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in American Angler?? It was by an Alaskan sportsman, and his problems with
fishing pegged beads. -- Scott Reverse name to reply |
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Scott Seidman wrote:
in American Angler?? It was by an Alaskan sportsman, and his problems with fishing pegged beads. No, but in looking for it online, I came across another nicely written article at http://www.alaskaflyfishingonline.co...ggsucking.html that mentions the pegged beads. Apparently a lot of the crap I see on the Salmon River in NY is common in Alaska as well. One could change the names in the Alaska article to New York and not lose a whit of relevence. It also puts my egg pattern conundrum from another thread in a fresh light. Joe F. |
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Scott Seidman wrote:
in American Angler?? It was by an Alaskan sportsman, and his problems with fishing pegged beads. Or did you mean this one from the Anchorage Daily News? http://www.adn.com/outdoors/story/69...-6828460c.html Wonderfully snarky, that one. a previous self-examination, I definitely do not need to catch a fish that badly. Joe F. |
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"rb608" wrote in
oups.com: Scott Seidman wrote: in American Angler?? It was by an Alaskan sportsman, and his problems with fishing pegged beads. Or did you mean this one from the Anchorage Daily News? http://www.adn.com/outdoors/story/69...-6828460c.html Wonderfully snarky, that one. a previous self-examination, I definitely do not need to catch a fish that badly. Joe F. I think it's the same author, different venue. Definitely the same technique. -- Scott Reverse name to reply |
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On 26 Oct 2006 10:19:18 -0700, "rb608" wrote:
Scott Seidman wrote: in American Angler?? It was by an Alaskan sportsman, and his problems with fishing pegged beads. Or did you mean this one from the Anchorage Daily News? http://www.adn.com/outdoors/story/69...-6828460c.html Wonderfully snarky, that one. a previous self-examination, I definitely do not need to catch a fish that badly. Joe F. Ok, but where can I get some Tibetan tree skunk belly fur? /daytripper (And can I dye it Chartreuse? ;-) |
#6
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![]() rb608 wrote: Scott Seidman wrote: I'm not sure what the "pegged bead" rig is. If it's that unethical I'll have to figure it out and give it a try. There's another egg road to travel down that I tried out this fall: soft plastic eggs, made from the same stuff rubber worms are molded from. These really are despicable. The trout give them and tentative try, and then they keep on chewing. I watched it happen in some crystal clear water, in a channel between two lakes. I'll have a package of those in my box every fall now. |
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salmobytes wrote:
There's another egg road to travel down that I tried out this fall: soft plastic eggs, made from the same stuff rubber worms are molded from. The other avenue has been discussed here previously - hot glue eggs. My fishing buddy squirted out a bunch of those & showed me a couple. I wouldn't use them. They definitely cross over whatever distinction I draw for something to be called a fly. There's a functional distinction between questionable flies & questionable methods, however. I don't begrudge the molded flies so much; but the intentional snagging in an abomination. Joe F. |
#8
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![]() Scott Seidman wrote: in American Angler?? It was by an Alaskan sportsman, and his problems with fishing pegged beads. I figured out what a pegged bead is: it's a clever, high-tech strategy for snagging fish in the mouth, even after they have done their best to reject your spurious offering. That may be too far out there even for me. Phew. That'd be saying something. |
#9
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"salmobytes" wrote in
oups.com: Scott Seidman wrote: in American Angler?? It was by an Alaskan sportsman, and his problems with fishing pegged beads. I figured out what a pegged bead is: it's a clever, high-tech strategy for snagging fish in the mouth, even after they have done their best to reject your spurious offering. That may be too far out there even for me. Phew. That'd be saying something. I'd have no problem with them if the bead were pegged right at the hook. Even then, if I guided out of an Alaskan lodge, and the guide was supposed to provide flies, I'd be very upset if that were the only fly he had. -- Scott Reverse name to reply |
#10
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Scott Seidman wrote:
I'd have no problem with them if the bead were pegged right at the hook. Even then, if I guided out of an Alaskan lodge, and the guide was supposed to provide flies, I'd be very upset if that were the only fly he had. The regulation in Alaska is that the bead must be pegged to farther than two inches above the hook. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
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