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#1
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Would have been a fantastic day to fish today: was cloudy, snowy and
not all that windy. Baetis where up every where, thick as a cloud of Big Hole Valley mosquitos, I know for sure, because I wasn't there. I had to stay home and work on the damn house. Did get a little fly tying time late in the afternoon. Bobber Hopper was a good fly this year. Can't sink'em. And the fish like'em. Cutthroats and Browns especially. http://montana-riverboats.com/Pages/...er_Hopper.html |
#2
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On 22 Oct 2006 17:46:35 -0700, "pittendrigh"
wrote: Would have been a fantastic day to fish today: was cloudy, snowy and not all that windy. Baetis where up every where, thick as a cloud of Big Hole Valley mosquitos, I know for sure, because I wasn't there. I had to stay home and work on the damn house. Did get a little fly tying time late in the afternoon. Bobber Hopper was a good fly this year. Can't sink'em. And the fish like'em. Cutthroats and Browns especially. http://montana-riverboats.com/Pages/...er_Hopper.html When you say you glue it together with CA, is it that really thin CA, and are you just running the CA down the thread work? Or do you actually try to glue the foam together with the CA? /daytripper (of course, hopper time here is long gone...) |
#3
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........well, like I said I don't have a tying-photo sequence yet.
I'll have that eventually. What follows is a tying sequence for the same fly tied as a dryfly tubefly. But it should answer your gluing question..........I use a combination of thin CA glue and thick, and loosely wrapped thread. http://montana-riverboats.com/Pages/...ody_Blank.html |
#4
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![]() daytripper wrote: When you say you glue it together with CA, is it that really thin CA, and are you just running the CA down the thread work? Or do you actually try to glue the foam together with the CA? /daytripper (of course, hopper time here is long gone...) 1) I answered your question already, but now that I look at what I wrote, I didn't answer your question. RE "are you just running the CA down the thread work?" both. I don't glue the parts before assembly or anything like that. I tie the fly, whip finish and then glue it as a last and final step. I put a bead of thin CA over the each thread joint (but only at the end of the abdomen). Then I repeat with a small drop of thicker ZapAGap or its equivalent, at the base of the deer hair, the junction of hte kicker legs and body and the underside of hte body, to bond it to the thread-wrapped shank. 2) Hopper season ain't done here. I may be the only guy in montana still fishing them. But I like to use a relatively small bright yellow hopper as a bobber, with a dry BWO or a small soft hackle wetfly (possibly a beadhead) dragging behind the hopper. I can't see **** anymore, so I need the hopper to get my eyes on target. If I see a swirl behind the hopper, I set the hook. At the end of the day I often have 2-3 additional fish that took the hopper. I've done that as late as mid-November. They few that take the hopper are almost *always* browns, and they're usually big. |
#5
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On 23 Oct 2006 07:44:12 -0700, "pittendrigh"
wrote: daytripper wrote: When you say you glue it together with CA, is it that really thin CA, and are you just running the CA down the thread work? Or do you actually try to glue the foam together with the CA? /daytripper (of course, hopper time here is long gone...) 1) I answered your question already, but now that I look at what I wrote, I didn't answer your question. RE "are you just running the CA down the thread work?" both. I don't glue the parts before assembly or anything like that. I tie the fly, whip finish and then glue it as a last and final step. I put a bead of thin CA over the each thread joint (but only at the end of the abdomen). Then I repeat with a small drop of thicker ZapAGap or its equivalent, at the base of the deer hair, the junction of hte kicker legs and body and the underside of hte body, to bond it to the thread-wrapped shank. 2) Hopper season ain't done here. I may be the only guy in montana still fishing them. But I like to use a relatively small bright yellow hopper as a bobber, with a dry BWO or a small soft hackle wetfly (possibly a beadhead) dragging behind the hopper. I can't see **** anymore, so I need the hopper to get my eyes on target. If I see a swirl behind the hopper, I set the hook. At the end of the day I often have 2-3 additional fish that took the hopper. I've done that as late as mid-November. They few that take the hopper are almost *always* browns, and they're usually big. Thanks, Sandy. I'll have to give that pattern a try next season... |
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