Lee Richardson's BC


Book Description




Vancouver Island Fishing Guide


Book Description

Vancouver Island in British Columbia, has been a destination for the world's salmon fishermen for more than a century. The island's steelhead are legendary and many of the great men of fishing legend, such as General Noel Money and Roderick Haig-Brown are only a couple who wrote of his fishing life here. There is no all-encompassing book on this area, until now; Reid includes the fish you will find and how to catch them; gear and tackle; useful websites; services and accommodations; special events and points of interest. Charts and descriptions of both salt- and freshwater fisheries will lead you to the millions of fish in this area. Now the time to plan your trip to B.C.




Famous British Columbia Fly-Fishing Waters


Book Description

Looking over the past 150 years, Art Lingren explores the origins of fly-fishing in British Columbia. He covers both the special waters where fly-fishing developed and the legendary fishermen who laid the foundation for the fly-fishers to come. Many of these fishermen were the first in all of North America to experiment with the flies and techniques of Great Britain. Lingren discusses such fabled waters as the Campbell River, the Dean, Bella Coola, and Skagit rivers, and of course the famous Thompson. A description of each water is given, including: its history, effective techniques and flies, species information, excerpts from historical references, local anglers and their experiences, and more. For many anglers, exploring the history of fly-fishing is as important a part of their life as actually getting out on the water. This book is for those fly-fishers with a love for the history of fly-fishing in North America.




Fish, Law, and Colonialism


Book Description

An engrossing history, Fish, Law, and Colonialism recounts the human conflict over fish and fishing in British Columbia and of how that conflict was shaped by law. Pacific salmon fisheries, owned and managed by Aboriginal peoples, were transformed in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries by commercial and sport fisheries backed by the Canadian state and its law. Through detailed case studies of the conflicts over fish weirs on the Cowichan and Babine rivers, Douglas Harris describes the evolving legal apparatus that dispossessed Aboriginal peoples of their fisheries. Building upon themes developed in literatures on state law and local custom, and law and colonialism, he examines the contested nature of the colonial encounter on the scale of a river. In doing so, Harris reveals the many divisions both within and between government departments, local settler societies, and Aboriginal communities. Drawing on government records, statute books, case reports, newspapers, missionary papers and a secondary anthropological literature to explore the roots of the continuing conflict over the salmon fishery, Harris has produced a superb, and timely, legal and historical study of law as contested terrain in the legal capture of Aboriginal salmon fisheries in British Columbia.




Vancouver Island BC Fishing Mapbook


Book Description

This fishing guidebook covers a diverse range of fishing locations, from easily accessible lakes and streams to lakes and streams that are only accessible by walking or by boat. Each featured fishing location has information on access, fish species present, and tips on the best times of the year to fish and the best fishing techniques to use that are specific to that fishing location. Contour maps and depth charts are also provided for many of the lakes. The book provides information on recommended fishing methods and tackle, fish identification, and how to choose the right rod and reel or fly gear. Anglers have the opportunity to fish for steelhead, rainbow trout, cutthroat trout, brook trout, and Chinook, Coho, chum, pink, and sockeye salmon. This book is based on extensive research and the knowledge of many experienced anglers.




Steelhead Fly Fishing


Book Description

The most all-encompassing compendium of truly valuable information on steelhead ever written. —Jack Hemingway There are exceptional chapters on the fish itself; the tackle and techniques used to pursue it under diverse circumstances in such great steelhead rivers as the Deschutes, the Dean, the North Umpqua, the Bulkley, the Rogue and the Babine, and memorable profiles of the modern masters and the fly patterns they developed.




Salmon Fishing British Columbia


Book Description

Vancouver Island is one of the world's best year-round salmon fishing areas. This comprehensive guide describes popular fishing holes, including a map of each and data on gear, best time of year, methods and more.




Fly Fishing British Columbia


Book Description

Destined to become an instant classic, this unique book presents the distilled knowledge of dozens of top fly-fishing experts in a format rarely achieved in fly fishing literature. Any single page of this book explains more than entire chapters of traditional books. Hundreds of intricately detailed drawings depict exactly what happens underwater. The marriage of text and illustration explains complex mechanisms at a glance. The book incorporates the wisdom, lore and first-hand knowledge of a group whose names read like a who's who of Western fly fishing. Highlighted tips from the West's best fly fishers provide personalised insights on a wealth of specific situations. Drawings feature over 80 top producing fly patterns plus tying recipes and expert advice on how and where to fish them. Learn precisely which fly to use for salmon, steelhead, trout, char and bass. Over 90 colour photographs present the signature pattern of 44 recognised leading-edge anglers. Crisp, clear instruction on appropriate fishing strategies covers hundreds of situations which apply anywhere in the world.




Fishing


Book Description

Richly illustrated, absorbingly written, Commercial Fishing-History of British Columbia explores the efforts of men and women who make commercial fishing one of the province's basic industries. Written in honor of the men and women who built and operated BC's commercial fishing industry, this history shows just how much more than fish goes into each can of salmon, shrimp etc. Joe and Anne Forester have combined talents to recall the old days of Indian fishing and the earliest efforts of pioneer fishermen and canners. Interviews and numerous photographs capture the atmosphere aboard tiny boats lacking radar and radio, while the authors tellingly outline dangers at sea, not omitting to pass on the humor of many a fishy tale. Commercial Fishing is a story of hard work and success. For all who work in the industry, it is a treasure to own and relive; it is a factual reference and fascinating tale about fishing boats, gear, fish, processing methods and the growth of a vital B.C. industry.