The Jargon Buster Directory is your central resource for locating
an explanation to typical terms found for within all industries , professions
and governments.
Use our directory to locate and decipher jargon that you would like an
explanation for.
Keeping our directory up to date and to include all the spheres where jargon
is used is a never ending task for us. We have started with what we can locate
but but it is a vast subject and can be very niche specific.
Are you in a profession or industry that uses jargon that is NOT included
here? Then why not send us your own jargon buster text and we will include
it within our database. to say thank you we will provide you with a return
link back to your web site.
Action of a flyfishing rod A rod may flex mainly towards its tip, from the
tip through to the middle, or all the way through from tip to butt. Tip-action
rods are also called 'fast-action', because they very quickly regain straightness
once pressure is released. At the other extreme, 'through-action' or
'slow-action' rods tend to bounce back and forth for much longer before settling.
With a tip-action rod you will cast further and more accurately; however,
fish are more likely to break your leader than if you use a rod with a slower
action. A good all-round compromise is a rod with 'middle-action', flexing
mainly in the tip and middle regions: it is fairly easy to cast and good
at absorbing the shocks of a leaping fish. AFTMA# A code, established by
the American Fishing Tackle Manufacturers' Association, defining the weights
of various flyfishing lines. Lines in common use range from AFTMA#4, used
with lightweight trout rods and very fine leader tippets, through to AFTMA#12
used with powerful double-handed salmon rods.
B
Backcast When the fly line is cast behind you prior to launching it forwards
across the water.
Backing At least 50 yards of braided Dacron, strong monofilament nylon or
other material tied on to a flyfishing reel before the fly line itself to
pack out the centre of the spool and to act as a reserve in case a powerful
fish makes a long run away from you.
Braided backing or nylon with an oval cross-section are less likely to tangle
than ordinary nylon of circular cross-section; they do cost more, however.
Belly The thicker, constant diameter section of a flyfishing line.
Blood knot A 'tucked half blood knot' is commonly used to ties the fly on
to the end of the leader. A double blood knot can be used to join two lengths
of nylon of dissimilar diameters when making up a tapered leader; however,
a water knot is a lot easier to tie - especially if your hands are cold and
wet.
Butt
The end of a flyfishing rod that you hold when casting; the handle is on
the butt section.
The thick end of a tapering leader.
Buzzer The adult stage of a family of small diptera flies known as the
chironomids. The larval and, in particular, the pupal stages of the life
cycle are of great importance to stillwater trout fishers. Swarms of these
non-biting midges make quite a buzzing sound in flight - hence their common
name.
C
Caddis fly Also know as sedge flies, the scientific name for insects in this
order is Trichoptera. All caddis flies have four wings, which when at rest
they park in 'ridge-tent' fashion along their bodies, and two antennae -
often longer than the body. Caddis flies develop via a complete metamorphosis:
egg, larva, pupa and finally adult. Sedge flies of rivers and lakes...
Cape The skin and feathers from the neck of a game bird. The best quality
capes are from birds specially bred for the quality of the hackle feathers
from their capes.
Carbon rods Plain amorphous carbon would be useless as a fishing rod material.
Rod makers use graphite fibres to reinforce epoxy resins and other hard-setting,
flexible materials. The rod material is wrapped onto a former, called a mandrel,
heat treated and ground to a smooth finish; this is then called a carbon
blank. The handle, rings and reel fittings are fitted to the carbon blank.
Casting The process of using the rod and line to project a fly across the
water. There are many methods of casting, some ideally suited to particular
difficult situations, such as when there is very little or no room for using
a conventional backcast.
Cast An old-fashioned term for a leader. Casts were often made from natural
materials (called 'cat gut'), but better synthetic alternatives have now
become universally more popular. Co-polymer Modern leader and tippet materials
that are stronger than conventional nylon and less affected by exposure to
ultra-violet light. For the same tippet diameter, and co-polymer leader is
very much stronger than a traditional nylon one. Some makes are also less
visible when submerged.
D
Damselfly Damselflies are relatives of the dragonflies; their slow-crawling
nymphs are an important source of food for trout in shallow lakes and
slow-flowing rivers.
Drag The river fisher's enemy when using dry flies that ought to drift naturally
on the current. Conflicting surface currents, caused by natural river turbulence,
pull different parts of the line and leader in different directions, but
since the line and leader are not very stretchy, the fly is also dragged
back and forth unnaturally. A dragging dry fly rarely tempts wise old trout,
although when fishing with sedge imitations drag can sometimes help you imitate
the skittering behaviour of the natural insect.
