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The Art of Temptation
November/December 2007
Photograph by Mark Morosse

Hand-tied flies may be
facsimiles of actual creatures, or, like the “Adams” fly in the vise shown
here, an angler’s idea of something irresistible. “The fish is the final judge,
and it’s not always a consistent judge,” says Ray Pupedis, who tied the Adams
and manages the Peabody Museum’s entomology collection. His fly-tying
paraphernalia is part of a Peabody exhibit (with the American Museum of Fly
Fishing; through February 24) where visitors can compare impostors with real
bugs. In the jars below, for instance, are real mayflies; just to the left of
the top jar is a fly-tier’s version. If you were hungry, which one would you eat?
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