Three new flies with common characteristics: reverse tied polafibre, "painted" with angel hair and Hard as Hull cement. The pollock/coalfish imitation is weighted for fishing around structure, and features flashy kinky fibre/fishair mix along with emu feathers. Floating Night Fly has a triangular piece of foam (a hidden crease fly concept) in the head, and floats perfectly. The Tutti Frutti colored fly is a four feather flatwing, with some polafibre and firefly flash mixed between feathers.
Sunday, February 21, 2010
Pollock, Night Floating Fly, Tutti Frutti
Three new flies with common characteristics: reverse tied polafibre, "painted" with angel hair and Hard as Hull cement. The pollock/coalfish imitation is weighted for fishing around structure, and features flashy kinky fibre/fishair mix along with emu feathers. Floating Night Fly has a triangular piece of foam (a hidden crease fly concept) in the head, and floats perfectly. The Tutti Frutti colored fly is a four feather flatwing, with some polafibre and firefly flash mixed between feathers.
Thursday, February 18, 2010
Sunday, February 14, 2010
Tuesday, February 09, 2010
Sunday, February 07, 2010
Friday, February 05, 2010
Monday, February 01, 2010
Big Baitfish
These large baitfish imitations are tied using the big fly fiber for the tail, craft fur/polarfibre for the head, and shredded mylar (such as angel hair, wings 'n' flash, etc.) for the veiling. I used Hard as Hull head cement to bond the flash material to the polarfibre, which gave the fly its final shape.
Tying sequence (given for the middle fly, since that one has a magnum bass rattle inside, which adds extra step):
-tie the heavy duty rattle on the bottom of the shank , so the hook rides correctly;
-tie the big fly fiber over and around the rattle, along with some polarflash for the flashtail. Fold the material over so it doesn't pull. If you don't want the rattle, add the twiston strip to keel the hook before tying. Omit this if you are using regular hook;
-reverse tie (hollow style) four clumps of polarfibre for the head: three white for belly/sides and one for the back in contrasting color. You can also use craft fur, or both. Polarfibre will give you smoother texture of the finished fly, though. For bunker fly (top), add another bunch od polarfibre to create wider profile. Comb the fur before folding;
-add a bunch of shredded mylar to veil the fly, fold and tied down. You can vary the colors, or add red under to simulate the bleeding gills. Comb the mylar to create a shroud around the fly;
-coat the fly liberaly with acrylic cement (I used Hard as Hull.) It dries quickly and it is easy to shape the fly to give it more round or oval cross profile. The cement will bond mylar fibers to the fur. Adjust the shape (leave it round or squeeze for flatter profile). Goop the eyes and you are done!
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Oliver Kite
A rare footage of Oliver Kite from his TV series Kite's Country is available on Youtube... It is fascinating to watch this legendary master fisherman and naturalist uncover the hidden world of chalkstreams through beautiful narratives, while taking trout on Mibro glass rod with his Bare Hook nymphs (and refusing to wear the polarizer glasses, considering them an unfair advantage!) Kite was a true gentleman and a true pioneer!
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Sneak Peek
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Mummichog/Striped Killifish
Monday, January 18, 2010
Friday, January 15, 2010
Toad Time
Toad flies are so cool, since they resemble many things at once: crustaceans, baitfish, squid, worms... I like flies you can fish confidently, letting the fish decide what they look like. I tied these for stripers. Even though originally designed as a tarpon fly, toad flies are becoming popular for many other species of marine gamefish.
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Wednesday, January 06, 2010
Friday, January 01, 2010
Sunday, December 27, 2009
Thursday, December 24, 2009
Monday, December 14, 2009
Recent Ties
Sunday, November 29, 2009
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