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Fly Names



 
 
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  #1  
Old January 31st, 2007, 12:16 PM posted to uk.rec.fishing.game
Da
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 74
Default Fly Names

The fly names have confused me for a long time. You could see my flies
at http://www.versacorp.cn . I have read some books about some of
those names. But until today, I have not got very clear about what the
meaning is. So I just try to tie flies as similar as those showed in
the books. I like the flies as anybody else. When I finish a new
pattern I am always feel very happy. But if there is any one ask me
"what do you call your new pattern. I will act as a dumb. Very funny.

  #2  
Old January 31st, 2007, 05:02 PM posted to uk.rec.fishing.game
Derek Moody
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Posts: 285
Default Fly Names

In article . com, Da
wrote:
The fly names have confused me for a long time. You could see my flies


Named after the person who first tied them: Wickham's Fancy, Greenwell's
Glory.

Some for the creature they represent: Black Gnat, Coch Y Bonddu.

Sometimes for the materials used: Tup's Indespensable, Black and Peacock.

Or the colour: Honey-dun Bumble, Soldier Palmer.

The place they were first used: Ilen Blue, Shaldon Shiner.

The appearance: Booby, Upright.

The action: Muddler, Popper.

Puns and jokes: Seaducer, Dog-Nobbler.

And a hundred other reasons.

at http://www.versacorp.cn . I have read some books about some of
those names. But until today, I have not got very clear about what the
meaning is. So I just try to tie flies as similar as those showed in
the books. I like the flies as anybody else. When I finish a new
pattern I am always feel very happy. But if there is any one ask me
"what do you call your new pattern. I will act as a dumb. Very funny.


It's probably best to name it for what it represents or else with a joke.
*If* others take up the pattern and it's remembered one of those names
might stick or they might begin by calling it "That green fly of Daniel's"
and in a generation or so it might be known as a "Green Danny" and only
fly-historians will remember who Danny really was...

Cheerio,

--
Fishing: http://www.fishing.casterbridge.net/
Writing: http://www.author.casterbridge.net/derek-moody/
uk.rec.fishing.game Badge Page:
http://www.fishing.casterbridge.net/urfg/

  #3  
Old February 1st, 2007, 04:05 PM posted to uk.rec.fishing.game
Da
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 74
Default Fly Names

On 2ÔÂ1ÈÕ, ÉÏÎç1ʱ02·Ö, Derek Moody wrote:
In article . com, Da

wrote:
The fly names have confused me for a long time. You could see my flies


Named after the person who first tied them: Wickham's Fancy, Greenwell's
Glory.

Some for the creature they represent: Black Gnat, Coch Y Bonddu.

Sometimes for the materials used: Tup's Indespensable, Black and Peacock.

Or the colour: Honey-dun Bumble, Soldier Palmer.

The place they were first used: Ilen Blue, Shaldon Shiner.

The appearance: Booby, Upright.

The action: Muddler, Popper.

Puns and jokes: Seaducer, Dog-Nobbler.

And a hundred other reasons.

athttp://www.versacorp.cn. I have read some books about some of
those names. But until today, I have not got very clear about what the
meaning is. So I just try to tie flies as similar as those showed in
the books. I like the flies as anybody else. When I finish a new
pattern I am always feel very happy. But if there is any one ask me
"what do you call your new pattern. I will act as a dumb. Very funny.


It's probably best to name it for what it represents or else with a joke.
*If* others take up the pattern and it's remembered one of those names
might stick or they might begin by calling it "That green fly of Daniel's"
and in a generation or so it might be known as a "Green Danny" and only
fly-historians will remember who Danny really was...

Cheerio,

--
Fishing: http://www.fishing.casterbridge.net/
Writing: http://www.author.casterbridge.net/derek-moody/
uk.rec.fishing.game Badge Page:
http://www.fishing.casterbridge.net/urfg/


I really appreciate your response. I want to buy some books about
England flies. Could you please recommend some good books. I have
bought 7 books from the USA and I would like to know the differences
between the two regions. Thanks in advance.

  #4  
Old February 1st, 2007, 06:22 PM posted to uk.rec.fishing.game
Derek Moody
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 285
Default Fly Names

In article . com, Da
wrote:

I want to buy some books about
England flies. Could you please recommend some good books. I have
bought 7 books from the USA and I would like to know the differences
between the two regions. Thanks in advance.


I'm probably the wrong person to ask about that aspect - anyone else here
have any suggestions?

For my 'traditional' ie. trout and salmon, fly fishing I do tie a few
(approximated) traditional patterns 'though the nondescript 'small brown and
boring', generic Wickhan / GRHE / Pheasant Tail variants I produce might
not follow the exact pattern. For us 'small' is about #14 down to #18. below
that is 'tiny'.

If you really want to know the roots of the differences then entomology
textbooks might be the best place to start. I understand that the Americas
have fewer of the large mayflies but a greater range of smaller species,
there are different sedge flies and damsel flies for example. It is natural
that the imitations of these different flies will themselves be different.

Much of my flyfishing is not traditional - coarse and sal****er fish
(slightly OT here, sorry) require a slightly different set of patterns.
Here too the variation in the food forms that are imitated drives the
different tyings. On UK shores for example, sal****er ffing is taking off
in a big way and many are using patterns from the USA. Some of these work
well: a small, fleeing, fish is a small, fleeing, fish after all. Others
don't work well on the other side of the Atlantic. I recently saw some
video footage of feeding tarpon and instantly realised why some apparently
deadly tarpon lures don't seem to work over here - we don't have a large
predator that specialises in the slow glide, short turn and snap approach of
a tarpon** - though bass will pull off the last part if surprised. We do have
more of the 'lurk in kelp and ambush' type of fish so weed defeating
patterns are more useful here.

See the drift?

You're right to ask. Learning how other anglers have solved problems around
the world -will- eventually improve your own fishing.

Which fly patterns do you find yourself using most of the time and why?

Cheerio,

** We do have some small ones from the same family but herrings and
pilchards will snap at a small, bare hook in any case - probably mistaking
it for pin-fry or small crustacea.

--
Fishing: http://www.fishing.casterbridge.net/
Writing: http://www.author.casterbridge.net/derek-moody/
uk.rec.fishing.game Badge Page:
http://www.fishing.casterbridge.net/urfg/

  #5  
Old February 3rd, 2007, 08:03 AM posted to uk.rec.fishing.game
Alec Powell
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 70
Default Fly Names

On Thu, 1 Feb 2007, Da, gave forth these words of wisdom:
I really appreciate your response. I want to buy some books about
England flies. Could you please recommend some good books. I have
bought 7 books from the USA and I would like to know the differences
between the two regions. Thanks in advance.

Although I rarely tie my own flies nowadays I found that I only really
needed the following two books:

The Fly Tiers Manual - Author Mike Dawes - ISBN 0002187280

and a must have! :
John Goddards Waterside Guide - ISBN 0953364836

Both are available on Amazon
HTH,
Alec
--
Alec Powell

(Waiting for the Great Leap Forwards)

Watlington
Oxfordshire
UK




 




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