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#1
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If you had one fly that you was your favourite, that produced the best
for you, what would it be?? Mine is a bead head fly called "Ryan's Butt". Mike |
#2
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An iron blue dun size 16 irresistible to trout on a spring/summer morning
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#3
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Subsurface, A PT/GRHE crossover called a Skip Nymph. On the top, a
brown EHC. --riverman |
#4
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Clouser Minnow...hands down. Fresh to salt; trout to Bass to Stripers.
Dave M "Mike Bernardoni" wrote in message ... If you had one fly that you was your favourite, that produced the best for you, what would it be?? Mine is a bead head fly called "Ryan's Butt". Mike |
#5
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My clousers don't have hands. :-(
--riverman (If I had to choose only ONE, I might go with a Muddler minnow. Its good as a surface fly for a few casts, then its a good streamer-like fly) |
#6
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![]() "Mike Bernardoni" wrote in message ... If you had one fly that you was your favourite, that produced the best for you, what would it be?? Mine is a bead head fly called "Ryan's Butt". Mike Tough question. I mean, there are so many situations that are covered better by one thing or another. For example, for a dry fly I would go with a Pass Lake. For nymphing, Pass Lake. Wet fly......um, Pass Lake, I suppose. And for a streamer, it's hard to beat a Pass Lake. On average, I guess I'd go with a Pass Lake. Wolfgang who would add only that a pass lake makes a wonderful generic sorta terrestrial thingy. |
#7
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..... for a dry fly I would go with
a Pass Lake. For nymphing, Pass Lake. Wet fly......um, Pass Lake, I suppose. And for a streamer, it's hard to beat a Pass Lake. Wolfgang, in a dire emergency, would you even consider using a Picket Pin? vince |
#8
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![]() "vincent p. norris" wrote in message ... ..... for a dry fly I would go with a Pass Lake. For nymphing, Pass Lake. Wet fly......um, Pass Lake, I suppose. And for a streamer, it's hard to beat a Pass Lake. Wolfgang, in a dire emergency, would you even consider using a Picket Pin? Much to my surprise, I found a couple in one of my fly old boxes this past week up in the U.P. However, I had thirty or so brand new Pass Lakes to baptize. ![]() Wolfgang in an emergency......yes. |
#9
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vincent p. norris wrote:
..... for a dry fly I would go with a Pass Lake. For nymphing, Pass Lake. Wet fly......um, Pass Lake, I suppose. And for a streamer, it's hard to beat a Pass Lake. Wolfgang, in a dire emergency, would you even consider using a Picket Pin? vince Sorry for taking this and running with it - I'll make sure to put down the scissors first... I really like the Picket Pin (actually a whole group of flies that are similar). In fact I just tied up a bunch of simplified Picket Pins for Tim's swap. I recently found out where the fly got it's name. My friend Big Jim tied some Picket Pins last week at our TU meeting - pretty much the traditional pattern on a wet fly hook with the peacock herl head. I know what a picket pin is and was wondering how the fly got it's name - it doesn't remind me much of any picket pin I had ever seen (well, I've only ever seen illustrations). For those who don't know, picket pins are basically a metal stake with a hole or loop at the top that you use to secure your horse. I remember seeing reading about them years ago in an article about the equipment used by the Union and COnfederate cavalry units in the Civil War (each side used a very distinctive picket pin - I have no idea why they were so different, but it was probably a States' Rights issue...). Anyways, I commenced to look up the history of the Picket Pin fly to see where the name came from, and it turns out there's a small animal, a ground squirrel, the Uintas Ground Squirrel (Spermophilus armatus) that has the nickname Picket Pin. I guess these things like to stand up in the meadows and from a distance they reminded somebody of an abandoned picket pin. There are several other ground squirrels in the Rockies that most likely share the nickname. The Picket Pin fly gets it's name from the use of this little critter's tail fibers which are used for the wing. Us poor East Coasters, not having a ready supply of Rocky Mountain ground squirrels, use the plain old common gray tree rat's tails. Anyways, we have a favorite streamer out here in Western Massachusetts created by one of our local tyers, Dave Goulet, that goes by the name Moby Dick. (However, given it's similarity to the Picket Pin and many Maine flatwing streamers, it's hard to say it was 'created' rather than 'evolved' or 'adapted') I have fished the Moby Dick all over and with it have caught many types of fish in all kinds of water. The Moby Dick uses red pheasant tail tippets for the tail and a mallard flank feather as the wing, but the body is the same as the Picket Pin (peacock herl with a palmered brown hackle). I prefer the Picket Pin's squirrel tail wing because: it holds up better than the mallard flank feather, and it's a lot easier to tie because you need an absolutely perfectly symmetrical flank feather. I prefer the red tippet tail because of the attrctive color - the bland brown hackle fibers of the traditional Picket Pin are too subtle and get lost in the wing fibers if you tie it down wing style (which I do for the streamer version). I tie mine without the peacock head because I think it makes the head too big. A smaller black thread head is easier to tie anyways, and works just fine in my experience. -- Stan Gula http://gula.org/roffswaps |
#10
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Nice TR, Stan. Got any links to images of Picket Pins, Moby Dicks and
other generic Maine flatwing streamers? --riverman |
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