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Personal economics of fly tying



 
 
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  #1  
Old October 26th, 2006, 07:28 AM posted to rec.outdoors.fishing.fly.tying
JR
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Posts: 537
Default Personal economics of fly tying

I tie the vast majority of the flies I use (maybe 90-95% or so).
In large part, though, that's because I already have a lot of
money invested in tools, hooks and materials. Being frugal by
nature, as well as unemployed at the moment g, I believe it
would be unacceptably wasteful to let all that stuff sit there
while I went out and spent money on flies.

That said, if I came into a fortune tomorrow, I'd probably give
away all my tying stuff and never tie again..... and not feel I
was any worse off as a fly fisherman.

For one thing, having tied, I'm now a far better judge of what
makes a well-made trout fly. Even if I stopped tying, I think
I'd still forever be a more discriminating consumer of flies. In
the end, that's perhaps the greatest profit I've had from
learning to tie in the first place.

- JR

  #2  
Old October 26th, 2006, 02:26 PM posted to rec.outdoors.fishing.fly.tying
pittendrigh
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Posts: 70
Default Personal economics of fly tying


JR wrote:

That said, if I came into a fortune tomorrow, I'd probably give
away all my tying stuff and never tie again..... and not feel I
was any worse off as a fly fisherman.


Here's another perspective:

http://montana-riverboats.com/Pages/...ttendrigh.html

  #3  
Old November 8th, 2006, 01:28 AM posted to rec.outdoors.fishing.fly.tying
Mike
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Posts: 5
Default Personal economics of fly tying

I personally tie for the enjoyment and the accomplishment of doing it. It
is relaxing. Just like fishing!
MIKE

--
http://www.myspace.com/bigdaddykahuna2

"When my body stops and my brain has to slam on its brakes, will it skid a
few more feet before it crashes?"
John Hartford
You are only given a small spark of madness. You mustn't lose it. Robin
Williams

"JR" wrote in message ...

That said, if I came into a fortune tomorrow, I'd probably give
away all my tying stuff and never tie again..... and not feel I
was any worse off as a fly fisherman.

For one thing, having tied, I'm now a far better judge of what
makes a well-made trout fly. Even if I stopped tying, I think
I'd still forever be a more discriminating consumer of flies. In
the end, that's perhaps the greatest profit I've had from
learning to tie in the first place.

- JR



 




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