How To Use Bluewing In A Sentence

  • During the spring and fall migration periods, extensive use is made of the area by most waterfowl in the mid-Atlantic region, including Canada geese, greenwinged teal, bluewinged teal, gadwall, pintail, wigeon and shoveler. Delaware National Estuarine Research Reserve
  • In March and early April, the bluewing olive, or Baetis, mayfly is common throughout trout country. Field and Stream Guide: 50 Ways to Catch Spring Trout
  • Little Bluewing, the dragoon's little bluewing, that is, was not like other children; she always talked very sensibly, but she often said queer things, and everybody was puzzled to know where she got them from. In Midsummer Days, and Other Tales
  • This fly is easily distinguished from the bluewing olive by its larger size, brown mottling, and raked-back wings. Field and Stream Guide: 50 Ways to Catch Spring Trout
  • Productive flies early and late in the season are typically small: bluewing olive emergers in sizes 18-28, GT Triple-Double dries in sizes 12-16 (see page 94), plus ant, midge, and scud patterns from size 16 downward. John Merwin Fishes America's Best Tailwater: Utah's Green River
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  • There is, by the bye, a little blue butterfly whom the people call bluewing; you can see it in the summer sitting on the tall blades of the grass, and its wings resemble a flax blossom; a fluttering flax blossom with antenna instead of filaments. In Midsummer Days, and Other Tales
  • Mercer's Poxyback Baetis nymph is a great imitation of the midget bluewing olive mayflies that hatch in most areas in August. 10 Tactics For Catching Late-Summer, Low-Water Trout on Small Flies
  • The trout might appear to be taking bluewing olive duns, but they could actually be eating cripples, emergers, floating nymphs, or something else entirely, like spent trico spinners floating flush with the surface. How and Why to Use Two Flies: Tie On a Dropper and You Will Catch More Trout
  • Early fishing in spring creeks and tailwaters can involve a lot of nymphing, but hatches sometimes come off ahead of schedule in the warmer water, especially those of small aquatic insects like midges and the miniature, drab mayflies that flyfishermen call bluewing olives. John Geirach's Tips for Catching Early-Spring Trout
  • Looking at photos of other teal hunters' bags, most seem to hold a high percentage of adult male bluewings.
  • Mercer's Poxyback Baetis nymph is a great imitation of the midget bluewing olive mayflies that hatch in most areas in August. 10 Tactics For Catching Late-Summer, Low-Water Trout on Small Flies
  • So there's at least a fair chance participants will see a few squads of bluewing teal darting over the cordgrass or hear the laughing call of early-arriving white-fronted geese.
  • The white breast and light underwings-especially on drakes-are a good clue when the birds are overhead or twisting and turning, and these help distinguish between greenwing al and the bluewing variety. Field Guide: Know Your Waterfowl
  • A size 18 or 20 Parachute Adams or Parachute Black Gnat, or a Griffith's Gnat in sizes 18 to 22, will cover the occasional hatch of midges or, on some rivers, bluewing olive mayflies. Fly Fishing for Trout in Winter
  • Particular importance is attached to black duck, mallard, gadwall, bluewinged teal, wood duck, bobwhite quail, ringnecked pheasant, American woodcock, mourning dove and recently reintroduced turkey, because of their importance as game birds and their occurrence as nesting species in the wetlands and upland fringe. Delaware National Estuarine Research Reserve

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