Skip to main content

Recent comments

Hi Michal, no offence taken! I'm glad I brought laughter to your life haha. Just to let you know the basket works great, although I've sealed the holes and shortened the whole thing making it shallower. I've also shortened the ties and cut two notches for the rod to sit in if I'm faffing about tying on flies etc.
Tight lines! :wink:
Dave

Hi Dave!
You just give really good laugh :D No offence! I really admire people with invention(I'm one of them). I saw the thing 1st time on my mongolian trip; orvis with the sticking things inside. The owner told me that it prevents the line from tangle. I hate retrieving my line from the current while casting but the view of this guy, walking miles every day through mongolian stepp with the thing hanging from his ass like nappie full of...Finally I got one for myself-snowbee-reinforced fabric with stiff removable bottom. That was OK until I removed the bottom(just the mesh left) and got the tray under the surface(Welsh Wye last week)line started tangling! This time I turned it back and look like the nappie man. Anyway-tight lines!
P.S
It has the holes so it collects the water. What about moving your tray up and down to prevent it to happen?

Submitted by Doug 1737246361 on

Permalink

Hi Paul, i just read your Andros story, good stuff. I'm on my way there (from Oregon) next week, I have booked a day with Phillip Rolle and am very excited about the bonefishing (my favorite fish on the fly)... Did you happen to see any permit or tarpon on your trip? a grand slam opportunity would be devine. :-)

Submitted by Juan J. Serra … on

Permalink

Martin, pontoons are a flyfisher dream. Congrats!
I purchased my Arrow Backpacker a couple of years ago and everything changed. To float endless rivers during days without encounters with other people in Patagonia, is incredible. The tent, small cooler and run!
Juan

Submitted by bert on

Permalink

the picture on the lake when its raining is the most beatiful of them all

Submitted by Raul Chavez on

Permalink

Hello Martin,
By the time I read this article last year the garfish season had already passed. So, I decided that I'd be in Denmark for garfish fishing in 2010. Now I have everything ready, including my flight ticket to Copenhagen. Can you recommend me some good spots that can be reached by bus or train from the capital? I've been to Dragør and it looks promising. Would you recommend that town for garfish? Thank you in advance.

Submitted by Pena on

Permalink

Thats exactly the same fly (except for the hook) that I use for grayling in northern Finland with good success.

Submitted by Jim Hill on

Permalink

I love the simplicity of this fly! I would like to see it in a single hook style. I seem to recall a single hook that was made with another piece that was bent from the bend of the hook back toward and finishing in a point behind the eye. There was only a couple mm between the main shaft and the upper one. Finishing the body as described then adding a small groove on the underside of the cork and the addition of a small amount of cement would provide the stability that the bottom two hooks of the treble gives the original.

Just an idea from a former tyer unable to indulge due to a stroke. Love the site.

Not the greatest idea putting the trout on snow like that. Fish such as trouts gets coldburns very easily sadly. But still, nice fish.

Submitted by Larry S on

Permalink

Martin:
Enjoy your site. I have a neighbor with two Shetland Sheepdogs - probably be looking at them a little
differently now.
Cheers.

Phlatwing... Sort'a... Thanks...
It starts off with vertically oriented hackles tied in near the bend then progresses with high/low tied splayed buck tail and culminates with flat and tented hackles tied in without the classic "pillow"...
I mix and match basic techniques to create the desired size and profile... and enjoy playing around with material management to achieve a balanced and pleasing result... the hook is a canvass and the pheatherz 'n phur my pallet... being able to share the results is part of the challenge and pleasure... phlatwing... sort'a...

Submitted by capt brian moran on

Permalink

great information, on line care, as a guide myself, too often i see clients equipment brought on board may be relatively new but in questionable working order, drag, lube neglect, and line neglect, thanks for driving home the importance of equipment care. capt. brian moran

Glenn, Mike,

The thing about tubes is not to consider it as a "better" way to tie the flies you usually tie, but to use tubes where it really makes sense.

I personally tie and use tubes for large, light flies where hook weight might be a problem, and for flies where the hook will typically last a lot longer than the materials or the other way round - pike fishing shreds a lot of flies, deep salmon fishing dulls a lot of hooks.

Last but not least, the new compact metal tubes makes it possible to tie a small and heavy fly, where the weight is concentrated exactly in the place you want it.

You might have noticed the large tube fly section here on GFF, where I go much more into depth with this issue:
http://globalflyfisher.com/tiebetter/tube-flies/

PS: regarding movement in the fly: that depends on the materials used, not on a tube or hook choice! I have plenty very enticing flies tied on tubes using zonker strips, marabou or Arctic fox or Finn raccoon hair wings. That works equally well on a tube.