Drag adjustment On a fly reel this is a mechanism that adjusts the amount
of force necessary to take line from the reel. Adjusting the drag setting
correctly ensures that the reel does not overrun (spin too quickly and so
allow the line to become a tangled 'birds nest'). The drag setting can also
help when playing a fish, although most anglers prefer to use finger friction
on the rim of the reel to control the strain on the line. Dry fly An artificial
fly intended to float on the surface an imitate either an insect that has
just emerged from its larval or nymphal form, an insect falling on to the
surface, or one touching down to lay eggs.
DT or Double-taper - A flyfishing line in which the last ten or twelve yards
of line at each end taper away from a level middle section (the 'belly').
DT lines are ideal for short range fishing and for making roll and Spey casts;
weight forward (WF) lines are better suited to shooting line a long way.
At close range, both lines give very similar results. When one end of a DT
begins to wear out, the line can be turned round on the reel and its life
extended - something you cannot do with a WF line.
DTF means a floating line with a double taper profile, while DTS indicates
a sinking line with the same profile.
Dun The first winged form of an upwinged fly of the order Ephemeroptera.
E
Emerger An insect in the process of leaving its larval or pupal stage (commonly,
but incorrectly, referred to as 'hatching'). The term emerger is applied
particularly to those insects that transpose to a winged form at the water
surface, as well as to artificial flies intended to imitate insects that
are going through such a transposition.
F
False cast Casting the fly backwards and forwards without allowing it to
alight on the water. False casting may be used to lengthen (and less frequently
to shorten) line, to change direction, or to dry off a fly that has become
waterlogged.
Floatant A chemical that applied to a dry fly to make it more waterproof.
Floatants are also available to help prevent parts of the leader Those well
away from the fly) from sinking in turbulent water. Oily liquid floatants
are most popular, but aerosol and powder floatants are also used.
Floater A flyfishing line the whole of which is designed to float on the
surface of the water.
Forward cast The part of a casting action where the line is projected in
front of the angler and alights on the water. An efficient, smooth backcast
is crucial to good presentation on the forward cast.
Forward taper A flyfishing line well suited to long range casting but still
able to present a fly delicately at short range. The profile of a forward
taper line, more commonly known as a Weight Forward (and coded WF), typically
comprises a ten yard section tapering away from the fly, a constant-diameter
belly of between eight and twelve yards, and another ten yard taper back
down to a fine 'shooting' line some ten to fifteen yards long. Manufacturers
vary these lengths to provide lines best suited to either long distance casting
or gentler presentation of the fly.
G
Graphite rods A more strictly accurate way of referring to carbon fishing
rods. Most modern rods are of graphite construction. Grilse Small salmon
that have spent just one winter out at sea before returning to the river
of their birth. Most grilse weigh between 4 lb and 6 lb.
H
Hackle A feather, usually from the neck area of a cockerel, tied as part
of the dressing of a dry fly and representing the legs of an insect, or in
the dressing of a wet fly, either as a 'throat hackle' or to represent the
legs of a drowning insect. Dry flies are best tied with good quality hackles,
and game birds are bred especially to supply dry fly 'capes'. Hatch Although
the change from egg to larva or nymph is, strictly speaking, the only hatch
in the life-cycle of an insect, anglers use this term to describe the process
whereby a winged adult fly emerges from a nymph or pupa and leaves the water.
I
Intermediate A flyfishing line that sinks very slowly. Top of page...
J
K
Keel hook A hook designed so that when a wet fly is tied on it and retrieved
slowly it swims with the hook point uppermost and so is much less likely
to catch on weed or stones. Top of page...
L
Larva The immature, aquatic stage of diptera (such as the buzzer), caddis,
water beetles and several other kinds of insects. It is as larvae that such
insects grow from a tiny egg to their full size; they then turn into pupae
and finally winged adults.
Leader Nylon or other flexible plastic line connected between the end of
the flyfishing line and the artificial fly. To cast well, a leader should
taper in diameter, being thickest at the fly line and much thinner (and hence
less visible to the fish) where the fly is attached.
