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#1
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I just went to their web page (www.ewingfeatherbirds.com) and looked at
their specials, and they are preety smoking. They have dry fly minpacks that are usually $5 in flyshops for $2, dry fly #1 necks that are usually $50 in flyshops for $20, wolly buggers that are usually about $10 for $3, and marabou patches for $4. I know ewing isnt of the quality of Whitting, but these seems like preety hot deals. http://www.ewingfeatherbirds.com/page61.html |
#2
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I would stick with stuff from Dr. Tom Whiting for trout flies, but
Ewings chicken feathers are superior for bass and sal****er. Big Dale |
#3
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Not to burst your bubble, but I believe the prices you saw are Ewings
prices to dealers, I don't think they sell direct to the public. As BD said, I wouldn't generally use Ewing for trout flies, but for streamers, buggers, etc, they'd be OK. I now use Collins hackle for most of my tying. |
#4
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![]() "Big Dale" wrote in message oups.com... I would stick with stuff from Dr. Tom Whiting for trout flies, but Ewings chicken feathers are superior for bass and sal****er. Big Dale Hi All, I go with Big Dale on this. In another life, in fly manufacturing, we used mostly Whiting, but found a gap, where Whiting wasn't doing bass or sal****er stuff we liked. We went to Ewing, and got the feathers we preferred. Whiting has since apparently filled that gap, after "suggestions" from the customers, and meanwhile the quality of Ewing's dry fly hackle has become better. Me . . . no longer in the business, these comments are from a casual observer. (used to buy hundreds of necks/saddles at a time) I see Ewing hackle around here sold retail. As mentioned by another poster, the price sounds pretty cheap. For Ewing I would still only go with grade 1or 2 feathers. (personally , I haven't bought any feathers at all the last few years . . .heck . ..I'm still working on stuff I bought in the mid '80s) I have heard good things about Collins hackle, but have not tied with the feathers. Gave the suggestion to the guy I was consulting to, for consideration to buy for production, but apparently it didn't work out or there was no followup. At that time, and maybe still, Whiting is hard to beat. FWIW, I still touch all necks/saddles even when I casually look. If a fly shop/business doesn't allow that, move on. Ask them about the properties of the feathers. If they don't know, move on. Ask them about sizes of flies from the different areas of the neck/saddle. If they don't know, move on. ( more questions are better . . .but do your homework) Heh . . . heh . . .you got me on this post. I have seen too many people buy "stuff", in terms of feathers, and couldn't tie what they wanted. BestWishes, DaveMohnsen Denver (any spelling errors are the fault of my computer . . . new computer . . ..not used to spelling on my own ![]() |
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