Very nice article....I'd love to see more.
Nice...Easy.....BIG!!
I love it
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Very nice article....I'd love to see more.
Nice...Easy.....BIG!!
I love it
You wont go broke tying those flies. I am a minimalist tyer (sometimes) and have tied several flies like yours. And that Starling Hackle is one of the best Brook Trout flies on small streams that I have ever used. It is also the best Bluegill fly I have ever used.
Nice site.
very nice, but my wife is going to kill me for cutting up her brush lol
Now you're talking like a bass fisherman. We use large flies so we're not catching 5-inch panfish all day long.
Dick,
it is hard to say whether the green coloured trout are kelts or chromers. Maybe you could send a photo?
In September the kelts should have gained what they lost during the spawning.
Kasper
Hi Candido,
I catched this one with a dry fly in the surface. It is a very succesfull fly in the Netherlands for flyfishing on carp called the white eggfly. In the reports section of my website (www.flyfishingandmore.com) you can find a photo of this fly.
Regards, Edwin
Great job with this one. I am sure it will help anyone who is learning how to fly fish for the first time or those that haven't picked up their fly gear in decades.
Hi! I was feeling the same way for a long time, but I think I found the one. I got one of the new Columbia wading jackets for $100 USD from Cabelas. The only thing missing is that there are no hand pockets (but they are not a big issue for me). I have been in some serious downpours and heavy nor'Easters on the North East Coast of the US and it is waterproof so far - and it has been a year of heavy use! the hood even has a brim to cover your cap brim, too! No velcro on the cuffs - just a plain tapered neoprene cuff and a neoprene waistband with 2 tabs out of the way to snag a line and two huge chest pockets. A great jacket so far.
Beautiful carp, as you deceived her, with what fly? With dry in surface or with nymph under the same one. He/she receives a cordial greeting. Candyfish (Extremadura - Spain). Cándido Pérez Márquez
You got some seatrout, and had a good trip, that`s what counts! :D Well done on adjusting to the warm weather we`ve been having here!
Cheers,
Peter
Hi Peter,
as promissed some feedback of the journey, the fishery was a bit disapointing. We have catched some seatrout but it was extreme hard to catch them. The nice weather of the last month makes the water temerature rise up to 12/13 degrees and from what i have heared it should be around 8 degrees. We have tryed every hour of the day, so we went at night and early sunrises ect.
We did catched a lot of garfish (hornfisk), the seatrout i have catched were all on a ... magnus 8). Never the less, i will be back in september / october and try my luck this summer in Norway.
regards,
Bjorn
Thanks Darryl!
For years I have fished a #19-21 black parachute w. yellow wing a no tail for midges, but this is about 18537 times easier and quicker to tie!
Will keep you informed :-)
Lars
It is a type of fly used on the River Tummel in the 19th and early 20th century.
The idea was to get fly down quickly by in effect using the bare hook as an aid to quick surface penetration and sinking. It is probably the sparsest type of fly ever used, even more than the Clyde style. There is not much info on them, except for W. H. Lawrie in "Scottish Trout Flies" and one picture in Skues "Way of a Trout with a Fly" of regional variations of the Blue Dun and (quote)' I have known Scottish burn fishers to fill bumping creels with just such simple patterns busked before setting out'(unquote). But Lawrie and Skues is quite a good recommendation. I am in the process of tying more of the flies for the article in my web-site.
I have tied a Greenwell and maybe a Blae (Blue) Dun and a couple of others.
They did not have the range of hooks we have now-a-days nor the aids to sinking flies we have. I have published most of Lawrie's comments from his book, still very appropriate today.
T,
Are you talking about the Eur-Flyfish mailing list?
[url]http://www.acc.umu.se/~widmark/lweurfly.html[/url]
Martin
If anyone wants more info on this type of fly -
http://www.dtnicolson.dial.pipex.com/page153.html
and here is another version of the fly -
[img:630d952eb7]http://www.dtnicolson.dial.pipex.com/_wp_generated/wpba8bc92e_1b.jpg[/i…]
Excellent, do you have the pattern recipes posted anywhere, if so where and if not can you give them to me. Thanks.
Hi Lars,
I have not had a problem with the fly landing on it's side. With this fly you can cut the post very short and it will still be highly visible on the water. Good luck and let me know how it goes.
Darryl
A stunning amount of clear, usable information! Thank you!
Freezing a cast line is extremely difficult but what helps is to get the subject against a dark background. If there are dark trees or rocks, position your subject between you and the background. This will sometimes allw you to open the lense one stop which helps so you can increase the speed.
I have a pair of Weinbrenner's and was thinking about replacing the worn out felt with an aquastealth sole. Has anyone done this?
Hi Darryl!
This is a nice fly that I want to try for my local streams here in Denmark!
Does it always land with the orange wing upwards?
Lars
Great wallpapers, can't wait to be part of one in a couple of weeks :D
Aart,
Interesting way of fishing this fly. Let us know how if the salmon found it stimulating.
Kasper
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