M
Mayflies In the UK this name is generally reserved for insects of the genus
Ephermera, and Ephemera danica and Ephemera vulgata are the two species anglers
come across. They are members of the upwinged or Ephemeroptera order - a
name derived from their very short lifetimes as winged insects. In the USA,
the term mayflies is applied to all Ephemeroptera. The eggs hatch into nymphs,
which develop gradually over usually twelve months before emerging from the
water as duns. The duns shed a skin and become spinners, which are the final
mature adult flies.
Magnificent Seven Seven artificial flies you can buy at all good tackle shops
and that will enable you to match the hatch reasonably well in most situations
on river, streams and lakes. They are: Greenwells Glory; Tups Indispensable;
Gold-ribbed hare's Ear Nymph; Red Sedge; Coch-y-Bonddu (a beetle imitation);
Olive Suspender Buzzer; and Damselnymph. The first six you will need in hook
sizes 12, 14 and 16; the Damselnymph will need to be tied on size 8 or 10
long-shank hooks. Matching the hatch Selecting an artificial fly of such
a size, shape, colour and surface footprint (the pattern of disturbance it
makes to the water surface) that a fish is likely to mistake it for the real
insect on which it is feeding. Also referred to as 'imitative flyfishing'.
Matching the Hatch, by Pat O'Reilly
Memory When nylon or a flyfishing line have been on a spool for some time,
they may take up the shape of the spool and fall into curly coils that do
not cast easily and refuse to lie straight on the water. If this curliness
remains even after stretching the line, it will serious affect your ability
to cast and to catch fish. Line memory is a bad thing; the ideal amount of
line memory is zero, and some modern flyfishing lines come very close to
this ideal... but not all.
Mending A technique of ensuring that a flyfishing line lies on the water
in such a way that a faster current over one part of the surface does not
result in the fly being swept rapidly across the surface. This is therefore
a method of minimising drag. It can be achieved by working the rod so as
to flick a section of the line upstream; alternatively (and generally preferable
because it avoids disturbing the water surface) it is possible to cast a
ready-mended line - something best learned from a qualified flyfishing
instructor.
Midge The adult stage of a family of small diptera flies known as the
chironomids. The larval and, in particular, the pupal stages of the life
cycle are of great importance to stillwater trout fishers. Swarms of these
non-biting midges make quite a buzzing sound in flight - hence their other
common name of buzzers.
Multiplier When applied to a flyfishing reel, this term means that the reel
contains a gear train so that when the handle is turned once the drum rotates
more than one turn. Most multiplier reels have a ratio of around 2:1.
N
Needle knot A superb knot for attaching the butt of a leader to a fly line.
Using a needle, the leader butt is pushed up through the center of the fly
line and out through the side. A whip knot is then tied above the exit point.
The needle knot can also be used to join monofilament nylon backing and fly
line.
Nymph The immature, underwater stage in the life-cycle of several kinds of
upwinged flies, stoneflies and damselflies. Some nymphs can swim agilely,
but most species are slow moving.
Nymphing A trout is said to be nymphing when it is feeding mainly on immature
insects near or on the bed of a river. The term is also used to describe
an angler fishing with an artificial fly shaped like a nymph and weighted
so that it sinks below the surface, where the angler hopes the trout will
mistake it for the real thing. It sounds easy, but nymphing requires good
eyesight and very rapid reactions; it is often a way of catching large trout
that would not bother to rise for a floating fly.
O
P
Presentation The accuracy and delicacy with which a fly is cast to the required
spot. Bad presentation either makes a splash or causes the fly to behave
in an unnatural way - for example because of drag.
Pupa An almost inert, non-feeding stage in the life-cycle of buzzers, sedge
flies and several other kinds of insects. The larval stage occurs between
the larva and winged adult stages.
Q
R
Retrieve Pulling the fly back through the water to represent the swimming
motion of a nymph, larva or small fish. the motion you impart by either
retrieving jerkily or smoothly, quickly or slowly, should be appropriate
to the kind of living creature your fly is meant to represent.
Roll cast A way of making a forward cast when there is no room for a backcast.
It is important to aim high, rather than driving the rod tip down towards
the surface of the water; otherwise the roll cast can result in very poor
presentation. The Spey cast is a more elegant and less energy-sapping
alternative.
S
Single action Refers to a flyfishing reel in which the handle is attached
directly to the spool, so that one turn of the handle causes the spool to
rotate once. Most flyfishers use reels of this type, which have very little
in them to go wrong.
