the bronze fragments that are housed in the museum room at Viscount Bledisloe's home at Lydney Park. Permission to visit was readily granted by Museum Custodian Mrs. B. Butcher, although she was not hopeful that the fragmented plate depicting a fisherman landing a salmon (marked item 2 in the drawing in Bathurst's book, p. 4) remained in the collection. This doubt reinforced my anxiety. I already knew that although Wheeler described the images on the larger fragment in Figure 1 in his report of the Excavation of the Prehistoric Roman, and Post Roman Site in Lydney Park, published by the Society of Antiquaries of London (i932), he made no reference to the image of a fisherman when he described the small fragment. On my arrival at Lydney Park I was given leave to search the collection of Romano-British bronzes for the "missing" item. Wheeler had described both upper and lower fragments as repoussk SPRING 1998 9 the authirvat ~ y b n e ~ ~ in a rNovember k 1997. ~t ;s parTictharly appropriate that the author was given permission to execute this research by the owner Viscount Bledisloe, because this lord and his father before him have always been dedicated salmon fishers. work, that is, raised or beaten (from the underside) into relief. Items 123 and 124 in Wheeler's report should have corresponded with items 1and 2 in Bathurst's drawings. Wheeler described items 123 and 124 thus: "Fragments of bronze ornamented in repoussk. The larger fragment may have formed part of a head-dress7 or may on the other hand have been part of the decoration of a tray or dish. It shows in the center the oriental sungod, armed with a scourge and standing in a four-horsed chariot. On each side of him flies a putto [representation of a naked child or child in swaddling] holding apparently a flaming torch, and be10 T H E A M E R I C A N FLY F I S H E R yond these again are two tritons [imaginary sea monsters] of whom one holds two anchors and the other an uncertain object, perhaps a conch-shell [a shell used by tritons as a trumpet or horn]."s He continued, "The small fragment (124) represents part of a swag with the figure of putto holding a basket and perhaps an agricultural implement. Both these items were found during earlier excavations."9 Whereas Wheeler's description of the large fragment, item 123, corresponded with item 1in Bathurst and King's drawing, his item 124 fragment, the so-called small fragment, did not correspond with their item 2 fragment. The confu- sion caused by the archaeologists' conflicting statements was resolved when I noticed that the small fragment, item 2 (now separated in the collection from item I), was not, as described, ornamented in repoussk, but plainly engraved on both sides. Bathurst had described one side and Wheeler the other! As the reader can observe, my photograph offers a more convincing image of the Romano-British salmon fisherman than the nineteenth-century drawing (Figure 5). The fish is undeniably a salmon, "the chief glory of the Severn." If the reader wonders why the rod in this illustration is so short and the line so thick, let him look below at two relief FIGURE 6. A Greek angler from the Agathemeros Relief; circa third century B.c., from Fishing from the Earliest Times (London: John Murray, 1921), facingp. 236. images (Figures 6 and 7) from classical antiquity and note the similarity in the thickness or crudity of those items. Notice also that all three anglers are seated, that all are right-handed, that all have a hooked fish attached to their lines, and that all are equipped with a creel. The Romano-British angler has his creel suspended from the shoulder (the modern way), whereas the other two have a hand-held creel. Perhaps the shoulder creel of the Lydney angler reflects the six centuries separating the fabrication of these images-and marks a change in fashion. I sent a copy of this photograph to Linda Woolley, assistant curator of tex- tile and dress at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, to see if the hood or mantle and the clothing worn by the angler was fashionable fourth-century British clothing or had any other known significance. Woolley, despite her considerable interest in the item. was unable to relate it to other dress items of the period because examples simply do not exist. Her earliest comparative work-ing material was eighth-century Anglo-Saxon. Indeed, she considered the Lydney fisherman's dress as "source material." In this context it is probably helpful to defer to the Reverend William Hiley Bathurst who wrote, "On the other side [meaning the right-hand side of item z] sits the votary [one who is bound by vows] of Nodens, the Silurian fisherman, enveloped in the hooded frieze mantle worn to this day [1868] by his brethren of Naples, and who, by the favor of god, has just hooked a magnificent salmon."lo - E N D N O T E S 1. William Radcliffe, Fishing from the Earliest Times. London: John Murray, 1921, p. 195. 