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Does anyone tie or use tube flies?
Tube flies are very popular for steelhead and Atlantic salmon fishing where
larger flies are used. The only pattern that I have considered for trout are wooly buggers. Over the years there have been lots of discussions of patterns, tubes, and flies on the Spey Clave (http://www.flyfishingforum.com/speyclave/) You can do a search on their archives and pull up a lot of patterns and discussions. I have gotten away from Q-tips because they are not permanent enough. A few large fish or a lot of casts will tear them up. HMG markets some tubes in plastic, aluminum and brass that will give you a long lasting fly. Hobby shops also have good materials for tubes. The sphagetti tubing tht you can get from auto parts shops is great for 1/8" tubes. -- --------------------------------------------------------------------- "Are you still wasting your time with spam?... There is a solution!" Protected by GIANT Company's Spam Inspector The most powerful anti-spam software available. http://mail.spaminspector.com "Padishar Creel" wrote in message ... I have been into tube flies for a while now and I haven't seen many posts about tube flies. Anyone have some favorite patterns, hints on their use, or experiences to share? Chris --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.684 / Virus Database: 446 - Release Date: 5/14/2004 |
Does anyone tie or use tube flies?
On Fri, 14 May 2004 19:12:31 -0700, "Sierra fisher"
wrote: Tube flies are very popular for steelhead and Atlantic salmon fishing where larger flies are used. The only pattern that I have considered for trout are wooly buggers. Over the years there have been lots of discussions of patterns, tubes, and flies on the Spey Clave (http://www.flyfishingforum.com/speyclave/) You can do a search on their archives and pull up a lot of patterns and discussions. I have gotten away from Q-tips because they are not permanent enough. A few large fish or a lot of casts will tear them up. HMG markets some tubes in plastic, aluminum and brass that will give you a long lasting fly. Hobby shops also have good materials for tubes. The sphagetti tubing tht you can get from auto parts shops is great for 1/8" tubes. R/C model aircraft stores are the best for buying tubes as you get all of the same stuff as you would from a fly tying materials supplier, but at a fracton of the cost. Get a pushrod tube if you want a more robust plastic tube. They sell it in 3' and 4' lengths, plus they sell brass and aluminum tubing in 3' lengths as well. Q-tips work great as the liner for 1/8" metal tubes. One other trick. When tying a fly that you wish to have ride in one postion (wing up like a streamer) cut a thin strip of adhesive lead tape and stick it along one side of the tube. That side becomes the bottom side of the fly. Some wing materials are not buoyant and the fly can ride on its side if the lead isn't used. Peter turn mailhot into hotmail to reply Visit The Streamer Page at http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...ers/index.html |
Does anyone tie or use tube flies?
In article , Sierra fisher
writes HMG markets some tubes in plastic, aluminum and brass that will give you a long lasting fly. Hobby shops also have good materials for tubes. The sphagetti tubing tht you can get from auto parts shops is great for 1/8" tubes. Try using the plastic tube used in the production of cotton-wool buds. After removing the cotton wool, bell the ends with a hot wire. These little tubes make excellent tube fly bodies. They must be cheaper than purpose made tubes for flies. -- Bill Grey http://www.billboy.co.uk |
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