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#21
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On 2/23/06 1:34 PM, in article , "William
Claspy" wrote: So just now I ditty-bopped on over to gula.org to look at the picture of Tom's Usual and KA-BLAM! "The database is off-line. Please try later." Noooooooo! I just used Google and they had Stan's page still in the cache. I also looked at a few other Usual images via Google, and it would appear that there isn't really a standard pattern, even beyond colors. One had the wing as a down wing, one had it looking like a parachute post, and Tom's is raked forward. Most use snowshoe hare hair ;-) as the tail, but one used mallard flank feathers. Interesting! Bill |
#22
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On Thu, 23 Feb 2006 00:18:46 GMT, "Anthony" wrote:
What's your top 5 favorite flys currently in use? Don't really care where your fishin 'em. Adams Elk Hair Caddis Wooly Bugger Usual foam head emerger |
#23
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1.) Ryan's Butt(Tim "Panman" Anderson Pattern)
2.) PT Nymph 3.) Marabou Miss 4.) BH Nymph 5.) Waxie(my own Waxworm Pattern) Kahuna Anthony wrote: What's your top 5 favorite flys currently in use? Don't really care where= |
#24
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From Anthony's message dated 2/22/2006 4:18 PM:
What's your top 5 favorite flys currently in use? Don't really care where your fishin 'em. Just curious... Anthony I've stopped carrying 5 boxes and a portable tying kit, and have begun travelling lighter. Last year I carried only Bird's Nests and Stimulators, each in various colors. It worked very well for me. |
#25
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![]() "Ken Fortenberry" Now that my eyes are almost fixed and I can get back to tying I'll have to get some bunny and tie a few. (Although I'd just as soon have a few of Tom's. ;-) FWIW, I have been tinkering for the past 6 or 7 years with a lot of variations on the Usual thing. Duns,at first, and midge emergers, then on to caddis adults and emergers. Snowshoe is wonderful stuff, and at the moment, I would say nearly half of my surface or near-surface trout fishing finds me with a snowshoe hair pattern at the terminal end. Tom |
#26
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5 + 8 = 5
elk hair caddis royal wulff sparkle dun woolley bugger brassie pheasant tail bobber hopper bunyan bugger marshmallow nymph bluedoo roadkill streamer skulkin twinkie |
#27
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![]() "Scott Seidman" wrote in message Maybe Tom can kick in with a little history. well, I first got a hold of it from talking to Betters back in 1980 or so. He can get kind of, well, excitable about his inventions, so I took him with a grain of salt and took a half dozen of the "original" Phillips Usual off his hands. The fly was named by a customer of Fran's by the name of Bill Phillips, who annoyed the crap out of people onstream by replying "the Usual" when asked what he was nailing fish on. Anyhow, the pattern I got was composed entirely of snowshoe rabbit foot hair, the coarse hairs for the tail and wing and the underfur, dubbed onto fluorescent orange thread for the body. They worked.....really well at times. No one really did much with snowshoe beyond the original that I ever heard of until around 1990, when a few of us started tinkering. Fred Reese figured out how to dye them properly, and this expanded the useful winging colors. A whole host of folks jumped in and started playing with the stuff, here in the east, notably Barry Beck(who damn near cleaned out Fred's supply a week before I placed an order, bastid!) and Art Lee, who wrote a good article on making dun imitations. I was interested in a durable substitute for CDC, and felt(and still feel) snowshoe was the ticket. It floats well, dries out easily, attacts bubbles like CDC, and when you learn how to chop it up and tie in mixed clumps of the stuff on little hooks, will tie down as small as you want. Tom |
#28
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![]() oh yeah, my top five: Yellow(Perla) stonefly nymph Snowshoe Caddis(tan,if I had to pick a color) Snowshoe Sulfur(sulfurs are too numerous in PA, this one gets used for 2 months) Black Ant Submerger(a scruffy soft hackle wet fly) still, if you tried to part me from the other 760 or so patterns in my vest, I would have to kill you..... Tom |
#29
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"Tom Littleton" wrote in
news:OcpLf.16611$GQ.15443@trnddc03: "Ken Fortenberry" Now that my eyes are almost fixed and I can get back to tying I'll have to get some bunny and tie a few. (Although I'd just as soon have a few of Tom's. ;-) FWIW, I have been tinkering for the past 6 or 7 years with a lot of variations on the Usual thing. Duns,at first, and midge emergers, then on to caddis adults and emergers. Snowshoe is wonderful stuff, and at the moment, I would say nearly half of my surface or near-surface trout fishing finds me with a snowshoe hair pattern at the terminal end. Tom It is super stuff. In general, I find myself using less and less traditional hackle these days-- and when I do, its often on a Caddis imitation. When I fish with a traditional Catskill, its often an older fly. I fish them less, so they stay in my box longer. The exception is during our sulphur hatch. We have a great local burned wing sulphur-- the one Peter Collin tied in a swap some years ago-- that's killer at the right time of year. Even then, I usually cut the bottom of the hackle off so it sits low in the water. In any case, I tend to buy the feathers for that fly in Whiting 100-packs. Scott -- Scott Reverse name to reply |
#30
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![]() "Scott Seidman" wrote The exception is during our sulphur hatch. We have a great local burned wing sulphur-- the one Peter Collin tied in a swap some years ago-- that's killer at the right time of year. Even then, I usually cut the bottom of the hackle off so it sits low in the water. having found that, on flat water, low floating sulfurs are by far the best, I swear by the snowshoe sulfur duns(I tie an orange and a pale yellow version). I find cutwings too fussy and fragile to fish hard, and I fish sulfur hatches hard. Tom |
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