2. William Hiley Bathurst, Roman Antiquities at Lydney Park, Gloucestershire. London: Longmans, Green & Co., 1879 (British Library Catalog shelf mark 7705.f.4). With additional notes by W. King. SPRING 1998 11 FIGURE 3. This reference to Major Hayman Rooke's piece (Arch~ologiaor Miscellaneous Tracts Relating to Antiquity, vol. 5. London: Society of Antiquaries of London, 1779) cited in Reverend William Hiley Bathurst's Roman Antiquities at Lydney Park, Gloucestershire (1777) is incorrect; the date was 1779. 4. "Exports from Britain which reached the Roman World included wheat, hunting-dogs [author's emphasis] and a species of freshwater pearl, of which Caesar was particularly fond." Leonard Cottrell, The Great Invasion. London: Pan Boolzs Limited, 1958, p. 48. 5. Established by the Emperor Constantine in A.D. 325 at a time when the vast proportion of his subjects were not Christians. 6. R. E. M. Wheeler, Excavation of the Prehistoric Roman, and Post Roman Site in Lydney Park, Gloucestershire. London: Society of Antiquaries of London, 1932, pp. 90-105. 7. "Worn either by the idol itself or by the offi- 12 THE AMERICAN FLY F I S H E R 7. An Etruscan panel from Orvieto, c. 300 B.C. According to B. Ashmole, sometime keeper of the department of Greek and Roman antiquities of the British Museum, in a letter published by The Fishing Gazette (13 May 1939), the panel may have been a part of a fountain. "This would probably be the front of the fountain, the jet coming through the hole." Photograph courtesy of The Fishing Gazette. ciating priest," according to Reverend William Hiley Bathurst, in Roman Antiquities at Lydney Park, Gloucestershire. London: Longmans, Green 81 Co., 1879, p. 40. 8. Wheeler, Excavation of the Prehistoric Roman, and Post Roman Site in Lydney Park, Gloucestershire, p. 90. 9. Wheeler, Excavation of the Prehistoric Roman, and Post Roman Site in Lydney Park, Gloucestershire, p. 90. lo. Bathurst, Roman Antiquities, p. 195. SPRING 1998 13 He Avoids Fashionable Costume Photograph taken by Alexander Behm (see The American Fly Fisher, Winter 1998, vol. 24, no. 1, pp. 2*23), dates uncertain. 14 T H E AMERICAN FLY F I S H E R by Jurgen F. Preylowski Julie Helene Brehm (1867-1912). Taken by a n unknown photographer, c. 1900. H o w H A P P Y Dr. Karl Heintz would be today to know that his beloved "rucksack" has been taken over directly into the English language without translation! He even wrote in his 1903 book Angelsport i n Siisswasser [tr.: SportIJishing i n Fresh Water], " . . . the English are otherwise so practical that it is incomprehensible to me why they have still have not yet adopted our rucksack [tr.: literally i n German, back bag]." But even in Heintz's Germany this so highly praised piece of equipment had not yet been adopted by all anglers at the turn of the century. Dr. Horst Brehm, in the 1904 book Die Fischwaid [tr.: Game Fishing] by Dr. Fritz Skowronnek, is quoted as saying " . . . in southern Germany the rucksack is surely in general use, [but] in northern Germany the angler who carries a rucksack on his back still often gives rise to public merriment." Originally published in Fliegenfischen, February 1985, pp. 50-51. English translation by Richard C. Hoffmann. SPRING 1998 15 Photograph taken by Alexander Behm, dates uncertain. The question of appropriate clothing and equipment took up far greater space in angling books of the turn of the century than it does today Surely the chief reason for this was that one could not then get to the fishing waters so quickly and easily. Time-consuming journeys by rail, coach, and foot forced anglers to take account of every possible weather condition and be correctly equipped to meet it. Although a strong national[ist] attitude is found in all an- gling literature at that time, there was still no truly competitive alternative to English goods in the area of clothing (as was also the case in the areas of rods, reels, and flies). Recommended in fishing catalogs and angling books were outer fabrics of mountain loden (heavy wool) and the "millerainierte" cloth of the Imperial navy (an early waterproof cloth with air permeability), and undergarments of wool and buckskin. But recognized as the best were products of the Left to right: Julie Helene Brehm, her husband Dr. Horst Brehm (1863-1917), and Baron von der Ropp. Dr. Horst Brehm was the founder and first president of the Deutscher Anglerbund (German Angler Association). His father was Alfred Brehm (1829-i884), better known as "Tiervater Brehm," who wrote and published the largest encyclopedia of animals, Brehms Thierleben (first edition in six volumes published from 1864 to 1869). Taken by an unknown photographer, c. 1900. English firms Anderson, Anderson & Anderson, Cording & Co., and Burburry. This was especially true for the wading boots so important to the fly fisher, but only a few could afford this English luxury. Germans more often wore sturdy mountain boots with