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Mike wrote:
Of course, the drop fly is tied to the end of your leader. TL MC ah...that's the part i didn't get. sounds workable, except won't the dry fly slip during parts of the casting motion? ....i also like the idea of a short permanently attached leader to the bend of the dry fly hook with a loop at the end for loop to loop attachment of varying lengths of pre-rigged dropper leaders with flies. i saw something - i think in an orvis circular - about a new (to me) nymphing leader system that has a series of loops down its length imparting a more natural action to the nymph as it moves with the current. jeff |
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On May 1, 11:47 pm, jeff miller wrote:
Mike wrote: Of course, the drop fly is tied to the end of your leader. TL MC ah...that's the part i didn't get. sounds workable, except won't the dry fly slip during parts of the casting motion? ...i also like the idea of a short permanently attached leader to the bend of the dry fly hook with a loop at the end for loop to loop attachment of varying lengths of pre-rigged dropper leaders with flies. i saw something - i think in an orvis circular - about a new (to me) nymphing leader system that has a series of loops down its length imparting a more natural action to the nymph as it moves with the current. jeff If the fly tends to slip. then make one twist in the loop before threading the fly through it. In practice it does not actually slip much. I have not used it very much really, I only recently thought of it, ( end of last year) because I got fed up of having to change tippet lengths for fishing varying depth grayling runs. I have never seen it before either, so it might be a new idea. First time I have published it anywhere either. A couple of times, when larger fish took the dry, the fly slipped down a bit. But it doesn´t slip much during casting. With large dries, I use one twist in the loop before threading the fly through the loop. With the leader ring, I twist the loop once anyway. This seems to lock the ring in position very well. I have tried various loop systems, but for one reason or another didn ´t like them much. They can cause tangles, interfere with leader turnover, and are simply not very elegant. I don´t like tippet off the bend off the dry, ( the "New Zealand rig"), because it bumps fish, when they hit the nylon, and the hook never enters their mouths. After a large fish on the dry, you may have a slight kink in the line, but it doesn´t seem to cause any problems. TL MC |
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