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On Tue, 2 May 2006 13:07:17 -0700, "Tom Nakashima"
wrote: I just received my order of flies for the McCloud River that are well tied, but not the greatest in aesthetics. I've paid 55 cents per fly, which I thought was a pretty good price, and they do match the patterns I wanted. I recently saw some very nice tied patterns at $2.80 per fly, but they were near perfect and very aesthetically pleasing. I've never fished with beautiful flies before, but was wondering if they do make a difference in appearance to trout? -tom A fly shop two towns over from me went out of business several years ago. I knew the guy that ran it and jumped at the chance to buy some of the "realistic" flies that he had for sale. I bought a bunch of them for about $0.75 apiece, and some Water Wisp flies for about the same amount. I was so very pleased in my purchase of these flies and couldn't wait to try them on my favorite stream. Long story short: The Water Wisp flies were absolutely useless. Never had a rise to them *all season*. The realistic flies did not perform any better that the hack jobs that *I* tie. So, I can say from experience that it ain't what they look like necessarily. I believe presentation is the key to successful fly fishing, regardless the discipline (nymphing, wets, dries, streamers). I once caught a 20 inch land locked salmon that had a fly in its jaw. I removed it and put it on my patch. About an hour later I tied on that fly and took fish after fish after fish. The fly was beat up beyond recognition at the end of that day. It became my "lucky fly", and I only used it when I was getting skunked. It *never* failed. I eventually lost it to a fish that beat me, and I regret to this day that I did not reverse engineer the fly to see how it was tied. I have tied similar ones, but nothing that had the success of that fly. Dave |
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"Dave LaCourse" wrote in message
... On Tue, 2 May 2006 13:07:17 -0700, "Tom Nakashima" wrote: I just received my order of flies for the McCloud River that are well tied, but not the greatest in aesthetics. I've paid 55 cents per fly, which I thought was a pretty good price, and they do match the patterns I wanted. I recently saw some very nice tied patterns at $2.80 per fly, but they were near perfect and very aesthetically pleasing. I've never fished with beautiful flies before, but was wondering if they do make a difference in appearance to trout? -tom A fly shop two towns over from me went out of business several years ago. I knew the guy that ran it and jumped at the chance to buy some of the "realistic" flies that he had for sale. I bought a bunch of them for about $0.75 apiece, and some Water Wisp flies for about the same amount. I was so very pleased in my purchase of these flies and couldn't wait to try them on my favorite stream. Long story short: The Water Wisp flies were absolutely useless. Never had a rise to them *all season*. The realistic flies did not perform any better that the hack jobs that *I* tie. So, I can say from experience that it ain't what they look like necessarily. I believe presentation is the key to successful fly fishing, regardless the discipline (nymphing, wets, dries, streamers). I once caught a 20 inch land locked salmon that had a fly in its jaw. I removed it and put it on my patch. About an hour later I tied on that fly and took fish after fish after fish. The fly was beat up beyond recognition at the end of that day. It became my "lucky fly", and I only used it when I was getting skunked. It *never* failed. I eventually lost it to a fish that beat me, and I regret to this day that I did not reverse engineer the fly to see how it was tied. I have tied similar ones, but nothing that had the success of that fly. Dave There used to be an olde salmon and trout fisherman who lived next door to me on Stanley Pond in Hiram, Maine when I was a kid. He would go out and buy Mickey Fins and some other types of bucktail streamers ( I was only like 12 or 13 at the time), bring them home and start plucking out some of the bucktail with tweezers, thinning them down and generally roughing them up. He swore that flies needed to be weathered and a bit thinned to work properly. Maybe thats what happened to your lucky fly. After being chewed on a bit by the fish and catching all those others... it was thinned enough to imitate something the fish recognized. -- flies from $5.60 per DOZEN! Rods/Reels and Gear www.fly-fishing-flies.com |
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