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Submitted by Daniel Overmier on

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I wanted to say thanks for showing me, and everyone else just how easy it can be to make great flies! Two thumbs up my friend!

Martin,
thanks for the reply, this work thing is geting to all of us.

I have just returned from aone day fly in and out deal to our head office and am hangin out in a hotel because I am going to teach a little about fish to nutritional students tomorow.

Thanks for sharing the worm pattern as well, there are fairly complicated patterns on double hook rigs connected by fishing line or wire which one can get a knot in the fingers while trying to ty them. Yours looks very pragmatic,
TL
Florian

Submitted by Pike 1737246338 on

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Martin, very nice and easy fly. I like it.

Btw: Very good idea with The Mundane Fly Project. I am looking forward to see next flies.

Submitted by brad on

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if i'm holding the rod in my left hand the winder is on the right side of the reel which way is the reel suppose to spin?

Submitted by Robert Lamb on

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I am a just starting out fly fisher and tyer. I love to watch and very slowly learn the art of fly tying.
Thank for this great web site

Submitted by Ralph Hertling on

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Hello!
A very simple and versatile fly as I like it most, being more a fisher than a tyer.
But doesn't it have the drawback of fouling much too often?!?
Ralph Hertling
Berlin

Florian,

Sorry I'm a ittle late with a reply here, but things have been hectic workwise.

Regarding the worm hatches, I actualy don't think that it's temperature alone, but rather the length of the day and the moon phase in combination with temperatures that has the greatest influence. I have no specific knowledge about when to expect the first clam worms, but here in Denmark we see them in late February and during March, and only after certain circumstances meet.

I personally only experienced a real worm hatch once or twice.

Martin

Peter,

This is not a club of any sort, but votes simply don't grow on trees. We cannot force people to vote, and as long as your picture doen's have three votes, it has no score.

Regarding bad scores it does happen the images are treated unfairly by multiple really bad votes (or the opposite), which I control on a regular basis and clean up, but apart from that the voting generally seems to be OK and quite fair for most images.

Of course having more than 3,000 images and 45,000 votes makes it a bit cumbersome to check everything manually.

...and I can only see one picture on this email-address and five others with the name Pete Bratt and a different address - a mac.com-address. Are they yours and do you want them listed under one name/account?

Martin

Submitted by Peter Bratt 17… on

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I've submitted 2 pictures, pretty good ones I'd say compared to many and am wondering why no votes or average scores when others appear to have better results. Is this a club where "I'll vote for yours if you vote for mine?

Just curious.

It does look pretty great. Duane Vigue has a ton of patterns that used to be posted on his site, but most are gone now. They are all a little tough to tie as well because of the materials and colors usually called for. Some wonderful looking smelts and attractors in there.

Submitted by Rodney Hart on

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Thank You for a very informative site the content of the Fly Tying Videos is excellent, full of techniques and thread control coupled with some very good material control.

Rod xixflyfishing.

Have you tried the double grinner? I'ts very bulky if you don't strip off the fly line coating, and then all most impossible to pull down at the coated and uncoated juncture. If I was going to use the loop system I'd just go with the new molded loop flylines. My concern with a loop to loop system is the leader material cutting through the loop.

Submitted by Jim Misiura 17… on

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I have an old wine cabinet that I put all my hackle and such in. Close the door and it doesn't look like I'm ready for a yard sale. But then you do have to get lucky and be there when someone put one out for the trash.

Submitted by Neil on

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Sort of like a double grinner knot. i find it easier to make my own loops using thread and superglue, then a rubber glue.

Submitted by Gary Soucie on

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Great page! Few articles of this length contain SO MUCH useful information.

Since you got this far …


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