Burlington-Plattsburgh WCAX-TV on MSN9 天
Orvis cutting jobs, mail-order business
Layoffs and big changes are on the way for one of Vermont’s oldest companies.Founded in the 1850s, the Orvis Company ...
"Isn't fly fishing expensive?" Patterson asked the friend. "No! Of course not!" the friend replied. He said he would only need one rod and reel and a handful of flies for the rest of his life. "He ...
In only its third year, the Mayfly Project approximately $97,000 Thursday at its annual "Mending the Fly" fundraising dinner at the Chenal Event Center in Little Rock.
There are a lot of numbers in fly fishing, and some of the numbering may not make sense to the uninitiated—or to the initiated, for that matter. A higher number means a smaller hook, yet the ...
Fly anglers are an opinionated bunch, and the single “best” fly rod for trout will differ from one person to the next depending on their budget, skillset, and the style of fishing they like to do. And ...
The 170-year-old Vermont-based retailer, known for its workwear and fishing gear, will also trim its assortment and drop its ...
Since joining Orvis, he has worked to diversify fly fishing and promote conservation ... and that discontinuing the catalog “will allow us to refocus our storytelling and product selling ...
The brain diagram, called a connectome, could revolutionize researchers’ understanding of the human brain, which has many parallels with a fruit fly’s Margherita Bassi Daily Correspondent ...
In the brain of a singular fruit fly, nerve cells weave themselves together, enabling flight, mating, eating, sleeping and every other activity of her fly life. Now, in nine papers published ...
Scientists have mapped out how 140,000 neurons are wired in the brain of the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster. By Carl Zimmer A fruit fly’s brain is smaller than a poppy seed, but it packs ...
“FlyWire,” a Princeton-led team of scientists and citizen scientists, has now made a massive step toward understanding the human brain by building a neuron-by-neuron and synapse-by-synapse roadmap — ...
FRUIT FLIES are smart. For a start—the clue is in the name—they can fly. They can also flirt; fight; form complex, long-term memories of their surroundings; and even warn one another about the ...