Martin

no financial interest here, just something i've come to love:

Clear Cure Goo: http://clearcuregoo.com/

it comes in several formulas -- i've tried them all and found them to be useful for different things. a little pricey to get into (i think the kit is around $US 40), but he ships pretty fast and so far i'm very happy with the results. this stuff really is quite fun, and no waiting around to dry either.

again, no financial interest, just something i've found that i love.

Submitted by John on

Permalink

I've been through loads of wading jackets to. Including the Simms Guide jacket. All are poorly designed for those who fish saltwater. However the one I've been using for the last 5 years is the Patagonia Deep Wading jacket. 2 deep chest pockets with velcro and thats it! The zip salted up so I had it replaced with a large plastic YKK zip used for tents. This was done by a local seamtress for £20. It's perfect now - no rusting and minimalist design. Why can't Simms, Patagonia and the rest use these zips in the first place?

[img:a2600fb514]http://i198.photobucket.com/albums/aa176/Phracas/P6101118.jpg[/img:a260…]
Playin' around with high/low ties then welding in the mylar gill plates, 3D eyez, and peacock herl... weshallsee!?
[img:a2600fb514]http://i198.photobucket.com/albums/aa176/Phracas/P4090751.jpg[/img:a260…]
A DarkOpsDualTubePhly...
I've blended some long black hackles with Midnight "Devil 'n Blend" then finished the body with segments of splayed buck tail to enhance the wide-body profile...
The 3D eyez were spot welded in place over the lower "junction tube" along with 3 wide black hackles, buck tail chin, and peacock herl to finish the profile...
[img:a2600fb514]http://i198.photobucket.com/albums/aa176/Phracas/P4080740.jpg[/img:a260…]
[img:a2600fb514]http://i198.photobucket.com/albums/aa176/Phracas/P4080739.jpg[/img:a260…]

[img:a2600fb514]http://i198.photobucket.com/albums/aa176/Phracas/P4270801.jpg[/img:a260…]

Submitted by capt brian moran on

Permalink

terriffic fish , they can be spooky devils at times ,, as hard to convince as rain bows on may flys,,, great photo,,, what fly?

David,

Excellent tip! I was looking at supplies for the dental clinics, which use the same technology for fillings and tooth repairs. But they were nowhere near being cheap! On the opposite. Not surprising when you consider the demands on health care materials.
The nail business is a lot less demanding!

Martin

Having liked the look that Tuffleye gives to flies, I set about trying to find a cheaper product that gave me the same effect, as being unemployed for the first time in my life I couldn't warrant the outlay for the more well known products. I stumbled upon the UV Gel used in the nail art industry. I bought the UV light, the base coat and top finish coat for a fraction of what you would pay for Tuffleye etc. It gives just as good a finish and cures in seconds.
Cheers Dave

Bernd,

Thanks for your kind words about GFF! We're glad you like the page.

I tend to agree with you on fly fishing competitions. Competing is far from my attitude towards fishing, and I never really understood people who want to compete rather than fish. Like yourself I fish to be out there and enjoy nature and good company.
But of course others can do as they please: compete, do distance casting or whatever.

Martin

Submitted by Bernd Nickoleit on

Permalink

Hello dear GFF Team,
in my opinion, your side is one of the best flyfishing sides on the www and definitly my personal favorit. I am a fly only man for more then 30 years, teaching flyfishing and flytying, writing articles for magazines and doing a lot of guiding. But the video from the "french flyfishing championship" has absolutly nothing to do with serious flyfishing. It degenerates our passion to ping-pong playing with live animals. Competition fishing -no matter if it is coarsefishing or flyfishing- means a less of respect to the fish. I wonder why especially flyfishermen do this; in my opinion flyfishing means an intensive feeling of nature, beeing a part of it combined with maximum fairness and respect to the creature itself. Competition flyfishing is in my opinion light years away from serious flyfishing. I think it would be better for the fish and for the standing of our passion, when these competition "flyfishers" would do only casting. They can earn their trophys much better this way.... This is only my personal opinion, but I hope, that this kind of sport has no real future or any space.
Everybody thight lines!

Submitted by Sight Fisher on

Permalink

Duh Uh! If Rain X is not for use on plastic then why does it come in a plastic Bottle and how can a Plastic Zip Lock bag survive the storing of Rain X Wipes???

"All is as it should be in the Universe"

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.