Seems like I'm noticing more and more flyfishing magazines these 
days. I picked up a couple last night I wasn't familiar with, 
although the names on their masthead read like a who's who of the 
sport.

Now that I've read Fly Fisherman, Fly Fishing & Tying Journal, Fish & 
Fly, and Northwest Fly Fishing, it occurred to me this might be 
another interesting list topic. Since, as usual, I've got a couple of 
opinions, I'll get things started with my 2� worth.

Seems like most of the current crop of flyfishing magazines have a 
national focus. While there are wonderful opportunities to fish for 
Great Lakes steelhead, midwest bass, Pennsylvania trout, Atlantic 
salmon in Quebec or bones in Florida, the reality is that I will most 
likely never do so. However, it is entirely probably that I will 
continue to explore waters within a 4-6 hour radius of Seattle or in 
Alaska.

I was amazed that Fish & Fly chose to focus on the Southern 
Hemisphere for their current issue, adorning their cover with a 
busty, barely-clad babe fishing for bonefish in the Seychelles. There 
were some nice photos of fish in it too as I recall ;-)

Frank Amato's Flyfishing & Tying Journal seems to me like one big ad 
and catalog for his publishing house. The list of names on its 
masthead reads like an invitation list to an Amato family reunion.

I've got to say my favorite magazine so far is Steve Probasco's 
Northwesy Fly Fisherman. In additional to locally-relevant content, I 
find the overall design and writing quality to be top-notch and not 
nearly as corporate-looking as its nationally-focused competitors.

In the current issue, Probasco describes in painfully vivid detail 
how he impaled a streamer in his nose while casting in the wind. Not 
only does he have the ego strength to come clean with his audience, 
he demonstrates bowling-ball sized cojones by including a photo of 
the thing lodged in his schnoz, taken right before his guide removed 
it, discovering in the process that the barb had not been crimped. 
Probasco artfully turned the narrative into an object lesson on 
checking and double checking ones equipment before using it.

It strikes me that the other mags mentioned above seem a tad too 
corporate to print a story like that. But then that's my 2� worth.

What other magazines are out there that I've overlooked? Do any print 
more frequently than every other month? Which ones do you subscribe 
to and why?

Kent Lufkin

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