Archive for the tag 'stackpole'

Radical Bear Hunter by Dick Scorzafava

daverichey June 22nd, 2008

TITLE: Radical Bear Hunter
AUTHOR:
Dick Scorzafava
PUBLISHER:
Stackpole Books
DISTIRBUTOR:
Stackpole Books
Radical Bear Hunt by Dick Scorzafava

CONTACT:

Stackpole Books
5067 Ritter Road
Mechanicsburg, PA 17055

WEBSITE: Stackpole Books for more information on this and other Stackpole Books
ISBN#: 978-0-8117-3418-9, for bookstore ordering
COST:  $21.95 + S/H; Paperback, color photos, 212 pages with index

The interest in black bear hunting has grown significantly in recent years. Whitetail deer, for most hunters, remain their primary focus. Bear hunting is less expensive than going after caribou, elk or moose, and bears frequently become the second big-game species to be hunted.

Black bears are relatively common in certain states, and the author features a chart that shows approximately how many bruins live in certain states and Canadian provinces. Anyone planning a spring or fall bear hunt should pick a state or province with high bear numbers.

I look at this book after being an experienced bear hunter for over 30 years. It covers all the angles a new or experienced hunter should know to be successful. Bear hunting is available in many areas, and after hunting deer for many years, sportsmen decide to tackle a game animal that has the ability to fight back if it chooses to do so. For some hunters, this faint element of danger is welcomed.

Don’t get me wrong: even though black bears can be deadly, the danger is fairly remote providing hunters do not get between a sow and her cubs. Make no mistake about it: bears can be dangerous, as the author points out in this book.

It has some great bear-hunting chapters, and the book is well illustrated by color photos. Some of my favorite chapters include:

  • Reading Bear Sign
  • Reading A Bear’s Body Language
  • Baiting The Black Bear
  • Spot And Stalk
  • Hunting With Hounds
  • True Trophy Black Bear
  • Deciding On A Hunt Location
  • Picking An Outfitter
  • Live Smart In Black Bear Country

The chapter on How To Field Judge A Bear is very informative. All bears look as big as a black VW Bug to the uninitiated sportsman when they see their first up-close bruin. Judging a big bruin can be handled in many different ways, and the author outlines his methods of judging a bear’s size.

He tells how to establish the height on a bear standing with all four feet on the ground, and how to place markers on nearby trees to give a better idea of its size. Know too that the difference between a spring bear that has just come out of hibernation, and a fall bear that is fattening up prior to hibernation, can be vastly different.

Several years ago I shot a 450-pound black bear on Vancouver Island while hunting with guide Jim Shockey, and the hide squared seven feet. That spring bear weighed 450 pounds but would have tipped the scales at about 600 pounds in the fall. The author of this book explains the differences between spring and fall bruins.

I found this book to be very informative, and chockful of useful information about bruins. It offers most of the information a beginning hunter will need, and there is some data here that even some advanced bear hunters may not know.

It is a worthy book to add to any hunter’s library, and if that hunter is gearing up for a future bear hunt, this is one title he should read.

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Hairwing & Tube Flies…, Chris Mann

daverichey April 21st, 2008

TITLE: HAIRWING & TUBE FLIES FOR SALMON & STEELHEAD
AUTHOR: Chris Mann
PUBLISHER: Stackpole Books

Hairwings & Tube Flies for Salmon and Steelhead, Chris Mann

CONTACT:

Stackpole Books
5067 Ritter Road
Mechanicsburg, PA 17055

WEBSITE: Stackpole Books
COST: $34.95+ postage; cover w/ dust jacket
ISBN Number: 0-8117-3176-6

Some flies are beautiful, some are functional, and some are a melding of both beauty and the ability to catch fish. These factors are what first attracted me to Atlantic salmon flies back more than 40 years ago when I made my first trips to New Brunswick for Atlantic salmon.

I marveled at the wondrous beauty of some of those flies tied on turned-up eye, and on single and double hooks. Some flies seemed, to my untrained eye, too gaudy to catch Atlantic salmon. That thought was quickly proven wrong. Then came a 10-year career as a fly-fishing steelhead guide on Michigan’s Great Lakes tributaries.

My twin brother and I became the first two Chinook and coho salmon fly fishing guides in Michigan. My twin brother George, the fly tier, invented many patterns that worked for anadromous brown trout, salmon and steelhead. Thus, my love affair with flies of beauty and functionality was cemented after writing a color Photo-filled book on Great Lakes steelhead flies.

Enough about me, and this was mentioned only to show why I find Mann’s book so pleasing. The simple flies of yesteryear’s steelhead fly fishermen are slowly being replaced with delightful hairwing ties and tube flies. We are seeing a cautious birth in the use of many of the materials once considered suitable only for Atlantic salmon flies, and they are now being incorporated into steelhead patterns.

This 224-page glossy book is filled from cover to cover with the author’s delightful color photographs. The author carries us along with an informative chapter called History & Development Of The Hairwing Fly. To show just how cosmopolitan this book is, the next large chapter is European Hairwings and Tube Flies. Next is North American Hairwings, then the Catalogue Of Dressings, and ending with a Bibliography. Between the two covers is a wealth of information from a distinguished cast of expert tiers.

The European flies come from the United Kingdom, Ireland, Iceland and Scandinavia. The big chapter on North America covers both Atlantic salmon and Steelhead patterns. The chapter on dressings covers salmon hairwings and tubes and steelhead hairwings.

Make no mistake about it. This book is the best treatment I’ve seen on these flies for these game fish, and its historical significance is a matter of great importance. It’s no secret that fly fishing came west across the Atlantic Ocean from the British Isles to North America. Great strides were made during the 19th and 20th centuries as the British methods became common to this country, and were then expanded or improved upon.

Some of the world’s greatest fly fishermen were originally from Great Britain, and we owe them a great deal for instilling within Americans a love of fly fishing. However, in a typical American way, we have produced many wonderful fly tiers and fly fishermen. Many contributors to this wonderful work came from both sides of the Atlantic Ocean.

This is truly one of the finest books on these specialty flies. And, since steelhead are running in Michigan as this is written, the timing is perfect for state anglers to study the photos and fly pattern recipes in the back of the book. This is a book to fall in love with.

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