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Submitted by Harper Lake Fl… on

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These are great ideas. Even as a commercial tyer I have never thought oft here kinds of ideas. I am a big streamer tyre as well and whenever I can get a chance I tie a few of the streamer and Spey style salmon fly patterns found on this website and on other resources. Please get back to me on any good flies to tie. Also, if you know of a good, cheaper place to get actual jungle cocks please inform me. They don't sell them for the cheap in fly shops in Colorado. I would love to start tying more different fly with artificial jungle cocks because I have easy access to them. Do you know of any patterns to start with. I would love to contact you with more useful hints and inventions I have used as a commercial tyer. I find that running a string on the ceiling to clip your materials to, with strings attached to the materials to pull them down. I am in need of a better fly dryer like your Cabelas one. Do you know of any other good commercial size ones.

Submitted by Bill Richards on

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Larry Walker, personally taught me how to use his very own dubbing tool....over 25 years ago....Saturday mornings at his fly shop in northwest Denver. So whateer happened to Larry...last i heard, he was in Steamboat Springs. Is he still out that way...cause I would love to go see him.

Submitted by MV on

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Actuallly Wardman is not necessarily wrong. Many dimmers are rheostat designs (you can find them by web-surfing). There was a time when they all were, but rheostats don't reduce power consumption (they only route a portion of the current away from the appliance load), so many dimmers are instead now done with solid state components that "pinch off" the current). Yes, true, you may have to be careful which one you buy...and you have to pay close attention to the current rating of the rheostat, even if you choose a rheostat fan motor control. Clearly Wardman has tried it successfully (or he wouldn't have recommended it), so he picked the right one. (And if you pick the wrong one, I think you don't really risk burning up your drill motor...but the rheostat can overheat and fail (and could get hot enough to start a fire, for example if you "control" your single-speed drill down to a really slow speed to use as a rod dryer, and then walk away and let it run unsupervised).

You ALWAYS have to check current ratings on anything you use, for that matter.

Submitted by John Wood on

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Hello,
I actually have a question for you...do you know from your books, which fly was "invented" by F M Walbran after an exasperating autumn days fishing for grayling on the R. Wharfe in 1888? ~ Would you believe this is a question in the Epsom Angling Society's Christmas Quiz! As coarse fisherman in Surrey, England I doubt most of them have ever caught a grayling let alone on an 1888 pattern fly.. Thank you very much. Kind regards.

Submitted by Franz on

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Hi Martin,

You know I am shameless - I will take advantage of your offer.
I hope I can make it sometime in early 2014 - don' t know yet - it also depends on the domestic autority' s approval ;-)
If you come to the Eifel region let me know - I have finally found two opportunities where I can take guest fishermen!!!

Happy Friday

Franz

Submitted by Gerry Zingg on

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Can you tell me what brand of tube vise is used in the SMHAEN tube fly videos and who sells it.

Thanks GZ

Thomas,

Bas is alive, but getting old and in a home for retired people. I will contact you through mail with more information.

Martin

Submitted by Thomas R. Eckert on

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Does anybody know if Bas is still alive and where I could get in touch with him?

Submitted by Richard O'Halloran on

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priers! I have seen plenty of articles with a few typos. Pikes, trouts and salmons are a few of my pet hates. I can just about get away with English, let alone any other language. Just as long as it has good pictures!

Submitted by William E. on

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Great web site, I just started tying fly's about a month ago and this site is very informative. Thanks!

Submitted by G.S. Marryat on

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Yes, all Coch-y-Bonddu can be shipped to the US. I have many of their excellent books. Also check-out Medlar Press for excellent quality writing about fishing.

Submitted by Woolybuggerflyco.com on

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I love the baby bugger I find that the yellow and white baby bugger in size 16&20 work best in fall.

Submitted by Jake on

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This is an awesome informative on different striking methods. The one question I'd have is in the "What I don't do" segment. Im having a hard time visualizing what you mean when you say " the rod...at steep angles like 60-90 degrees to the fish or even backwards" and also "Pull the straight line with the rod low and pointed towards the fish, ...and at 20-30 degrees.." is there anything that could be added to that to help clarify? I really appreciate the help

Submitted by Lincoln Parmer… on

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I never knew the Llama was a wet. Only knew it to be a streamer.

Since you got this far …


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