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#1
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The fly tying season started for me today. I haven't tied
a fly since April. But I did visit the ladies sewing store today, where I bought scissors, thick claret-colored thread for ribbing, various spools of metalic tinsel and a bunch of long thin 'beading' needles, which I tie most of my fly bodies on these days. This weekend I'll drive down to West Yellowstone and get a bunch of bird skins for tying soft hackles. And I find myself wondering: what should I work on this year? I still tie lots of standard patterns, but like many of us, I do like working on new designs most of all. So what do you think the most important, still-outstanding and unresolved design problems are? What the most important fish foods that don't have a satisfactory imitation yet? If you could close your eyes and say the magic words, presto, what would you like to see in the fly bins next year? |
#2
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![]() "spittendrigh" wrote in message ... So what do you think the most important, still-outstanding and unresolved design problems are? What the most important fish foods that don't have a satisfactory imitation yet? If you could close your eyes and say the magic words, presto, what would you like to see in the fly bins next year? A great set of questions, Sandy. I am about to start up the season, as well, so a fine time to ponder(unfortunately the next 60 dozen or so are established designs, for me, but I still do some thinking, from time to time). Unresolved design issues? Geez, probably every design can be improved somehow....it's just that we haven't figured it out yet. What foods aren't satisfactorily imitated? Algae and plankton have few, if any imitations, and some fish eat them.....seriously, most common foods of trout and bass have been imitated to some serious extent. Satisfactory? Well, that would be up to the end user. Can it be done better? See above for my opinion. What do I wish to see in fly bins next year? If they held mine, nothing....I will immediately seek payment from the shop owner, and well as re-orders! Have a good season, Sandy, and keep us posted with those brainstorms of yours. Tom |
#3
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Tom Littleton wrote:
"spittendrigh" wrote in message ... So what do you think the most important, still-outstanding and unresolved design problems are? What the most important fish foods that don't have a satisfactory imitation yet? If you could close your eyes and say the magic words, presto, what would you like to see in the fly bins next year? A great set of questions, Sandy. I am about to start up the season, as well, so a fine time to ponder(unfortunately the next 60 dozen or so are established designs, for me, but I still do some thinking, from time to time). Unresolved design issues? Geez, probably every design can be improved somehow....it's just that we haven't figured it out yet. What foods aren't satisfactorily imitated? Algae and plankton have few, if any imitations, and some fish eat them..... You say that in jest but one of my things this Summer was to catch a grass carp on a fly. There's a small pond just down the street that has some HUGE 20 to 30 pound grass carp. I fished for them probably about a dozen times, usually for about 15 minutes when I end up spooking them. In the small shallow pond, you spook one and they all get spooked. They're plant eaters, and it's hard to imitate plants with a fly (at least for me). The one guy I know that is reasonably successful, chums them with grass clippings. Once they're feeding he throws out a fly with some strands of green floss tied to it. I don't want to chum the fish. I know some people have caught them on nymphs, but I've made some great presentations to actively feeding fish with no results. Common carp are easy but these grassies are tough! Willi |
#4
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spittendrigh wrote:
... So what do you think the most important, still-outstanding and unresolved design problems are? ... I make no claims as to its importance, except to me, but the design problem which will get most of my attention this winter is how to tie a large bait fish imitation on a 4/0 hook. Gizzard shad can grow to 16-20" and muskie love them. Rabbit fur strips are the tried and true but they're a pain to cast, the Puglisi-style synthetics absorb less water and are easier to cast but don't catch as many fish. At any rate, tying up big honkin' muskie flies will occupy a large part of my "creative" tying time this season. -- Ken Fortenberry |
#5
