dbo:abstract
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- The Brown Bi-visible is an attractor style dry fly. The addition of light cream colored or white hackle at the front of the darker body made the Bi-visible easier for the angler to see on the water. Ray Bergman in his seminal 1952 work Trout gave the following credit to the Bi-visible pattern: I gave Bivisible flies complete and indisputable credit. I believe that I even intimated they were the last word--the ultimate in dry flies. I was so sold on the Bivisibles for one complete season that if trout wouldn't take one, I figured they wouldn't take anything, and I was perfectly satisfied with this decision. — Ray Bergman, Trout (1952) (en)
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- 4512 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
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dbp:body
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- Rooster hackle, palmered (en)
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dbp:caption
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- Bi-visible Dry Flies (en)
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dbp:created
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dbp:creator
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- Edward Ringwood Hewitt (en)
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dbp:hackle
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- Cream or white dry fly hackle (en)
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dbp:hooktype
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- TMC 100, Firehole 419 (en)
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dbp:imitates
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- Adult mayflies, caddisflies, stoneflies (en)
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dbp:name
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dbp:sizes
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dbp:tail
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- Hackle fibers, CDL fibers (en)
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dbp:thread
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dcterms:subject
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rdfs:comment
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- The Brown Bi-visible is an attractor style dry fly. The addition of light cream colored or white hackle at the front of the darker body made the Bi-visible easier for the angler to see on the water. Ray Bergman in his seminal 1952 work Trout gave the following credit to the Bi-visible pattern: — Ray Bergman, Trout (1952) (en)
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