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Fly Tying

flyDology

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Posts posted by flyDology


  1. A guide fly is one of those patterns that can imitate a whole lot of anything, is easy to tie and inexpensive. When thinking about flies that I want in my fly box, I want a fly that will simply catch fish wherever I cast it and not drive mebonkers at the vice. If you think about it, Randall Kauffman's Simulator is just one of those golden patterns. It can imitate a Golden Stone…Check! Cased Caddis…check! Hellgrammite…check! you name it, it looks like something that trout and steelhead would eat. I use it all year long in waters that harbor salmon flies and stoneflies. be sure to tie them in a range of sizes, even small version are highly effective.

    simulator.jpg

     

    More info here....http://www.facebook.com/JPNewburyAnglingArts


  2. Having recently relocated back to my childhood home, I have had to stash away my half a dozen boxes filled with classic steelhead wets and spey's into the bottom drawer of the tying bench for another time and place - perhaps when I am long gone, they will end up in a curators collection. I pulled out a dozen of my trout boxes and started to re-organize them for the hatches and conditions that I would encounter on my new home waters. I get to fish almost everyday on a gold medal trout stream so I have a chance to start a new fishing log book and discover different hatch timing or particular flavors that the trout prefer.

     

    Here are some of the most effective patterns that I have used in the past thirty days.

     

    redquilMicromay.jpg

    PinkCahill.jpg

    GreenPapayFB.jpg

    blackDiamondBeauty.jpg

    twilightSuperPeacockCaddis.jpg

    More info here...


  3. I have dyed many polar bear colors. Its amazing at how easy it is to dye and the hair takes color well. I use Fly Dye brand dye in an acid bath just cool of boiling. I mix my dye and acid to manufactures suggestions and immerse the hair swatches for about 15 minutes. The hide will shrink a bit after you dye it but the hair will be perfectly intact and if you did it right, you will still have the original sheen. Just buy high quality industrial textile acid dyes like Fly Dye or Veniards. DO NOT USE RIT, it will dye to a dull flat sheen.


  4. I tied commercially, in that time I tied hundreds of dozens of deer hair fly's. I discovered that a t-edger from the beauty supply store AKA beard trimmer was an asset at bulk trimming of the deer hair flies before I took the razor and sheers to them. You cannot get super clean results but you can quickly get a desired shape before further refinements are made.

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