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Fly Tying

Bruce Norikane

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About Bruce Norikane

  • Rank
    Advanced Member

Previous Fields

  • Favorite Species
    Brown
  • Security
    2009

Profile Information

  • Location
    Boulder, CO USA
  1. Love it! I'm a big fan of parachute ants. I wasted a lot of time not fishing ants because I couldn't see them.
  2. Possibly a dead end as the Jerry Neal I'm thinking about is probably the late father. The son, Jerry Neal, works for Colorado Parks and Wildlife and writes the current articles. Here's the son's Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/jerry.neal.75
  3. I think it might have been the current author's late father, also Jerry Neal, who wrote about the traditional Colorado flies. Did you try Jerry Neal at Colorado Parks and Wildlife?
  4. Jerry Neal is a great resource for older and obscure flies that were popular in Colorado.
  5. Like Powershooter, I like Letort hoppers for small hoppers. Especially for picky fish. When the fish are hitting, a Madam X is a quicker tie and uses very common materials. (This is not my tie. It comes from Old AuSable Anglers website.)
  6. Ask the bug ID forum at Troutnut. http://www.troutnut.com/
  7. It's growing in Colorado. More shops sell Tenkara gear and Tenkara guide service every year.
  8. UV resin is so useful. I've used it for a few things around the house, just because I had it. So you're right, the craft stores should stock it. Many hardware stores carry UV glue, either Bondic or the infomercial version "5 second fix". I assume the craft stores are next.
  9. For big drakes, I like Scott's (SBPatt) Carnage style patterns. He has dozens of SBS tutorials that show the tying steps in detailed and beautiful photographs. Here's one from the Step by Step Patterns and Tutorials forum: http://www.flytyingforum.com/index.php?showtopic=82916
  10. In a similar effort to put a spot of color hidden from the fish, for midge dries, I use a foam post with a bright orange spot on the flat top. I use a marker or fluorescent orange fabric paint. Most of the time, I just use a bright orange, pink or yellow post or wing. I've caught some very picky fish using fluoro posts.
  11. Noooooooooo! Tell me this isn't true! Please, please My flyboxes are full of parachutes, My favorite ties. I can tie them from #8 to #28. I use them for emergers, adults, attractors. Mayflies, midges, caddis (sometimes), terrestrials (some patterns.) . I love parachutes because they are easy to tie. They always land upright, so no picky proportion issues. I can see them very easily. It's my one slightly advanced competency. I sometimes use Comparaduns and a few clipped bottom patterns like Barr's VisiDun. Actually, I tend to use these as more visible spinner patterns.
  12. Ignore the wings/legs description. Steve is wrapping a normal dry hackle, then cutting the bottom. The wings/legs is his description of what the wrapped hackle imitates. You just need grey (dun) dry fly hackle. Exactly like what Flytire shows. Here's the step-by-step. http://globalflyfisher.com/patterns-tie-better/better-winged-olives
  13. These don't float. They sink like most unweighted nymphs. They also work during bwo hatches for some reason. Black thread body, copper rib, a wee bit of foam. Very quick and easy tie.
  14. There was a thread on this in January http://www.flytyingforum.com/index.php?showtopic=84764&hl=%20pest%20%20strip I have been using No Pest Strips for years, but I'm going to stop. I hate the smell of moth crystals, so No Pest Strips seemed like a better alternative. I cut up the strips and put a piece in each fur or feathers bin. This is definitely against the recommended safe practice. After reading up on No Pest Strips yesterday, here are the latest safe handling rules. Never touch the strips with bare skin, the stuff is carcinogenic and can transfer through contact Don't cut the strips Don't use them in occupied rooms. There meant for sheds and attics. No Pest Strips shouldn't really be used in your tying room I can stop touching them and cutting them, but I sit near my tying materials for many hours a day. I don't see a practical way to move my tying materials to another room. I'm sad as this has worked for me for over 10 years. If anyone is interested, No Pest Strips use Dichlorvos (2,2-dichlorovinyl dimethyl phosphate) as the active incredient. Here's the SDS: For use in unoccupied areas; not for use in homes except garages, attics, crawl spaces, and sheds occupied by people for less than 4 hours per day.
  15. Flatrock - Hey it looks like those C&F nippers also solve the big problem with my second favorite tool! Do they have a C&F threader built in? Wowsa, I love those threaders, but I haven't found a good way to make them accessible and protected. Do you like the built in threader and needle?
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