linen leggings, solid cowhide fishermen's boots, or thinner ones made from Russian leather. Naturally these had to be carefully oiled with Mars01 [tr: Mars oil] before and after fishing. But because there was still no guarantee of dry feet, the recommendation was simply to carry two of everything. Scarcely a single old photo [shows] a fly fisher without a hat-an important item for protection against sun and rain, but at the time also the most practical place to keep leaders prepared with flies on hand. Innumerable details were thought through: the arrangement of pockets, the buttons concealed so that nothing would get tangled, even the soSPRING 1998 17 Baron von der Ropp, photographer unknown, c. 1900. The baron's daughter wrote to Mr. Preylowski in 1985, when she was eighty-two years old, saying that this photograph (and the ones on pages 15 and 17) had been taken in Saxony. called grandfather's cuff for the chamois leather knee breeches. Far ahead of his own time was Max von dem Borne, who made recommendations in the fourth edition of his angling book, Taschenbuch der Angelfischerei (1904) [tr.: Pocket Book of Angling], to women who fished: "They may put on a cornbination of women's hunting and cycling costume with knickers and a short skirt. Have many small and large pockets, though these are rarely present in women's clothes. With that are worn high waterproof laced boots and heavy linen leggings. A pert little loden or sailor's hat looks good and makes a good place to wind up leaders. A short waterproof cape of loden will serve as a coat." But the fly fisher was also advised against being dressed Photograph taken by Alexander Behm, dates uncertain. too fashionably. All authors then urged clothing that was unobtrusive in natural surroundings, as did von dem Borne: "The color should be brown, gray, hunters' green or mottled, in any case not conspicuous." This advice would still hold today for those fly fishers who walk around like moving billboards for the tackle industry. Thanks to modern materials, these days we find it much easier to dress ourselves for the weather. But Dr. Karl Heintz's recommendation of 1903 still holds: "In selecting clothing, the sport fisher should above all make sure that it protects him against wetness from above and wetness from below." - SPRING 1998 l9 The Museum Reaches 30 by Richard G. Tisch, P R E S I D E N T BOARDO F TRUSTEES T HOUGH WE ARE precise in describing the fish we catch and celebrate to others -"that bonefish weighed 8 % pounds" or "the rainbow was 17% inchesn-we seem to prefer celebrating only anniversaries cornfortably divisible by five. If you've been married a mere twenty-two years, you and your spouse may be the only ones taking notice of this estimable mark. Reach twenty-five and it's a silver anniversary with more friends and relatives than hairwing salmon flies or Clouser Minnows in your vest. The Museum is pushing thirty, and we're not about to break traditionwe're celebrating, too. These are some of the highlights since our silver anniversary in 1993. Your Museum's collection continues to grow: 2,800 books, scores of manuscripts and journals, untold magazines, with many first and rare editions (I recently gazed at a 1558 volume of Rondelet's Histoire des Poissons). Through the generosity of trustees, members, and friends, we continue to add to the tens of thousands of flies and thousands of reels and rods, many of which are extraordinary and some of which are mundane, but all of which represent the evolution of fly fishing. These artifacts and the creels, fly boxes, and hundreds of other objects celebrate more than just the history of a sport-they embrace in part the folklore, ethics, social strata, art history, commercial marketing, conservation history, economics, industry, and literature of generations of fly fishers. Each object has a unique story, having been held, cast, tied, written, read, or carried by past or present anglers, and visitors to the Museum are invited-no, urged-to imagine those glories, conjure them up, with every story being possible and none less real than any other. The American Fly Fisher grows in 20 T H E A M E R I C A N FLY F I S H E R stature as well, Through the able editorship of Kathleen Achor and the artistic design marvels of Randall Perkins, this journal sustains a respectable scholarship in fly fishing and acquaints readers with events of the past that have shaped the sport. It is a beautiful journal, too, having won first place in the scholarly journal category for its design in the 1996 New England Museum Association's publication awards. This issue of the journal will be funded in part by advertisers, which will help us cover costs as we add more color. Let us know what you think of it. We think it's terrific. The Museum now has a full-time membership directorlevents coordinator, Paula Welch, and a director of administration, Marianne Kennedy. Membership has grown almost 20 percent