Skip to main content

Recent comments

Bob,

I have no current plans regarding the US. I'd love to go - I have a bunch of people that I want to visit and places that I want to fish, but time and money keeps me from going as often as I wish.

Such is life...

Martin

Submitted by Dave Cook 1737246420 on

Permalink

Excellent advice Martin. The handbook you get with your camera can seem a bit daunting at first but the info is there for a good reason. Must try it soon.

Submitted by bob mead on

Permalink

Martin, great site! I shall have to return many times to read it all. Nice work. When will you be crossing the Atlantic to the U.S. again?...Warm regards,..Bob

Submitted by bob mead on

Permalink

I fished the Beaverkill with Steve two Mays ago at the Mayfly Club meeting on the river. I can attest that Steve, using his "Cam" fly outfished some rather well known personalities who were with us and who are excellent fishermen. I know he has pictures of a 23 and 21 incher he caught and released on this fly. He not only took the largest fish caught the two days I was there, but the most fish, by probably a 3 to 1 ratio.. Are his flies worth the time it takes to tie them?? You better believe they are! : Tom, just give them a try and I think you may want to rethink your comments...

Submitted by mick cooke on

Permalink

great reading very imformitive going to give it a go , like the photos this is certianly going in my favorites, glad i found it .
many thanks

We were all fighting the wind. But I think the only one practising true "over-the-wrong-shoulder" casting, and doing so in good form, was Jesper. I wish I had trained my wrong-shoulder casting as much as he had.

Submitted by Dale Rushby on

Permalink

Tom,
I think you will find Steves flies do last a very long time. I have had 17 fish on one Ammonite nymph and at least 10 fish to the CAM. They do take slightly longer to make but after a couple of attempts they are really quick and simple. I spoke to Steve and followed his advice "just follow the step by step". No one knows if the extra effort is worth it after all only the fish can answer that one. But on results alone i can usually bag a few on the hardest of days using some or all of the above.
"dry flies and wet wellies" Dale

Submitted by Steve Reifsneider on

Permalink

Great Site!
I met Bob in 1991 and He was tying his Surf Candy than. I think it was either 1990 or 1991, his Candies were featured in American Fly Tyer.
I think this is one of the nicest sites I have seen in years!
Steve

Submitted by sean on

Permalink

this shrimps is extremely nice...
i never saw a shrimps so live like this....
can i know about what hair you using only?

Submitted by Ron Scala on

Permalink

Great web-site thanks for all the tips. What’s the difference between McFlylon, and McFlyfoam, if any? Thanks Ron

Those guys are SPOILED !!! Mikey Weir just gave me a sneak peek at some images from a recent Taimen expedition. I do look fwd to the NZ stuff too. Expect more from any of these mad men for sure.

Submitted by Harold Pettipas on

Permalink

Thanks a lot for the GREAT Presentations. Will be tremendous fun tying these this winter.

Submitted by Flyman 1737246420 on

Permalink

Years ago, I've been using almost the same system as your Slinky. I used it for flyfishing for barbel. I fished the system for several days (...weeks). I think that this system is useless in rivers with rocks and stones. "My Slinky" constantly snagged the bottom of the river, no drift was completed. It is also very difficult to cast on a long line.

Mike,

You're one of our great supporters. Thanks!

I don't know about shirts... I'll look into the CafePress thing. Others have pointed in the same direction. I prefer stitching and they only do print, but it might be an option anyway. And they have a ton of other product types.

Martin

I still prefer a small shooting head made of some fast sinking fly line. A heavy slinkie at the end of a long fly line cannot be easy to cast.

Submitted by garth blain on

Permalink

This is one of the most effective flies , l have ever used for late fall midge fishing. lt took fish when no other patterns whould. your right about the wing looking so real underwater, the big trout in the BOW RIVER in calgary sure thought it was the real mccoy. thanks for the great pattern.

[quote:adf7ac0cb9="Dada"]Hello there....
the another think, as a little child(Iam still child:)) Iwas very interesting in entomoligy and I study crayfish a little too.... The think which I mena now is that crayfish has a stadium, evry moths they are changing the skin and processll take about two days and a couple of my friends told me this time is the most interesting for a fish because they are week, soft and his colour is nearly white......So may be it ll be better to tie very bright.......What you mean about that???? :wink:[/quote:adf7ac0cb9]

Yes, we call them "soft craw" in the US. They're actually quite pretty to look at, with tints of blue, green, but mostly gray. You can tiie a Skip's Dad with gray haretron dubbing to give it that soft craw look.

Cheers
--Mike

Submitted by Ron McKusick on

Permalink

Will you be doing the patterns in the back of the book as well? If so I would like to contribute.

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.