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#1
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I am looking for a good Pattern book for Soft-Hackled Flies. I already have
the book Two Centuries of Soft-Hackled Flies by Sylvester Nemes but would like yet another. If you know of any better I would appreciate your suggestions. Thanks in advance. -- Tight Lines & Great Memories Stuart DeWolfe |
#2
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![]() "Stuart DeWolfe" wrote in message . .. I am looking for a good Pattern book for Soft-Hackled Flies. I already have the book Two Centuries of Soft-Hackled Flies by Sylvester Nemes but would like yet another. If you know of any better I would appreciate your suggestions. Thanks in advance. -- Tight Lines & Great Memories Stuart DeWolfe Leslie Magee "Fly Fishing - The North Country Tradition" and Roger Fogg "The Handbook of North Country Flies". ... TL MC |
#3
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Stuart DeWolfe wrote:
I am looking for a good Pattern book for Soft-Hackled Flies. I already have the book Two Centuries of Soft-Hackled Flies by Sylvester Nemes but would like yet another. If you know of any better I would appreciate your suggestions. Thanks in advance. Although soft hackles are great (and fun to fish) searching patterns, I find myself using soft hackles more and more often on surface feeding fish when I can't get them to take a dry or feel they are feeding on emergers. For these match the hatch type soft hackles, I usually modify a nymph pattern that is usually good for the given hatch. I think there's lot of room for experimentation with soft hackles. Many of the established patterns are old and were developed in England for the hatches there. Not that that's bad, it's just that there aren't many patterns around developed to imitate American hatches. Willi |
#4
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![]() "Willi & Sue" wrote I think there's lot of room for experimentation with soft hackles. Many of the established patterns are old and were developed in England for the hatches there. Not that that's bad, it's just that there aren't many patterns around developed to imitate American hatches. Nemes has a book, "Soft Hackle Imitations" ( I think is the title ) that does some work along these lines. Borger and Hughes also mention soft hackles fished for specific hatches This is something with great potential, imho, and I, too, spend a lot of time fishing soft hackle flies to rising fish. Indeed, I'd say that 90% of the time a riser will take a soft hackle, IN the film, that comes close to the size of the natural even if nothing else seems close to the naturals. SHs that were closely matched to the hatch would be damn deadly, indeed Willi, I've given up on the idea of "claves" and such and probably will never meet you, ... I'm too much of a loner ... but I sure wish we lived close enough to compare notes on this, as a season went from bug to bug. This summer I walked down the hill from my trailer to the HFork nearly every night to try slight variations of a "muskrat and partridge" size 18 on the evening rise ... basically EVERY fish I could cover with a good drift and a good "float" took ... but getting a float that lasted more than a single fish or even a few casts without one is something I never achieved .... exactly the kind of challenge that drives one both nuts and back the vise, over and over |
#5
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Larry L wrote:
Willi, I've given up on the idea of "claves" and such and probably will never meet you, ... I'm too much of a loner ... but I sure wish we lived close enough to compare notes on this, as a season went from bug to bug. If you've given up on Claves, then the chances of us getting together is slim (unless you come to CO) because virtually all the fishing I do out of State is at Claves or informal get togethers with people I've met at Claves. There are people from time to time who attend Claves from a distance. They don't stay in the same places as the other people and they only drop by occasionally either to fish or to talk or .... Think they generally feel welcome. There are no rules or requirements but it's best if you don't act like TOO much of an asshole. This summer I walked down the hill from my trailer to the HFork nearly every night to try slight variations of a "muskrat and partridge" size 18 on the evening rise ... basically EVERY fish I could cover with a good drift and a good "float" took ... but getting a float that lasted more than a single fish or even a few casts without one is something I never achieved .... exactly the kind of challenge that drives one both nuts and back the vise, over and over I don't understand, if every fish took, why are you looking for a better fly? Willi |
#6
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Willi & Sue wrote in
: Larry L wrote: Willi, I've given up on the idea of "claves" and such and probably will never meet you, ... I'm too much of a loner ... but I sure wish we lived close enough to compare notes on this, as a season went from bug to bug. If you've given up on Claves, then the chances of us getting together is slim (unless you come to CO) because virtually all the fishing I do out of State is at Claves or informal get togethers with people I've met at Claves. There are people from time to time who attend Claves from a distance. ... basically EVERY fish I could cover with a good drift and a good "float" took ... but getting a float that lasted more than a single fish or even a few casts without one is something I never achieved .... exactly the kind of challenge that drives one both nuts and back the vise, over and over I don't understand, if every fish took, why are you looking for a better fly? I think they tend to be one fish flys i.e. don't sit in the film after sliming or several drifts. It doesn't parse well though ... but otoh at least it on topic Steve (carefully checking group ...) |
#7
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![]() "Stephen Welsh" wrote I think they tend to be one fish flys i.e. don't sit in the film after sliming or several drifts. yeah, what he said ... |
#8
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![]() "Stephen Welsh" wrote I think they tend to be one fish flys i.e. don't sit in the film after sliming or several drifts. yeah, what he said ... |
#9
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![]() "Stephen Welsh" wrote I think they tend to be one fish flys i.e. don't sit in the film after sliming or several drifts. yeah, what he said ... |
#10
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![]() "Stephen Welsh" wrote I think they tend to be one fish flys i.e. don't sit in the film after sliming or several drifts. yeah, what he said ... |
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