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Top 5 Fly List
Anthony wrote:
What's your top 5 favorite flys currently in use? Don't really care where your fishin 'em. Just curious... Anthony Not sure how to interpret your question, so I'll put up a list of my five most used flies in no particular order: Bruce's Foam Backed Midge Soft Hackle Hare's Ear Pheasant Tail Parachute Adams Charlie Wilson's Orange Stimulator A Woolly Bugger is a standard and is mentioned by people here ( Scott even chose it although "that I rarely use on the particular waters that I usually fish"). In all the years I've fished, I've probably caught a dozen stream/river fish on a Bugger. I haven't fished it alot but enough to know it doesn't produce for me. I have some success with it in lakes both for trout and carp. Willi |
Top 5 Fly List
Scott Seidman wrote:
I think of the Usual as something of an eastern pattern and I never had occasion to use one until I tried Tom's. It's an excellent fly but not one that's usually stocked in fly shops where I fish so it flies under my radar. Now that my eyes are almost fixed and I can get back to tying I'll have to get some bunny and tie a few. (Although I'd just as soon have a few of Tom's. ;-) What's your biggest hatch?? Just let me know size, tail, body, and wing color (wing can be white, dun, or natural bunny foot). No promises, but next time I tie them up, if I have enough hooks laying around, I'll try to remember to whip off a half dozen for you. Like I said in another thread, the Usual is one of the two flies that I got in a swap that I use the most. However, I "usually" use a modified "Usual". Most of the hatches I fish (aside from Stoneflies) are small. 18's and 20's are the most common. I find the normal Usual kind of gross in those sizes. I use the Usual wing but use micro fibbetts for the tail and a variety of body materials like quill, thread, and dubbing. Willi |
Top 5 Fly List
Anthony wrote:
What's your top 5 favorite flys currently in use? Don't really care where your fishin 'em. Just curious... Anthony PT(several variations) EC Caddis Copper John Hopper(variations) Para BWO brians |
Top 5 Fly List
"Scott Seidman" wrote I'm a Usual guy many people find me a bit unusual, .... but is a Usual just using snowshoe rabbit foot hair for the wings instead of more usual materials? If so, I usually have a few Usuals in my box, although I find the hair hard to deal with in smaller sizes and usually use cdc for those |
Top 5 Fly List
"Larry L" wrote in
: "Scott Seidman" wrote I'm a Usual guy many people find me a bit unusual, .... but is a Usual just using snowshoe rabbit foot hair for the wings instead of more usual materials? That's the beast If so, I usually have a few Usuals in my box, although I find the hair hard to deal with in smaller sizes and usually use cdc for those Tom has posted a cool way to deal with small flies and showshoe. -- Scott Reverse name to reply |
Top 5 Fly List
"Scott Seidman" wrote Tom has posted a cool way to deal with small flies and showshoe. .....and, I will repeat, in brief form: chop the hair off the snowshoe rabbit foot. All of it. Pile it into a coffee grinder and mix it with a couple of short pulses. The mess you now have is mixed up every which way, which is how you want it. To tie wings onto a small hook(I use these techniques on 18s and smaller), a few basic techniques are used. For upright wing clumps, take a sparse pinch of hair, lash across shank as you would a spinner wing. Pull upright, take one, or at most two wraps around the base of the splayed wing. Voila! It stands upright, with no added bulk. For downwings, take similar sparse clump of hair, hold over shank and tie down behind eye. DO NOT cut the length hanging forward, but instead, divide forward strands into two halves, lash one down on far side of wing, one on near side of wing. No more than 6 wraps of thread should complete this whole process, after which you can finish head area sparsely. Hope this helps. Tom |
Top 5 Fly List
"Tom Littleton" wrote in
news:3zsLf.50441$6f2.6969@trnddc02: "Scott Seidman" wrote Tom has posted a cool way to deal with small flies and showshoe. ....and, I will repeat, in brief form: chop the hair off the snowshoe rabbit foot. All of it. Pile it into a coffee grinder and mix it with a couple of short pulses. The mess you now have is mixed up every which way, which is how you want it. To tie wings onto a small hook(I use these techniques on 18s and smaller), a few basic techniques are used. For upright wing clumps, take a sparse pinch of hair, lash across shank as you would a spinner wing. Pull upright, take one, or at most two wraps around the base of the splayed wing. Voila! It stands upright, with no added bulk. For downwings, take similar sparse clump of hair, hold over shank and tie down behind eye. DO NOT cut the length hanging forward, but instead, divide forward strands into two halves, lash one down on far side of wing, one on near side of wing. No more than 6 wraps of thread should complete this whole process, after which you can finish head area sparsely. Hope this helps. Tom Thanks for refreshing my memory, Tom. I was about to go search google, but now I have this post archived. It's going to be interesting to see if the usuals pop up on peoples top fly list around next september. -- Scott Reverse name to reply |
Top 5 Fly List
Don't use much "hackle" anymore. Love that snowshoe. Got a bunch of
cul d'canard if anyone wants it. Frank Reid |
Top 5 Fly List
Don't use much "hackle" anymore. Love that snowshoe. Got a bunch of
cul d'canard if anyone wants it. Frank Reid |
Top 5 Fly List
Tom, when you going to bring the Coyote Ugly out of the closet? Best
fly I've used in years. Tom: "I think this water has been fished over." Frank: "Yeh, by ME!" Love that fly. Frank Reid |
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