Dry-Fly Fishing in Theory and Practice


Dry-Fly Fishing in Theory and Practice is British author and angler Frederic M. Halford's second and most influential book on dry fly fishing. It followed Floating Flies and How to Dress Them and this pair of books initiated some 40 years of a rigid, and sometimes dogmatic school, the Halfordian school, of dry fly fishing, especially on English chalk streams. The work also played a significant role in the development of dry-fly fishing in America.

Synopsis

Whereas Floating Flies and How to Dress Them was about the dry fly, fly tying and to some extent the entomology of the chalk stream, Dry-Fly Fishing... was about fishing the dry fly. It was the consummate "how-to" manual for the dry-fly fisherman. It was not only about methodology, but also about the ethics and purism of the dry fly on English chalk streams.
The volume begins by spelling out the various pieces of fishing and personal equipment the dry-fly angler should possess. The pros and cons of different rod styles are discussed, along with fly lines, reels and the various miscellany a fly angler should carry. Although Halford did not invent dry-fly fishing, before this volume, no one had laid out in such detail the equipment recommendations needed to be a successful dry-fly angler.
Such were Halford's recommendations that they were routinely referenced by the fly-fishing trade:
A short, but concise Chapter 2 discusses the distinction between a floating fly and a sunk fly, with emphasis on the superiority of the floating fly as characterized by this concluding statement:
Chapters 3-5 go into great detail about how, when and where to cast the dry fly on the typical chalk stream. These chapters are heavily illustrated with casting techniques and comprise nearly 20% of the entire 1st edition.
The bulk of the remaining chapters deal with the entomology of the chalk stream, fly selection and trout behaviour.

Reviews

, the acknowledged "Father of American dry-fly fishing", wrote extensively about the influence Halford had on his views.
George M. La Branche in his seminal American fly fishing work The Dry Fly and Fast Water, wrote this of Halford's Dry-Fly Fishing:

Contents

From
*