in the last six months-the largest such increase in at least a decade. We forecast continued growth at more than 20 percent annually through 2000 and expect to achieve it. The financial and other records of the Museum, needed to ensure smooth handling of donations, dinnerlauctions, payroll, and dozens of other transactions required of nonprofit organizations have never been better handled. We're interviewing candidates for curator and expect to hire someone shortly. Our executive director, Gary Tanner, in only seven months has presided over the development and early implementation of the Museum's first three-year business plan, engineered substantial membership growth, and overseen the strongest end-of-year financial results in memory. With the full support of the trustees, Gary will continue to ensure that the American Museum of Fly Fishing remains a permanent institution dedicated to the careful and responsible stewardship of angling objects. Among the expected changes for 1998 are the hiring of a part-time registrar, quarterly exhibits featuring the Museum's collection, and publication of a quarterly newsletter, similar to the former Greenheart Gazette. You may read more about saltwater fly fishing too. The Board of Trustees has both many new and many well-recognized faces. Their judgment and dedication have provided a needed steadying influence these past few challenging years. Trustees do, indeed, owe a duty of disinterested loyalty, but the service provided by many trustees has been exceptional, for which I am profoundly grateful. Recently, the trustees' donations to the Museum, and those of Museum friends, have been unequaled. Thanks to the trustees, the Museum has a dedicated Endowment Fund with a balance of more than $loo,ooo, commitments of at least another $50,000, and the likelihood that substantially more will be added to the account before year's end. Although the endowment is still small, what required twenty-nine years to create has effectively tripled in one month. The board and staff still have many challenges before them, such as maintaining financial stability, hiring a curator, ensuring membership growth, implementing educational outreach programs, enhancing exhibitions, and continuing the care and growth of the collection. With your continued support, however, we will accomplish these goals and set our sights beyond them. The American Museum of Fly Fishing is a vibrant, healthy thirty-year-old. Thank you for this birthday present. - Honoring Our Membership C L U BA N D T R A D ES U P P O R T E R S The Museum's ability to accomplish its mission has been significantly enhanced by the support of fly-fishing clubs and members of the fly-fishing trade who realize that yesterday is as important as tomorrow when it comes to the future of fly fishing. We are thankful to them for their many contributions of time and resources. Abenaki Publishers Bennington, Vermont The American Museum of Wildlife Art Minneapolis, Minnesota Angler's & Shooter's Bookshelf Goshen, Connecticut The Anglers Journal Livingston, Montana Athens Fly Fishing Shop Athens, Georgia Battenkill Angler Manchester, Vermont The Bay King Club Tokyo, Japan Callahan & Co., Booksellers Peterborough, New Hampshire Catskill Fly Fishing Center Livingston Manor, New York The Cortland Line Company Cortland, New York The Diablo Valley Fly Fishermen Walnut Creek, California Federation of Fly Fishers Bozeman, Montana Fish & Game Frontiers Wexford, Pennsylvania Fishing World Floral Park, New York Fly Fisherman magazine Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Fly Fishers of Virginia Richmond, Virginia Fiy Fishing Outfitters San Francisco, California Fly Tier's Primer Carrollton, Texas The Fontinalis Club Vanderbilt, Michigan Gates AuSable Lodge Grayling, Michigan Glenn Struble Manufacturing Co. Sutherlin, Oregon Golden West Women's Flyfishers San Francisco, California Gray's Sporting Journal Augusta, Georgia Green Mountain Fly Tyers Chittenden, Vermont Hexagraph Fishing Rods Houston, Texas The H. S. Trask Company Bozeman, Montana The Joe Jefferson Club Saddle River, New Jersey Key Largo Angler's Club Key Largo, Florida Kidd Guide Services Auckland, New Zealand Me1 and Fanny Krieger's Club Pacific San Francisco, California Lang's Sporting Collectibles Raymond, Maine The Lyons Press New York, New York Martin J. Keane, Classic Rods Ashley Falls, Massachusetts Midwest Fly Fishers Minneapolis, Minnesota The Orvis Company Manchester, Vermont Orvis San Francisco San Francisco, California Press of the Sea Turtle Easthampton, Massachusetts Primal Scream Outfitters Sun Valley, Idaho Quest Fly Fishing Shop Louisville, Kentucky Retreats Nashville, Tennessee River Essentials Honesdale, Pennsylvania River Graphics Portland, Oregon River's Edge Oklahoma City, Oklahoma R. L. Winston Rod Company Twin Bridges, Montana Rodale Press, Inc. Emmaus, Pennsylvania Rod & Reel magazine Camden, Maine Scientific Anglersl3M