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GFS2007 - Shipping
jeff wrote:
i studied that video before i decided to enter this swap. the fact that it is such an apparently simple tie led me to the erroneous conclusion even i could do that. a type 1 cdc feather is important simply to lock in the lower feather branches allowing the upper ones to flow out and backward. Yep, and if you tie it in with the concave side facing backwards, it's easier to keep them out of the way when wrapping the feather. I take the feather and stroke all the extra longer fibers back, leaving just a tiny bunch of feathers at the tip to tie it in. (I initially tried doing it the way he says and slide the feather back and trap it, but kept catching longer fibers that way.) In then lock it in place with a wrap over the tip, one under, and another over it before advancing the tying thread. (I experimented quite a bit with this one, as I tied my own mutant CDC Madame X for a previous swap.) my mutants are... uh ...well, you'll see. hans ties his on a 15 hook...i'm using cheap 14s and 12s. it's been humbling. the 12s are laughable, the 14s humorous but nearly acceptable. doubt they'll float upright, and finding the eye will be tough...but you guys don't fish with the swap stuff anyway. me...i fish em all. If I like the looks of the fly I'll tie up some extras and save the original to refer back to it. but, i'll tell you, that is the best dry fly i have ever used. it works everywhere. i bought some from harry mason (troutflies.com) a couple years ago and it's my favorite dry fly now. the madison browns and rainbows and slough cutts really liked it, and snowbird and hazel creek trout couldn't resist it. as i ripen, i'm narrowing my preferred flies to a few proven types. this one's tops. Cool. I used them on the Little River with no luck, but the Crowsnest River 'bows loved them. They were smacking it from every direction; dead drift, dragging across stream, skittering directly downstream ... it was great fun. I'll have to make a more concerted effort to fish them on my May trip to the Smokies. (I'm with you on sticking with a proven fly. I usually just tie on a #16 para Adams and fish that until it gets totally trashed or hung in a tree somewhere.) Chuck Vance (which is really prety funny when you consider all the different flies I tie up before a big trip) |
GFS2007 - Shipping
My Flies were shipped on Tuesday.
Thanks! MIKE BERNARDONI -- http://www.myspace.com/bigdaddykahuna2 "When my body stops and my brain has to slam on its brakes, will it skid a few more feet before it crashes?" John Hartford You are only given a small spark of madness. You mustn't lose it. Robin Williams "rb608" wrote in message news:piKsh.2427$yj7.1220@trndny08... Now that the tying is well underway, it's time to reiterate the tagging & shipping instructions. A more verbose discussion is still on the temporary website at http://mysite.verizon.net/gfs2007 but here's the Reader's Digest version. Tags: Don't make them too big, & make sure they won't fall off in transit. Shipping boxes: Send them large enough to receive 25 unknown flies. The oft-mentioned VCR-sized box remains the gold standard. Postage: Please affix correct postage & return address to your return box. Mail your completed flies to: Joe Fleischman P.O. Box 171 Bel Air, MD 21015 If anyone is shipping via a method that will not deliver to a PO box, let me know. Thanks, Joe F. |
GFS2007 - Shipping
Alrighty, I guess it's time for me to start checking the PO box. More
than a couple tyers say they've sent 'em in, so it's the least I can do to go pick 'em up. FWIW, I added a "Flies Received" column to the table on the sebsite, so if I fail to mention yours here, I might have just put it there. I'll try and be somewhat prompt about it though, so you don't have to worry if your hard work made it here or not. Joe F. |
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