Spey cast Sinker A fly line all of which is designed to sink beneath the
surface of the water. Various rates of sinking are available, from almost
neutral density intermediate lines (with a very slow sink rate) to lead-cored
lines that go down rapidly and allow you to fish near the bed of a fast flowing
river or a very deep lake.
Spinner The mature adult stage in the life-cycle of an upwinged fly, such
as a mayfly. Once spinners have mated, the males die and the females return
to the water to lay their eggs, either on the surface or by crawling down
emergent vegetation and attaching their eggs to stems or sticks below the
surface.
Spare spool A replacement drum section of a flyfishing reel. If you intend
fishing with floating and sinking lines, keeping one of the lines on a spare
spool makes it is possible simply to swap lines quickly without going to
the expense of buying two complete reels.
Stoneflies Aquatic insects that go through a life-cycle of egg, larva and
adult - there is no dun stage. Most stonefly nymphs transpose ('hatch') to
adults by crawling to the shallows and emerging from its nymphal case on
rocks or emergent vegetation. The edge of a stream is therefore usually the
best place to fish with an artificial stonefly nymph.
Streamer flies Large artificial patterns tied not as copies of insects but
rather to represent small fishes. The 'wing' representing the small fish's
back and flanks is usually tied either of long feathers extending behind
the bend of the hook.
T
Taper The section of a fly line or a leader comprising a stepped or gradual
transition from a large diameter to a much smaller diameter. Such a taper
is essential for good presentation of a fly.
Tapered leader Leaders have to taper from a large diameter where the butt
joins the fly line to a much finer diameter at the tippet to which the fly
will be attached. The taper can be factory manufactured, with the diameter
decreasing progressively from butt to tippet; alternatively, but with some
small loss in presentation, you can construct your own step-tapered leaders
using short lengths of nylon of breaking strains from (for example if you
are making a trout-fishing leader for a lightweight outfit) 20 lb to 3 lb.
Tippet The fine part of a leader to which the fly is attached. As you change
flies, so the tippet gets gradually shorter until eventually you need to
tie on a new length of tippet.
Turn-over The turn-over that you achieve is a key part of presentation. If
the fly line goes exactly where you want but the leader and fly fall to one
side, behind the end of the fly line, or in a crumpled heap, you are not
getting a good turn-over. A tapered leader is essential to good turn-over
if you are casting small, lightweight flies. There can be several reasons
for poor turn-over, but a qualified flyfishing instructor should be able
to see immediately what is causing your particular problem.
U
U-V or Ultra-violet - Light rays of very short wavelength that are present
in sunlight. U-V waves cause plastics to deteriorate, and so it is essential
to store flyfishing lines (even those on reels and spare spools) away from
sunlight. Leader material and backing nylon is also susceptible to such damage.
V
W
Wet fly A fly designed to sink below the surface. Traditional wet fly patterns
have swept-back wings that make them look like small fish or spidery, soft
hackles that wriggle in turbulent water and are thought to give the illusion
of an insect that is drowning. The term wet fly fishing (as opposed to dry
fly fishing) is applied to nymph fishing, traditional wet fly fishing and
to lure fishing - a technique of luring reservoir trout using flashy flies
that may bear little or no resemblance to any of the creatures on which trout
feed but which stimulate their aggressive instincts. WF or Weight forward
- A fly line designed for easy casting at long range. Most of the weight
of the line is in its forward section (nearest to the leader and the fly).
The profile of a Weight Forward line (coded WF) typically comprises a ten-yard
section tapering away from the fly, a constant-diameter belly of between
eight and twelve yards, and another ten-yard taper back down to a fine 'shooting'
line some ten to fifteen yards long. Manufacturers vary these lengths to
provide lines best suited to either long distance casting or gentler presentation
of the fly.
Wind knots Tangles and knots in the leader caused by bad casting. A single
overhand knot will at least halve the strength of nylon. The best cure for
this problem is usually to put less effort into the casting and concentrate
on the presentation. A qualified casting instructor will be able to diagnose
the true cause of any such problems you may have.
X
X rating of leaders An old and rather obscure method of rating leader tippets
by their diameter. It has now been superseded, and most manufacturers publish
the actual diameter plus a minimum breaking strain.
Y
Z
Zulu A wet fly pattern that allows me to put an entry under 'Z'.