钓之大侠
注册时间2003-7-8
在线时间 小时
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2#
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发表于 2003-9-27 01:28:00
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只看该作者
Coho fishing remains solid in many Puget Sound areas .
The American Museum of Fly Fishing, a nationally accredited, nonprofit, educational institution dedicated to preserving the rich heritage of fly fishing, was founded in Manchester, 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 Museums collections and exhibits provide the public with thorough documentation of the evolution of fly fishing as a sport, art form, craft, and industry in the United States and abroad from the sixteenth century to present. Rods, reels, and flies, as well as tackle, art, books, manuscripts, and photographs form the major components of the Museums collections.
The Museum has gained recognition as a unique educational institution. It supports a publications program through which its national quarterly journal, The American Fly Fisher, and books, art prints, and catalogs are regularly offered to the public. The Museum's traveling exhibits program has made it possible for educational exhibits to be viewed across the United States and abroad. The Museum also provides in-house exhibits, related interpretive programming, and research services for members, visiting scholars, authors, and students. The Museum is an active, member-oriented nonprofit institution.
The American Museum of Fly Fishing was established to preserve and exhibit the treasures of American angling. Since then we have gathered more than twelve hundred rods, four hundred reels, thousands of flies, almost three thousand books, and countless other rare or unique items. Permanent headquarters were purchased in 1983 in Manchester, Vermont, and our new exhibition galleries first opened in the spring of 1984.
These exhibits are open to the public year-round and include the fly fishing tackle of many famous Americans: Daniel Webster, Dwight Eisenhower, Herbert Hoover, Andrew Carnegie, Samuel Morse, Ernest Hemingway and others. Devoted fly fishermen can see the masterworks of Americas best fly tiers firsthand. Theodore Gordon, Ray Bergman, George LaBranche, Edward Hewitt, Roy Steenrod, Joe Brooks, Preston Jennings, Mary Marbury, and John Atherton are only a few of the fly tiers whose works are exhibited. The history of rod-building is told through the stunning craftsmanship of rods by Leonard, Payne, Thomas, Kosmic, Orvis, Murphy, Edwards, and many others.
Whether you are a novice or an old-timer, whether you are a serious student of angling literature or just love beautifully crafted objects, you will be fascinated by the Museum. Thousands of people are every year. And, like all nonprofit institutions, we depend on our friends for support. When you join, you are helping to carry on this important work. There is no other organization that presents to the public so many of the priceless objects that enrich the history and lore of fly fishing. In addition to our Manchester galleries, we exhibit at various times around the country and abroad. California, Montana, Massachusetts, New York, and New Zealand are recent examples.
Aside from the Museum exhibitions, the most visible membership benefit is our award-winning magazine, The American Fly Fisher. It presents articles, carefully researched and written by the worlds authorities, about the development of fly fishing. Four times a year the magazine brings the Museum and its rare bounty into your home.
We mix features on the collection with vintage angling writing the best of American fishing writing from colonial days to the present. We reprint the rarest, the most important, and even the most amusing pieces of literature from a vast body of fishing writing that otherwise has been sadly neglected. In the magazine you can share the excitement of the first fly fisherman to catch a sea-run cutthroat trout or a bonefish. You can enjoy the endless pleasure of it all, because in the magazine no one will tell you that you should have been here yesterday.
It is yesterday, and as long as you are here, enjoy it! Remember, we can only preserve this rich heritage of fly fishing as long as we are supported by our members.
Spin fishing is an ideal way to begin trout fishing as the skills involved are easily mastered. A basic outfit of rod, reel and line, plus a few lures are all that is necessary to give the novice a chance of catching trout. Watercraft and knowledge of trout habits learned while spin fishing are equally useful in other forms of trout fishing such as fly-fishing.
Spin fishing, or to use its common name, threadlining, is fishing for trout with lures that imitate small fish. These lures are cast with a threadline outfit consisting of a mixed spool reel loaded with suitable monofilament line, and a short, single-handed spinning rod, ideally between 1.80m and 2.40m long.
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