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  2. Float tube - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Float_tube

    The Orvis Guide to Personal Fishing Craft: Fishing Effectively from Canoes, Kayaks, and Inflatables, The Lyons Press. ISBN 1-59228-813-8; Meyer, Deke (1989). Float Tube Fly Fishing, Frank Amato Publications. ISBN 0-936608-71-4; Pothier, Patricia C (1995). Float tube magic: a fly fishing escape, Frank Amato Publications. ISBN 1-878175-91-2

  3. Fishing techniques - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fishing_techniques

    Float tubes - small doughnut-shaped boats with an underwater seat in the "hole". Float tubes are used for fly fishing and enable the angler to reach deeper water without splashing and disturbing stillwater fish. Fly fishing - the use of artificial flies as lures. These are cast with specially constructed fly rods and fly lines. The fly line ...

  4. Tube fly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tube_fly

    The use of tube flies for casting to salmon and steelhead in the Puget Sound region was first documented in Fly Fishing for Pacific Salmon (Ferguson, Johnson, Trotter, 1985). [ 3 ] Sometime in the late 1960s and early 1970s, American anglers began introducing the tube fly style to surface poppers, sliders and other floating patterns for both ...

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  6. Fishing float - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fishing_float

    The Stick Float is a straight float with a taper. [9] It is always attached to the line both top and bottom. They are made from two different materials, a light, buoyant top section of balsa wood and a heavy stem of hard grade cane, non-buoyant hardwood, or plastic. Unlike the Avon float, the stick has no body; it is just a tapered rod.

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  8. Glass float - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_float

    A Japanese glass fishing float. Glass floats were used by fishermen in many parts of the world to keep their fishing nets, as well as longlines or droplines, afloat.. Large groups of fishnets strung together, sometimes 50 miles (80 km) long, were set adrift in the ocean and supported near the surface by hollow glass balls or cylinders containing air to give them buoyancy.

  9. Submerged floating tunnel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Submerged_floating_tunnel

    Submerged floating tunnels can be anchored to the seafloor (left) or suspended from a pontoon (right) A submerged floating tunnel (SFT), also known as submerged floating tube bridge (SFTB), suspended tunnel, or Archimedes bridge, is a proposed design for a tunnel that floats in water, supported by its buoyancy (specifically, by employing the hydrostatic thrust, or Archimedes' principle).