Angler's Hours

Angler's Hours

by Hugh Tempest Sheringham

15 chapters6h 19mEnglish1905

About this book

One of the classic British books about angling. The author’s love was fly fishing—“…while there are trout, life is worth living…” but he was no snob. An Angler’s Hours includes several chapters about coarse fishing (grayling, dace, chub, etc.) as well as a surprising account of the Japanese tenkara method as used in England. Sheringham's style is similar to that of the much-loved B.B. (Denys Watkins-Pitchford) with a dash of P.G. Wodehouse. He doesn’t bore us with technical details but writes of the simple joys of angling—"a man who gazes at the wares in a tackle-shop on a sunny day in April has certainly a fishing expedition in prospect”—not forgetting the pleasure of a nice pot of tea at the end of the day. Hugh Tempest Sheringham (1876 - 1930) was angling editor of The Field (London) and considered one of the premier British authors on freshwater angling both for his knowledge of the subject and readable style. - Summary by Adrian Praetzellis

Chapters (14)

1Chapter 1. At Dawn of Day
1815
2Chapter 2. The Inviolable Shade
701
3Chapter 3. May-Day on the Exe
2509
4Chapter 4. A Brace of Tench
732
5Chapter 5. The Fly-Fisher's Aftermath
2282
6Chapter 6. A February Pike
870
7Chapter 7. Fisherman's Billy
1690
8Chapter 8. A Miniature Trout-Stream
835
9Chapter 9. The Festival of the Green Drake
2631
10Chapter 10. Three Wild Days in Wessex
1066
11Chapter 11. Lady Maud's Walk
1816
12Chapter 12. The Mystery of a Thames Salmon
1095
13Chapter 13. The Midland Brook
2027
14Chapter 14. A Suburban Fishery
2296

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