St. Paul, Minnesota South Creek Outfitters Lyons, Colorado Sporting Classics magazine Columbia, South Carolina The Sporting Life Memphis, Tennessee Stackpole Books Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania Theodore Gordon Flyfishers New York, New York Thomas & Thomas Rodmakers Turners Falls, Massachusetts Trout Unlimited Arlington, Virginia Troutwater Supplies Kelowna, British Columbia United Fly Tyers, Inc. Woburn, Massachusetts Vagabond Angler Castle Rock, Colorado C L U BA N D T R A D E continued Vermejo Park Ranch Raton, New Mexico Vermont Dept. of Fish &Wildlife Waterbury,Vermont C O R P O R A TAEN D F O U N D A T I O N M E M B E R SThe significant financial contributions of our corporate and foundation members have always been vital to the day-to-day operation of the Museum as well as to its ability to carry out its mission: the preservation of our fly-fishing heritage. Baron Technology Vermont Inst. of Natural Sciences Woodstock, Vermont The Kara Foundation Trumball, Connecticut Bloomingdale, Illinois McGean-Rohco, Inc. Borden and Affiliates Western Fly Fishing magazine Portland, Oregon Cleveland, Ohio Denver, Colorado Cargill Lumber Company, Inc. McGraw-Hill Companies Minneapolis, Minnesota Whale River Outfitters Parish, New York Culbro Corporation Princeton, New Jersey Steve O'Brien South Hamilton, Massachusetts New York, New York The Wild Trout Journal Bozeman, Montana General Cigar Company Wood Classic Sport Enterprises Barton, Vermont RemyJAmerique New York, New York Bloomfield, Connecticut S. C. Johnson Company Sharf Marketing Group Racine, Wisconsin Wright & McGill Company Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts Samuel F. Johnson Foundation Denver, Colorado Redmond, Oregon L I F E M EM B E R S An institution like the American Museum of Fly Fishing doesn't move into its fourth decade of existence without the significant contributions of a core group of people who, through their lifetime membership commitments to the Museum, have helped ensure its future. The general membership, the trustees and staff, and fly fishers the world over owe these individuals a sincere debt of gratitude for their significant support. E. M. Bakwin Michael Bakwin Foster Bam William Barrett Philip J. Baugh Stephen D. Bechtel, Jr. Erik Bedford Heidi S. T. Bedford John F. Betts Hamilton W. Budge Donn Byrne, Sr. James H. Carey Hoagie Carmichael Roy D. Chapin, Jr. Kenneth M. Childs, Jr. Thomas Clark Michael D. Copeland Peter Corbin Hugh Corrigan James R. Dalziel Thomas Davidson John C. Dorn John D. Drinko Charles R. Eichel Charles E. Ferree Cliff Fitzgerald 22 Michael Fitzgerald Audun R. Fredriksen Arthur T. Frey Reed Freyermuth George F. Fry, Jr. Vernon E. Gallup Patrick I. Gilligan Larry Gilsdorf David I. Glaesser Francis Goelet Duncan Grant Gardner L. Grant Wayne Hicklin Curtis I. Hill Herman C. Hittenberger Robert J. Hoback James H. Hunter Robert Johnson Arthur Kaemmer Martin J. and Lillian Keane John Kiely Woods King I11 Martin Kline Me1 Krieger Edward D. Landel David B. Ledlie T H E A M E R I C A N FLY F I S H E R William Levy John J. Louis Nick Lyons Ian Mackay William J. Mares Leon Martuch Walter T. Matia Janet Mavec James F. McCloud Tom McCullough Henry P. McIntosh W. Harrison Mehn John Merwin Robert L. Mitchell Michael H. Monier Christopher E. Mullin, Sr. Wallace I. Murray 111 Wayne Nordberg David D. Perkins Leigh and Romi Perkins Perk and Randall Perkins Joe A. Pisarro 0. Miles Pollard Allan K. Poole Ivan and Susan Popkin Thomas J. Rice Pamela Bates Richards Dean E. Richardson Tom Rosenbauer Keith Russell John Schlesinger Paul Schullery Robert G. Scott Stephen Sloan Brett J. Smith Jim Spendiff Wallace J. Stenhouse, Jr. Arthur Stern John Swan James S. Taylor Richard G. Tisch David H. Walsh Richard J. Warren Joe C. Wells Dickson L. Whitney Pete Widener George Widener I1 James C. Woods Earl S. Worsham 30th Anniversary Poster This work of art will be a stunning addition to any home or office. We are grateful to photographer and longtime member Bob O'Shaugnessy and designers Jeff Billig and Anthony Henriques of P A R T N E R s & Simons, Inc. for donating their creative services. Posters, which measure 20" x 30", may be ordered by phone (802) 362-3300 or by mail: AMFF, P.O. Box 42, Manchester, VT 05254. $24 includes shipping. VISA, Mastercard, and AMEX accepted. SPRING 1998 23 The American Museum of Fly Fishing Box 42, Manchester,Vermont 05254 Tel: 802-362-3300. Fax: 802-362-3308 JOIN! Membership Dues (per annum) INDIVIDUAL Associate Sustaining Benefactor Patron $35 $60 $125 $250 GROUP Club $50 Trade $50 Membership dues include four issues of The American Fly Fisher. Please send your payment to the Membership Director and include your mailing address. The Museum is a member of the American Association of Museums, the American Association of State and Local History, the New England Association of Museums, the Vermont Museum and Gallery Alliance, and the International Association of Sports Museums and Halls of Fame. We are a nationally accredited, nonprofit, educational institution chartered under the laws of the state of Vermont. As an independent, nonprofit institution, the American Museum of Fly Fishing relies on the generosity of public-spirited individuals for substantial support. We ask that you give our museum serious consideration when planning for gifts and bequests. 