
December 27th, 2004, 03:06 PM
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Early Birthday Present-- Benchside Reference
Scott Seidman wrote:
"Guy Thornberg" wrote in
:
Whether it costs $50 or $100 it is worth the price when trying to
remember some obscure tying method used in the past, how you did it,
and in most cases gives you options and other methods to accomplish a
similar task. I tried it for bed time reading which doesn't work so
well as it gives me nightmares of how i get intertwined into the
materials being tied to the hook with no other possibility but being
eaten by a large trout. Well, time for my nightly medication so...
Bring On ther Trout!! Nightmares with trout are better than other
fantacy dream I can think of. Eggnog Anyone?
Guy
Biggest lessons learned so far--
1) It's all in the underbody. Even when you don't think you're tying
an underbody, you often are. A little extra effort here (which seems
to be becoming second nature) will result in a better fly, and will
probably save time f-ing around with top layers.
2)(And this goes along with 1, above) Control of thread diameter-- the
hows and whens of when you need it tightly wound, and when you need it
flat.
3) The book has a remarkable section on handling floss, and within a
dozen practice shots, and liberal use of a razor blade, I think I've
got it almost down. I've mostly switched to unifloss and unistretch
(God's gift to those who choose not to use real floss), but I think I
might be switching back to good old 4-strand for quite a few patterns.
4) How to REALLY handle peacock herl. I've always thought you just
tied it on and wrapped it, and if it wasn't fuzzy enough, use more
herls-- and if it still wasn't fuzzy enough, tough. Now, just one
herl gives me fuzzier bodies than I've ever had before.
5) The many alternatives to rooster hackle.
6) The different types of hairs, between solid and hollow, and what
you should look for to best serve each method.
And this list doesn't even get to split tail methods, parachute
methods, amazing things to do with dubbing loops, and the nifty
things you can do with beads.
Bastid! I guess I'll have to go get that book.
--
TL,
Tim
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http://css.sbcma.com/timj
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