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Minor tactics of the chalk stream and kindred studies

Chapter 3: NOTE TO THE SECOND EDITION
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About This Book

The work argues for the wet fly as a complementary technique to the dominant dry-fly practice on chalk streams, combining natural observation with practical instruction. It surveys underwater insect behavior and surface feeding, recommends fly patterns and dressings, and treats tactics for conditions such as glassy glides, pools, eddies, and rough water. Chapters address casting and presentation (including deliberate drag and cross-country casts), selection and colour of materials, use of oil tips and spinners, ethical considerations, equipment like landing nets and light rods, and episodic anecdotes that illustrate adaptive approaches to trout and grayling angling.

NOTE TO THE SECOND EDITION

It would ill become me if I allowed a Second Edition of “Minor Tactics of the Chalk Stream” to go to the public without expressing to those writers who have dealt with my volume in the Press my grateful sense of the generosity with which, whether they were or were not in agreement with the main object of the work—the endeavour to put the wet fly in what I conceive to be its right place on the chalk stream—they have one and all received it. In the fifty or so Press notices, short and long, I find, without exception, an absence of the harsh word, and a pervading urbane and kindly spirit which is of the true Waltonian still. Such fault as has been found has in the main been that I have shown undue timidity in dealing with the pretensions of the dry-fly purist. To that criticism I should like to reply that in dedicating my book to my friend the dry-fly purist I was using no idle word—that in asking him to make room for the wet fly beside the dry fly as a branch of the art of chalk-stream angling, I knew myself to be making a claim on him which he would not willingly concede, and I was determined that no harsh or provocative word of mine should give offence to any of the many good friends, good anglers, and good fellows who would not—at the first onset, at any rate—find themselves able to see eye to eye with me.

I take leave to hope that the interval since the first publication of “Minor Tactics” has brought a good few of them round to the view that, without ousting the dry fly from pride of place as major tactics of the chalk stream, the wet fly has its subsidiary, but still important, place of honour in chalk-stream fishing.

G. E. M. SKUES.