1998 AMFF Heritage Award Dinner Trustee Gardner L. Grant was guest of honor at a benefit dinner at the Yale Club in New York City on January 29. Grant, a lifelong supporter of fisheries conservation and the preservation of the fly-fishing tradition, was the recipient of the Museum's Heritage Award. The award, created in 1997 by the Museum's trustees, honors those individuals who have made contributions of their time, energy, and resources to a degree that sets a standard for others. Museum founder Leigh H. Perkins was the recipient of the first AMFF Heritage Award. The evening featured cocktails, dinner, and tributes to Gardner. Dona1 C. O'Brien Jr., chairman of the Atlantic Salmon Federation (U.S.) served as master of ceremonies, and noted author and fly-fishing expert Ernest G. Schwiebert gave the keynote address. In his remarks, Schwiebert recounted Gardner's involvement and leadership in organizations such as this Museum, Trout Unlimited, the Theodore Gordon Fly Fishers, the l?nvir~nmentalPlanning Lobby for the State of New York, the New York State Commissioner's Council on Envi- DinnerIAuction Events APRIL 24 Westford, Massachusetts Westford Regency 9 Manchester, Vermont The Equinox Hotel & Resort MAY Author Ernest G. Schwiebert gave the keynote speech honoring Gardner Grant. Hours are lo AM to 4 PM. We are closed on major holidays. Available at $4 per copy: Volume 6,- umbers 1,2,3,4 Volume 7, Number 3 Volume 8, Number 3 Volume g, Numbers 1,2,3 Volume lo, Number 2 Volume 11, Numbers 1,2,3,4 Volume 13, Number 3 Volume 15, Number 2 Volume 16, Numbers 1,2,3 Volume 17, Numbers I, 2,3 Volume 18, Numbers 1, 2,4 Volume 19, Numbers 1, 2,3,4 Volume 20, Numbers 1,2,3,4 Volume 21, Numbers 1,2,3,4 Volume 22, Numbers 1,2,3,4 Volume 23, Numbers I, 2,3,4 Volume 24, Number 1 Museum volunteer Peter Castagnetti and Events and Membership Coordinator Paula Welch display a reserved deluxe edition of Fishing Atlantic Salmon: The Flies and the Patterns by Joseph D. Bates Jr. and Pamela Bates Richards. At the podium, Executive Director Gary Tanner served as auctioneer. All ~ h o t o e r a ~ hbvs Mareot Paee President Richard Tisch, Trustee Gardner Grant, and Executive Director Gary Tanner at the dinner honoring Grant with the Museum's Heritage Award. Reelmaker Stanley Bogdan, who donated a reel for the first in the Museum's Great Rods &Reels series. Ellen Stern and committee member Wendy Tisch. Volunteer John Mundt displaying auction item, "Gone Duckin:" a limited edition, museum-quality bronze by artist and Trustee Walt Matia. ronmental Conservation, the Atlantic Salmon Federation, and the Hudson River Foundation for Science and Environmental Research. Schwiebert also related some personal fishing tales about Gardner, and summed up by saying "I celebrate Gardner Grant for his remarkable fishing skills, his continued husbandrv and leadershiv in environmental affairs, his support of our little fly-fishing museum in Vermont, and thirtyodd years of unflagging friendship and generosity." At evening's end, Board of Trustees President Richard Tisch presented Gardner with the Heritage Award. Both a silent and a live auction were also features of the evening. The silent auction featured domed displays containing flies dressed by some of the world's premier tyers. Tyer Rick Whorwood created an original pattern especially for the event called "Gardner's Benefit." Trustee Pam Richards and Bob Blain assembled the treasures. Thanks go to the benefit committee for their work that made this such a successful event: Richard Tisch, Chair; SPRING 1998 25 You@ GotIa CastThe Lightest Orvis is proud Ito suppor t The: AmericaIn Museu m of Fly Fishing I ~ ~ t r ~ d ~the c i nNew g Orvis Trident Tl" Rods like every Orvis Trident, they cany our patented MVR' Cast a Trident TL. That's the only way you'll fully appreciate just how incredibly light and responsive these new Orvis rods really are. Rod Weight Comparison 865 8X' 5-WT. 905 9' 5-WT- 908 9' 8-WT. 9' 11-WT. Orvis Trident TL 2.86 oz. 3.09 oz. 4.75 oz. 5.69 oz. Comparable Sage Rod 3.23 oz. 3.52 oz. 4.68 oz. 7.89 oz. 911 New Exclusive Lightweight Graphii. When you pick up the rod you'll notice that it is incredibly light. So light in fact, that the new highmodulus graphite construction laces them among the lightest rods in the world. But don't let the light weight fool you - these rods are tough. Trident TLs combine featherlight feel with the strength to set the hook on the big boys with total confidence. New Compound Tapers: Where the Acti Power flows