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On Thu, 9 Mar 2006 14:50:35 -0500, "Tim J."
wrote: According to my calculations, I'll have to live to 128 years old to break even on the tying stuff. It's the tying itself that rewards now, especially since I rarely follow a recipe these days. I just see something in my mind's eye I'd like to tie and get busy. If I used the money I have tied up in vises, tools, hooks, materials, hackles/feathers, dubbing boxes, lights, magazines/books on the subject, etc, etc, etc, I'd have enough money to buy flies for everyone in this thread for ten years. I imagine every fly I tie costs me about $100. d;o( But, like Sandy, I enjoy experimenting with different ties. About ten years ago I tied a green rock worm caddis larva patterned after one that was pumped out of the stomach of a land locked salmon. There was no tie like it (as far as I know), and my first iteration of it caught more fish on the Rapid than any other fly I've ever fished. The next iteration used v rib, then stretchy tubing, then yarn, then green goose biots. They all took fish, but the first two are the best. Some will say I was foolish to share it, but I did with folks I didn't even know. Now the guides use the GRW and Lakewood Camps have them for sale in their fly shop. I am now experimenting with CDC rope after finding the perfect color CDC feathers. Bruce Hopper (found occasionally on roff) introduced me to very small (20 - 26) nymphs. I experiment all the time with these ties, made simply out of tying thread for the body and ribbing and a bit of dubbing for the head. I once tied a caddis emerger (can't remember what recipe I used), but I modified it by "hiding" a small cylindrical clear glass bead on the bottom of the fly (hook) to mimic the air bubble caddis use when going to the surface. It was meant to be a fly used primarily with the Leisenring Lift, and it worked like a charm, but ONLY with the L. Lift. I still use it occasionally, but hate to tie it. I think I have two left. I've babbled on..... sorry. Interesting subject, Sandy. Dave |
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