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#1
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I seem to be (almost) the only one posting to this newsgroup.
There are a lot of fly tiers out there, and there are (so far) no insult fests in this group. You'd think it would get more traffic. Here (link below) is a forgotten fly that still works. This got me thinking about forgotten flies. I'm going to make a bunch this summer, and see if they still work: The Bi-Visible, Renegade, Gray Hackle Yellow, Professor and Red-tagged Woolly Worm are flies that used to be in every shop in Montana--that you never see anymore. #18 Renegades work well during Tryco hatches (a mentor just told me that yesterday) and you can see them, which isn't necessarily so with the more realistic imitations the shops sell now. ..........another forgotten fly: http://montana-riverboats.com/Pages/...mes/index.html |
#2
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![]() .........another forgotten fly: http://montana-riverboats.com/Pages/...ly-Tiers/Woody... Thanks for posting, do you have any information on how the fly was/is fished? My first impression is that it is fished like a streamer, but if you have historical information on how it's fished, that would be appreciated. PENZZZ |
#3
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On 7 Mar 2007 07:04:00 -0800, "pittendrigh"
wrote: ...another forgotten fly: http://montana-riverboats.com/Pages/...mes/index.html Sandy, have you ever seen the book Forgotten Flies by Paul Schmookler and Ingrid V. Sils? It is a very large "coffe table" type book with more than 500 pages. The flies are Atlantic Salmon flies and streamers. The colors are breath taking, and the entire book is worth purchasing even just to look at the wonderfull flies tied by artists long ago, never mind the hundred of recipes, and the great reading. There is a section on Carrie Stevens' streamers and we all know they work. Also sections on John Raymond Bergman, Chrles DeFeo, Mary Orvis Marbury and Preston Jennings. Dave |
#5
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pittendrigh wrote:
I seem to be (almost) the only one posting to this newsgroup. There are a lot of fly tiers out there, and there are (so far) no insult fests in this group. You'd think it would get more traffic. Here (link below) is a forgotten fly that still works. This got me thinking about forgotten flies. I'm going to make a bunch this summer, and see if they still work: The Bi-Visible, Renegade, Gray Hackle Yellow, Professor and Red-tagged Woolly Worm are flies that used to be in every shop in Montana--that you never see anymore. I'd add Bloody Butchers (cool name,) Grey Hackle Peacock and the Potts flies to your list as popular flies in CO during that period. I still fish Renegades and Bi-Visibles. Willi |
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On Mar 7, 5:36 pm, Dave LaCourse wrote:
Sandy, have you ever seen the book Forgotten Flies by Paul Schmookler and Ingrid V. Sils? Thanks Dave. No I hadn't heard of that book. But now I want it. |
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#8
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On Mar 7, 11:18 pm, Kevin Vang wrote:
I have great luck fishing Bi-visibles when the trout are feeding on caddises. If I had to guess why, I would say that the palmered hackle resembles a caddis fluttering its wings. Perhaps--in the dry fly on top of anything but spring creek surfaces-- all the fish sees is a fuzzy collection of leg-like dimples in surface film. In other words, on typically broken surfaces, it's possible a BiVisible looks roughly the same (to the fish) as an Elk Hair Caddis. And if so, why not fish the fly that floats the best, that is easiest for the fisherman to see. |
#9
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![]() "Kevin Vang" wrote in message t... In article , says... I still fish Renegades and Bi-Visibles. I have great luck fishing Bi-visibles when the trout are feeding on caddises. If I had to guess why, I would say that the palmered hackle resembles a caddis fluttering its wings. Kevin In "What the Trout Said", Proper puts forth the argument that palmer hackled dries are pretty much as effective as anything for caddis hatches on broken or quick moving water. That you can see the contrast of a bivisible while fishing such waters helps, too. I still carry them in a range of sizes, and they do work. Tom |
#10
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![]() "pittendrigh" wrote And if so, why not fish the fly that floats the best, that is easiest for the fisherman to see. I carry smallish Renegades and fish them fairly often, even on spring creeks. Usually in a situation where one might be tempted to "ant, or beetle, the hatch" ... easier to see than an ant or beetle and works for me .... little rws are good for this too, just much harder to tie G (a size 20 Royal Wulff is one fly I will buy rather than tie ... even as cheap as I am :-) |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
In case you have forgotten | Charles B. Summers | Bass Fishing | 16 | March 9th, 2006 11:32 PM |
Forgotten classics, from one to another | William Claspy | Fly Fishing | 4 | February 2nd, 2006 06:54 AM |
Forgotten pleasures | Wolfgang | Fly Fishing | 13 | November 21st, 2005 05:27 PM |
Forgotten pleasures | Wolfgang | Fly Fishing Tying | 12 | November 21st, 2005 05:27 PM |
Gone and forgotten? | joe | Saltwater Fishing | 3 | January 14th, 2004 01:55 AM |