American Angler
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''American Angler'' is a magazine dedicated to the subject of
fly fishing Fly fishing is an angling method that uses a light-weight lure—called an artificial fly—to catch fish. The fly is cast using a fly rod, reel, and specialized weighted line. The light weight requires casting techniques significantly diffe ...
, with an emphasis on cold water fisheries, published six times a year. It bills itself as a "how to, where to" magazine focusing on technical fly-fishing informational articles and explorations of new fishing locations. It is an asset of
Morris Communications Morris Communications, headquartered in Augusta, Georgia, is a privately held media company with diversified holdings that include magazine publishing, outdoor advertising, book publishing and distribution, visitor publications, and online serv ...
, which also owns publications such as ''
Gray's Sporting Journal ''Gray's Sporting Journal'' is a magazine dedicated to the pursuit of outdoor recreation, with an emphasis on hunting and fishing. It is a consciously literary publication, using a "blind reader" to select articles, poems, and stories for publicat ...
'', '' Fly Tyer'', and the soon-to-be-defunct '' Saltwater Fly Fishing''. Collectively, these magazines are referred to as the "Morris Group." ''American Angler'' is the third-largest fly-fishing magazine in terms of circulation, with approximately 40,000 subscribers, following ''
Fly Fisherman Fly fishing is an angling method that uses a light-weight lure—called an artificial fly—to catch fish. The fly is cast using a fly rod, reel, and specialized weighted line. The light weight requires casting techniques significantly diffe ...
'' and '' Fly Rod and Reel''. It is the only magazine among those to use "perfect binding" instead of stapled pages.


Notable Authors

Macauley Lord, author of the ''L.L. Bean Fly-Casting Handbook'', is the regular casting columnist. Phil Monahan is the former editor of ''American Angler'' magazine, as well as a feature-articles author and the past editorial director of the Morris Group of fly-fishing magazines. Ed Engle, author of '' Splitting Cane'', is a frequent contributor. William "Bill" Tapply, author of the Brady Coyne mystery novels, writes the final column in each issue. Dave Klausmeyer, editor of ''Fly Tyer'', contributes the Tyer's Notes column in each issue.


Regular Features

''American Angler'' has a number of regular columns. "The Rant" is a reader-contributed column intended to give readers the chance to get something related to fly fishing off their chest. Past subjects have included pegged beads (a controversial form of salmon fishing), as well as conservation issues. "Natural Reflections," an insect photography column written by Ted Fauceglia, features a different photo of a fly fishing related insect each issue. "Headwaters" (formerly "FYI") is a news and information column. "Expeditions" is a regular feature-article section highlighting longer trips, often to exotic locales. "Casting" features Macauley Lord discussing techniques and improvements to the art of
fly casting Fly casting is a competitive variation of fly fishing found in sport fishing and fishing tournaments. This type of sports fishing originated in the Fourteenth Century. The modern version of the sport is supervised by the International Casting Spor ...
, written for a beginning to intermediate audience. "Quick Fly" describes the method of tying a different fly with each issue, and is usually published in collaboration with sister-publication '' Fly Tyer'', edited by author Dave Klausmeyer. "Gear I Love" is another reader-penned article highlighting a favorite piece of flyfishing gear.


History

''American Angler'' began as '' Fly Tyer'', an in-house publication of the Dick Surette Fly Fishing Shop in North Conway, New Hampshire. The first issue was published in 1978. During the 1980s, following declining interest in
fly fishing Fly fishing is an angling method that uses a light-weight lure—called an artificial fly—to catch fish. The fly is cast using a fly rod, reel, and specialized weighted line. The light weight requires casting techniques significantly diffe ...
, '' Fly Tyer'' was sold and underwent several name changes. It became ''American Fly Tyer,'' then ''American Angler & Fly Tyer'', and finally ''American Angler''. In 1990, under more successful business management, the magazine increased to a bimonthly (six issues a year) printing schedule. "Why ''American Angler''? hen-ownerDick Stewart explained that he wanted a name that would stand out from the other fly-fishing periodicals. More important, the surveys he conducted told him that the magazine’s readers wanted practical information that they could use on their home waters. Stewart chose a title that reflected a commitment to the average American fly fisher.""A Magazine Milestone," ''American Angler'', June 2000, by former ''American Angler'' editor Art Scheck. In 1992, ''American Angler'' changed hands and became the flagship publication of Abenaki Publishers, which moved the magazine to Bennington, Vermont. The year 1992 also saw the debut of Robert Redford's A River Runs Through It, with a corresponding boom in national attention paid to fly fishing. In 1995, then-editor Art Scheck re-launched '' Fly Tyer'' and moved with it, while Dave Klausmeyer (current editor of '' Fly Tyer'') joined as an associate editor. By 1999, Phil Monahan had taken over as editor of ''American Angler'' and the magazine changed hands once again, to become a part of the Morris Group. "In a memorial piece written for '' Fly Tyer'', Dick Stewart described Dick Surette, the founding publisher, as 'democratic to a fault, publishing articles submitted by professional and amateur alike.' That approach set the tone. While ''American Angler'' has published the work of the sport’s best-known writers, it has always been open to new voices and new ideas."


News

According to their publishers, ''American Angler'' and ''Saltwater Fly Fishing'' will be joining into one magazine as of December 2007. ''American Angler'' is expected to have an increased page count, while subscribers of ''Saltwater Fly Fishing'' will have their subscriptions transferred to the new joint publication, which will continue to be titled ''American Angler,'' but will have a standalone saltwater section. Additionally, ''Saltwater Fly Fishing'' editor Steve Walburn announced the purchase of www.saltwaterflyfishing.com, where back issue content will be hosted.


Reader Contributions

''American Angler'' is one of the few major fly fishing publications that regularly accepts and publishes reader contributions, in the "Gear I Love" and "The Rant" columns.


Official website


American Angler Magazine Online
featuring a discussion board as well as continuing content from the magazine.


Recommended links


Interviews



a podcast interview with ''American Angler'' editor Phil Monahan.


Websites


SaltwaterFlyFishing.com
the official new site of ''Saltwater Fly Fishing'' and the place to find back issue content following the recently announced merger.
The Itinerant Angler
fly fishing podcasts, photoblog, and online community, also including articles reprinted from ''American Angler''.
MidCurrent Flyfishing
a daily blog for dedicated trout anglers, also featuring articles reprinted from ''American Angler''.


References

1978 establishments in New Hampshire Bimonthly magazines published in the United States Fly fishing literature Hobby magazines published in the United States Hunting and fishing magazines Lifestyle magazines published in the United States Magazines established in 1978 Magazines published in New Hampshire Magazines published in Vermont {{italic title