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![]() spitten It's that time again isn't it. I get bored tying the samo samo patterns hour after hour, year after year. After tying 5 or so, I quit and start tying something else. Hince, material and hooks piled all over my bench. I've even been known to buy the standards just so I don't have to tie them again. Then I complain all season about the poor tying job and cheap hooks. However...this summer I went to one of my favorite fishing spots and casted to rising trout all morning without a single take. So, I got out my trusty net and caught a few of the drifting midges they were feeding on. Never seen them before and couldn't find them in any book or online. I made some up that night and in the am gave them a try. All I can say is they were exactly what the trout wanted. So guess what I'll be tying a bunch of this winter. Probably one of those once in a lifetime hatches, that came from Mexico in the intestines of migrating finches. Cdog -- Corndog ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Corndog's Profile: http://www.njflyfishing.com/vBulleti...hp?userid=1696 View this thread: http://www.njflyfishing.com/vBulleti...ad.php?t=13144 ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Unrestricted-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#6
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On 28 Nov, 23:35, spittendrigh wrote:
The fly tying season started for me today. I still dress lots of flies all the year round, so I don´t really have a "season". As I fish for lots of different fish, I also use quite a large number of patterns. The only way I have found to come up with new designs is when I discover specific problems or scenarios, and sit down to solve them. Just sitting and trying to come up with new designs doesn´t work for me. Sorry if that is not much help! TL MC |
#7
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spittendrigh wrote:
The fly tying season started for me today. I haven't tied a fly since April. But I did visit the ladies sewing store today, where I bought scissors, thick claret-colored thread for ribbing, various spools of metalic tinsel and a bunch of long thin 'beading' needles, which I tie most of my fly bodies on these days. This weekend I'll drive down to West Yellowstone and get a bunch of bird skins for tying soft hackles. And I find myself wondering: what should I work on this year? I still tie lots of standard patterns, but like many of us, I do like working on new designs most of all. So what do you think the most important, still-outstanding and unresolved design problems are? What the most important fish foods that don't have a satisfactory imitation yet? If you could close your eyes and say the magic words, presto, what would you like to see in the fly bins next year? I'm up to my ears in tying stuff for the silent auction at my club's Xmas party. Some of my old standbys have provoked some quite savage bidding wars to the clubs advantage. After that it's replenishing my boxes of small stuff, 18 and smaller. I'm also considering going semi-pro with a barter deal for some steelhead guiding services. Mike McGuire |
#8
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![]() "spittendrigh" wrote in message ... ...So what do you think the most important, still-outstanding and unresolved design problems are?... Beetles come readily to mind. Not that I think they're undermisrepresented as a food source......they just aren't that important compared to the aquatics.....or that there aren't already enough effective patterns around.....plenty of very useful deer hair and foam bugs to chose from. But, deer hair is fragile and quickly soaked, while foam holds all the aesthetic appeal for me of a bag of pus. Wolfgang |
#9
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On Nov 28, 7:06 pm, Ken Fortenberry
wrote: At any rate, tying up big honkin' muskie flies will occupy a large part of my "creative" tying time this season. I've fished the following two full seasons now. It's the best big fish fly I know (in brown trout terms anyway) and it IS a lot easier to cast than a fur strip fly of the same size. It does take a fair amount of planning and determination to make. http://montana-riverboats.com/Pages/...g-Sticker.html |
#10
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![]() Always looking for big, ugly flies to catch big trout. The Pig Sticker looks interesting and I will tie some up. My quest is to get nymphs to wiggle like the real ones. When I throw live nymphs into a stream the trout come running and grab them aggressively. My patterns will take fish, but don't get the positive takes a real live bug gets. BTW, dead nymphs seem to be a turn-off - it's the wiggle that seems to draw them in. The plastic cones work OK for streamers and very large nymphs, but for size 14 and under nymphs I still can't get the wiggle I'd like. -- JeffK ------------------------------------------------------------------------ JeffK's Profile: http://www.njflyfishing.com/vBulleti...php?userid=334 View this thread: http://www.njflyfishing.com/vBulleti...ad.php?t=13144 ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Unrestricted-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
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