through a Trident TL.As you make your T L rods are also first cast, you'll available i n a Silver Label version, which gives Y O U light weight with a light feel the balance price tag. and symmetry that only an Orvis compound taper can provide. And vibration-reduction technology for increased accuracy and distance. Orvis Quality from End to End All Trident TLs are further graced by anodized aluminum reel seats, superior quality cork handles, and low-glare, low-friction carbonitride rmides. and precision-ground integral ferrules. Trident TL rods are available in two- and four-piece models, a variety of flex Trident T L rods come in both profiles, and line weights fresh- and saltwater models, in line weights from four to eleven. from four to eleven. And if budget is a concern, but you don't want to compromise on your equipment, try out a TL rod from our Silver Label" series. Casting is Believing Fishing a Trident TL is an exceptionally satisfying experience. Visit your local Orvis dealer and experience firsthand the lightness and power of Trident TL. ORW A SPORTING TRADITION SINCE 1856 www.orvis.com Hlstor~cRoute 7A, Manchester, Vermont 05254 Call toll free 1-800-333-1550 MI. 990 for further information on our dealers world-wide or for a free Fishing Catalog 26 T H E A M E R I C A N FLY F I S H E R Would you like to host a fund raiser for the la Welch at 802-362-3300. President Richard Tisch presented Gardner Grant with the Museum's 1998 Heritage Award. MTHE - LYONS PRESS Limited and Deluxe Editions! Our limited editions are slipcased and printed letterpress on 80pound paper. There will be 750 copies available at $95.00 each. The deluxe leatherbound editions are large-format and printed on Arches Mouldmade paper. There will be only 2 5 copies, available at $750.00 each. Each limited and deluxe edition copy is signed by the author, artist, and publisher. Former Trustee Art Kaemmer with benefit committee member Judith Bowman. Attendees of the benefit dinner included Sallie Baldwin and Ed Migdalski. Michael Bakwin; Foster Bam; Judith and James Bowman; Roy D. Chapin Jr.; Paul Fitzgerald; Bill Hazen; Bob Johnson; Dona1 C. O'Brien Jr.; Michael Osborne; Janet Mavec; Wayne Nordberg; Leigh and Romi Perkins; Allan K. Poole; Pamela Bates Richards; Terry Shultz; Ernest Schwiebert; Robert Scott; and Wendy Tisch. IN PRAISEOF WILDTROUT ONE RIVERMORE On the Pleasure, Biology, and A Celebration of Rivers and Fly Preservation of Wild Trout Fishing Edited and with a Foreword by Nick Lyons W. D. Wetherell ISBN 1-55821-677-4 (limited) ISBN 1-55821-676-6 (deluxe) ISBN 1-55821-750-9(limited) ISBN 1-55821-751-7 (deluxe) RIVERSOF THE HEART A Fly-Fishing Memoir BLOODKNOT Fishing Stories by Pete Fromm, author of Dry Rain Steve Raymond ISBN 1-55821-748-7(limited) ISBN 1-55821-749-5(deluxe) ISBN 1-55821-752-5(limited) ISBN 1-55821-753-3(deluxe) M o r e t h a n 125 fine fishing t i t l e s ! For quick credit-card service, call 212-620-9580 ext. 39 from 9-5 EST, or write for a complete catalog of books on the outdoors to: The Lyons Press / Dept. TL 3 1 West 2 1 Street New York, New York 1 0 0 1 0 SPRING 1998 27 C O N T R I B U T O R S Frederick Buller is one of England's finest all-round anglers and is the author of the highly acclaimed book, Pike. He founded the gunmaking and fishing tackle company of Chubbs in London and is now the managing director of the famous London gunmaking firm of Charles Hellis, Frederick Beesley and Watson Bros. He is the author of ' four books and coauthor of two His most recent contribution to this journal was a Notes & Comment piece, "The Earliest Fishing Reel: A New Perspective," which appeared in the Summer 1997 issue. Jiirgen Preylowski, whose images and articles have graced the pages of several of the most recent issues of The American Fly Fisher, is a freelance designer and art director living in Diisseldorf, Germany. He is a collector of historic tackle, books, and angling art. Preylowski designed the fly-fishing tackle collection of Rudolf Reichel, one of the most important collections in Europe, for the South Tyrolean Museum of Hunt and Fishery on Castle Wolfsthurn. Richard C. Hoffmann, Preylowski's translator, is professor of history at York University and a continuing member of the Centre for Mediaeval Studies at the University of Toronto, as well as author of Fishers' Craft & Lettered Art: Tracts on Fishing from the End of the Middle Ages, which we excerpted in the Winter 1998 issue. That very issue featured another PreylowskilHoffmann collaboration, "Dr. H. C. Alexander Behm and the Behm Fly." Alvaro Masseini is a high-school teacher of history and philosophy in Florence, Italy, and has worked with several Italian environmental organizations. An expert on water pollution and related problems, he is the author of numerous articles on fly fishing in western and eastern European countries and in the Americas. Masseini is author of "The French School: Messieurs de Boisset