Field & Stream (West ed.) 1996 William G. Tapply |
Title | Subject | Authors |
A matter of degree: if you can read a thermometer, you can learn to find more fish.(Outdoor Basics) | Sports and fitness | William G. Tapply |
Deep water for big trout.(trout fishing; Myths & Misconceptions) | Sports and fitness | William G. Tapply |
Interpreting rise forms: understanding where a trout is feeding can often tell you what it is feeding on. | Sports and fitness | William G. Tapply |
It's only a fish; the fish are always bigger on the other side, but are they worth it? (wading techniques) | Sports and fitness | William G. Tapply |
Matching still-water hatches: surface-feeding trout aren't always what they seem.(Fishing)(includes related information on trout flies) | Sports and fitness | William G. Tapply |
Outsmarting ruffed grouse.(hunting technique)(Column) | Sports and fitness | William G. Tapply |
Sam's ear: the seasons change when the time is right, and nothing we do - on purpose or by accident - can alter this.(hunting and fishing seasons) | Sports and fitness | William G. Tapply |
The cold truth: rising to the challenge.(fishing in the early spring)(includes related information on odd facts about ice)(Cover Story) | Sports and fitness | Mark Hicks, Marshall, Robert (American environmental activist), Ken Schultz, John McCoy, Bob Saile, William G. Tapply, Peter Barrett |
The fisherman's edge: if you want to cast your lure to where the fish are, you need to find the fringes.(Field Guide) | Sports and fitness | William G. Tapply |
The problem-solver.(soft-hackle fly)(Fishing Techniques) | Sports and fitness | William G. Tapply |
Understanding the spinner fall: the metamorphosis of our most imitated insect. (trout fishing) | Sports and fitness | William G. Tapply |
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