Pesca a mosca - Book and video reviews - Global FlyFisher
The Global FlyFisher - A Good Place to go for Online Fly Fishing and Fly Tying
Book, video and gear reviews
Home
Home
News
Pipeline
Themes
Blog
Hitlist
Store
Patterns
Patterns
Pattern section
Suggest pattern
Tie better
Streamers
Tying videos
Pattern list
Fishing
Fishing
Fishing section
Reports
Destinations
Fishing videos
Rod building
Podcasts
Recipes
Stories
Pictures
Pictures
Gallery section
User's pix
Phtographers
Fishy art
Wallpapers
Slideshows
Ecards
Videos
Videos
Video section
Tying videos
Most viewed
Highest rated
Search
Suggest video
DVD reviews
Reviews
Reviews
Review section
Books
DVDs
Gear
Rods
Tying tools
Read/watch list
Quick takes
Forum
Forum
Forum section
Patterns
Fly tying
Fly fishing
Rod building
About GFF
Site tools
Site tools
Search
Sitemap
Comments
Keywords
About
About
About GFF
Blog
Facts
Contribute
Staff
Store
GFF Books
Comments
GFF on Facebook
Contact
Touch
Pesca a mosca
Recommend this page to a friend
More stuff to look at on The Global FlyFisher
A few random articles for your entertainment
Shark's Caddis Larva
This is a very simple fly imitating the caddis larva. Some may call it realistic fly, some will say impressionistic, but no matter what, the originator says with 100% certainty that it's a killer pattern and he has caught lots of fish with it in many different places.
April 8th 2009
Bonefish - a fishing odyssey
Charles Rangeley-Wilson is an apparently mild-mannered Englishman who spends most of his time in the London area. But he is addicted to bonefishing, so much so that he shows signs of withdrawal when unable to cast a fly on a Caribbean flat for some time. This resulted in a DVD.
March 17th 2010
Kola autumn - Horses, bears and fly-fishing
After a famly vacation to Turkey, Lithuanian Mindaugas Banelis decided it was high time to go fishing somewhere in the North. The target was salmon. He decided that the Kola Peninsula was the ideal place to travel to. So he set off.
February 25th 2009
The Blitz
Tracking the annual saltwater migration from north (Maine) to south (Carolina) has all the hallmarks of a daunting task, but McDonald and Brown do it justice.
November 9th 2011