Skip to main content

Recent comments

Submitted by mark dyba on

Permalink

Many years ago I met Hyde and while we were talking about flies and fishing he gave me one of Leisering spinning blocks. I still have it and in fact used it this afternoon to spin seal fur for a fly body. One thing I can say for sure,after spinning the body in the Leisering block, the body of spun fur is not comming appart.
Mark

Sarunas,

I will be at the Danish Fly Festival! I'm writing a blog entry about it as your comment drops in. I expect to be there Saturday only. I may set up a GFF rendezvous sometime Saturday.

Martin

Submitted by Jeen Schippers on

Permalink

Hello, I have fished for perch with your Fluff flies last season, with great results. But this year I go to the seashore for the holidays and would like to have a go at some sea fish. You wrote about a dubbing mix for your fluff flies. Can you give me a recepie on how to blend it,

With kind regards Jeen Schippers The Netherlands

Nice pics and story Martin. We still have 20-25 inches of ice on the lakes around here, and since my heart attack I hate the cold, can't handle it any more. :) Hope your spring comes soon my friend.

I ordered ZipCast about 4 weeks ago with my credit card. The card hasn't been charged yet and I haven't recieved the purchase. Is ZipCast still in business?

Thanks

Hi I'm getting into furled leaders. Please confirm for me the peg spacing above is as follows. 2 & 4 on one side of the board, 3 & 5 on t'other? Similarly, with the leader calc series, how do I figure out which pegs go where ? I get most of the measurements. but there seems to be a difference between the strands and the 5.5/2.5/1.5 this allows for three pegs yet there are five strand lengths Much appreciated.

Submitted by willard andes on

Permalink

I'm just restarting my rod-building after a 50 yr 'remission' . I enjoyed the comments above.

Does this company still exist. I ordered the product about 3 weeks ago...the purchase has not yet been recorded with my credit card company and have not had a response to the purchase yet.

Thanks for your help.

Submitted by Dave Cook 1737246349 on

Permalink

Original photo was taken Jan 2007. It is now Feb 2011 and you should see this lake now. It has just filled to overflowing in days and 50 tons of weed has already been removed for angler access. The small native Gambusia baitfish are in for a shock as they now have nowhere to hide from the large brown and rainbow trout.

Submitted by andy on

Permalink

To all of the fly fishing purists up above, quite be a bunch of old smelly *beeps*. Hooking a fish that you can't even see by feel alone is a lot harder that fishing with a dry fly. I'll hook you in the ear with a barbed skagit minnow for being old and lame.

Everybody,

We have a mystery script that for some reason deletes some of the images in this article. I have been trying to hunt it down, but can't seem to find it. Strange! Let me know if they keep disappearing, and I'll intensify the pursuit.

Martin

Submitted by Jeff D'Amico on

Permalink

Hi,
There are pictures on this that don't come up. I was hoping to print this for reference to go with my copy of "Trolling Flies for Salmon and Trout". Thanks for your help!
Jeff

Submitted by Clyde Dillman on

Permalink

I've been experimenting with a new hobbie. Jetty fishing for various rock fish on the Washington coast (Westport Wa). It's lots of fun and I've noticed a lot less hang ups loss gear and more fish. My problem is casting needs to be done with heavy sink tips to get the fly down quickly. A stripping basket because of rocks, barnacles etc. is a must. My problem is managing the tangles. I've found that using 5' to 8' of T16 or T18 works nice for getting fly to the fish and managing the limited space the heavy tips shoot so fast and hard the coils often get tangled. There is no room for a false cast Basically 5' of tip 3' of leader and heavy Clouser type fly carries 40 to 60' line out of a basket. Any Ideas on managing tangles.

nebc,

Hooks such as the B175 from Kamasan don't come in different lengths. The Kamasan hook doesn't even have an 1X, 2X or whatever-X in its description. So putting a length in there makes no sense!
And in general we will tell you if a hook needs to be a special length by putting in a description like "short shank saltwater hook" or "long shank, straight eye streamer hook".

I can also recommend looking at the flies and the tying steps (where applicable) to see the hook length and shape. Generally our hook recommendations are guidelines and meant as a hint to what hook can be used.

Martin

Submitted by nebc on

Permalink

If only putting your hook size that does not tell us enough. Would like the hook lengths as well...1X, 2X, 3X etc.

Submitted by ggj1977 on

Permalink

You'll find it in northern brazil too! Very sportish fish!! Beautyfull video!

Anonymous,

It requires very little force to split bamboo and can be done with a knife and maybe a small hammer or wooden mallet. No force needed.

Martin

Submitted by Mark Dysinger … on

Permalink

Jamie-

Thanks for taking the time to respond...I'm pleasantly surprised that you took the time to do so. Forgive the lateness of my reply, as I have just now realized that you posted this here. I look forward to future films from your crew.

FYI, location X was my favorite of your works so far. :-)

Submitted by kendid on

Permalink

enjoyed watching this video, makes want to get back into tying my own flies again. Thanks

Submitted by halcyonsancta on

Permalink

This is a nicely written story of persistance when confronted with results not in accordance with one's aim. My wife likes to say: When you don't get what you want, you call it experience!
In a broader vein, fishing success is related to temperament in many ways, but a true fisher-person, whether they are successfully catching or not, has the character that this story reflects.
tight lines

Since you got this far …


The GFF money box

… I have a small favor to ask.

Long story short

Support the Global FlyFisher through several different channels, including PayPal.

Long story longer

The Global FlyFisher has been online since the mid-90's and has been free to access for everybody since day one – and will stay free for as long as I run it.
But that doesn't mean that it's free to run.
It costs money to drive a large site like this.
See more details about what you can do to help in this blog post.