and de Chamberet and Les mouches de la se'rie Gallica," which was published in the Winter 1997 issue of this journal. As a reader of The American Fly F~sherMaszine, \'ou ~ l i s t ~ n ~ uvourself i s l ~ as one who obviously appi-eciates the finer elements ot our wonderful pastime. That fact alone identifies you as a fisherman wlhc will appreciate and unilerstand HEXAGRAPH. Our company helleves that a fly rod can and should reflect an equally advanced perspective and we build our rods with that in mind. HEXAGRAPH rods deliver unequalled strength, exquisite cosmetics and unparalled performance in a graphite package unique among fly rods. Froin our delicate Small Stream Series to the awesome power of our new Atlantic Salmon Special, we have a rod that will take you to a higher plane of satisfaction and enjoyment. And - I guarantee that! Harry J. Briscoe - President Etching by noted sporting artist Brett James Smith, The Pool. Released in an edition of only thirty 9" x 12" hand-struck, signed, and numbered prints annotated "AMFF 30th Anniversary." Available only through the Museum-twelve will be offered at Museum dinner/auctions, with the remaining eighteen available only through our first-ever mail-in-yourbid auction. The fair market value and minimum bid for this extremely limited edition etching has been established at $200. Bids in excess of that minimum may constitute a charitable contribution for income tmpurposes; check with your tax preparer. Mail or phone your bid to Paula Welch, AhfFE PO Box 42, Manchester, V T 05254; (802) 362-3300. 9Note: Bidding closes May 15,1998. Artful Commemoration T HE AMERICAN Museum of Fly Fishing's thirtieth anniversary has arrived! We've grown from a collection of seventeen rods, a few reels, and fewer flies in 1968 to a treasure trove of more than 1,200 rods, 1,000 reels, and 25,000 flies. Our library now has 2,700-plus volumes on the shelves, and our art collection exceeds 650 images that revolve around the world of fly fishing. Speaking of images, we are commemorating this milestone in our history by releasing two works of fine art in limited editions: The Bubble by John Betts and The Pool by Brett James Smith. These images bring the essence of fly fishing alive. In The Bubble (see the inside front cover), the careful observer will notice that one mayfly in the group floats backwards, tied by a leader to an anxious angler. It takes us into that wonderful, tension-filled moment in our fly's drift when success or failure (as defined by a "take") is but a heartbeat away. The Pool (pictured above) takes us back a step, to a time when a creel was not quite the "collectible" it is today and when life was simpler (or so we like to think or remember). You may wonder why we have chosen these images instead of, for example, a still life that portrays items from our collections-the "neat stuff," as one of our trustees like to call it. That is certainly a valid question. I guess my answer is that, in my view, the Museum is ultimately about fishing, albeit through the arts and crafts and even sciences that are integral components of the activity. These images celebrate fly fishing, including the "stuff" that makes it all so much fun. And so, for our supporters' enjoyment in their own home, office, or getaway spot, we are proud to present these thirtieth-anniversary celebrations of fly fishing. To the artists, our sincere gratitude-like so many other artists associated with this Museum before them, they have declined remuneration for their efforts. DIRECTO~ GARYTANNER, EXECUTIVE I THEAMERICAN MUSEUM OF FLY FISHING, a nationally accredited, nonprofit, educational institution dedicated to preserving the ch heritage of fly fishing, was founded in lanchester, Vermont, in 1968. The Museum serves as a repository for, and conservator to, the world's largest collection of angling and angling-related objects. The Museum's col, d o n s and exhibits provide the public with iorough documentation of the evolution of y fishing as a sport, art form, craft, and industry in the United States and abroad fron the sheenth century to the present. Rods reels, and flies, as well as tackle, art, books, manuscripts, and photographs form the major components of the Museum's collections. The Museum has gained recognition as a unique educational institution. It supports a publications program through which its national quarterly journal, The American Fl Fisher, and books, art prints, and catalogs art regularly offered to the public. The Vuseum's traveling exhibits program ha. ~adeit possible for educational exhibits tc e viewed across the United States anc ,road. The Museum also provides in-housl exhibits, related interpretive programming, and research services for members, visiting scholars, authors, and students. The Museum is an active, member-orient~d nonprofit institution. For information lease contact: The American Museum of Fly ishing, P. 0. Box 42, Manchester, Vermon I