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Submitted by Vijayavarman.J on

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How to maintenance Fly Rod, Spinning Rod, Beach casting Rod, Reels adn Fly Line.
Please give me the details for the above mentioned.

Submitted by Darrell Myskiw on

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Have followed through your series and it makes a much clearer picture of what is required (ok - most of what is required).
I've been reading up on making fly rods (from graphite blanks through to raw 'boo culms) - and am now playing with some bamboo kicking about. It may not be Tonkin cane - but some properties should be reflective - which is fine for now. Starting slowly, building up as I go. But will definately be back off and on to see what's new.

Top notch series Harry - top notch. Thanks for sharing.

Submitted by will bartholomew on

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Very well put-together article. I might just have a go myself. Thanks very much!

>>>>Ey jeg bor i malmø arbejder i KBH. Har været lidt rundt og kigge på nogle åer, men syntes ikke der har været noget specielt spændende endnu. Af kendte åer er der hvad jeg ved af svaneåen, rååen, Nybroåen. Tror hvis man skal have noget bedre fiskeri skal man nok en anelse længere op til Ätran. Men der sker ikke det helt store lige nu kan jeg se af fangst raporterne. Hvis du hører om noget selv må du meget gerne skrive det kigger selv efter gode fiskevand herovre. <<<<

This looks like that confession I wrote one night when I was picked up for drunk driving.

Submitted by Darrin Lewis on

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as most adept flyfisherman are aware trout eat 80-90% of their food on the bottom or just above, I have been using the nymph teqnique for about 12 years now and it is the most productive way to catch trout I know.

[quote:cfa1fd84f7="Martin Joergensen"]
People,

My girlfriend has also showed some interest, and there should be plenty of room and some opportunities to shop...

[/quote:cfa1fd84f7]

..I believe you are talking about fishing shops, otherwise it is going to be a very expensive weekend :D

[quote="Stephen Wade"]Hi Vanuz,

I could take you to a few waters in Denmark to fish for grayling and browns if you can put up with an english man. ;-)

...if you can handle a beginner, I´d be pleased :D
....C U at GFF

[quote:c21ef1129c="Martin Joergensen"]
A couple of the participants have asked whether they could bring their wives, and sure that will be no problem as I see it.
[/quote:c21ef1129c]

But I thought there was a saying amongst flyfishers: "What happens on Fyn stays on Fyn". :lol:

Cheers
--Mike

Stimulators make an outstanding part of a dry/dropper combination. All the hair makes it float like a cork. Add a bead-head or stonefly nymph 2 feet or so below the stimulator.

If you tie in a small loop of hard, strong mono underneath the tail, it gives you an anchor point to tie a dropper on. Add your dropper with a loop-to-loop connection.

A stimulator/dropper rig has proven effective quite a few times for me, but usually in riffles or pocket water that is 3-6 feet deep. It's also a good choice when the water is up a little bit higher and cloudy, such as a tailwater in the winter or any stream after a good hard rain.

Cheers
--Mike

Glass beads are good on flies that are emergers--caddis and chironimids being the best. Because they can't swim very well, these insects use a bubble of trapped air to float them to the surface of the water so they can hatch.

Sometimes in your float tube you can see the chironies wiggling as they rise to the surface, clinging to their air bubble.

Submitted by Jim Malan on

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I can't wait to try out this method of Czech short nymph fishing as well as to tie up some Bobesh's! Fascinating article.

Submitted by David Sunderland on

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Hi Everyone......I love Realistic Flies which are tied by Steve Thornton. They are soo.....erm......realistic. I love tying the 'Ammonite Nymph'. I have only had missed takes on this fly and am hoping to catch some fish on it especially Chub and Barbel and other course fish in the future.

Yeah, I'm pretty much a chironomid freak also. I love first thing in the spring and fall fishing with them. It is pretty cool getting a 10 lbs Rainbow to take such a little pattern. We'll see if these blue guys work come September and October before the ice comes back on.

Submitted by Bora on

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Well, mullets are hard to catch. I have been trying out to hook those species with bread fly and had the same reaction. Funny is that bream can get one of those flies but mullet do not seem interested. I will keep trying until I get one!

It's just a brown trout. The red dots are usually lower on the body and closer to the tail.

You can view more brownies, complete with red dots, if you go to the gallery and do a search for "brown".

[quote:87167c205a="Grant Banes"]I guess a blue chironomids could work also.[/quote:87167c205a]

I've seen chironies in many different colors. If chartreuse and purple work, why not blue? Remember that fish see differently than we do, and that light is filtered as it goes down through the water column. It's the same reason you would use a purple steelhead fly.

By the way, I love chironimids. I've spent too many hours hooking large fish on small flies from a float tube. The hooking was good, the landing wasn't so great, but it sure was fun.

Submitted by mark on

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Need some fill flash - we miss the angler's happy face in the shadow. Nice shot overall. No waders on when fishing for Piranah--sounds brave to me!

Submitted by 1737246424 on

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I love how you tied the gold ribed hares ear! I'll tie that right now!!

The one thing we use a lot of glass beads on are woolly bugger patterns. A black wool with a red glass bead head, or an olive woolly with a green glass bead head and many other combinations. These variations all seem to work very well fishing rainbows in lakes.

Since you got this far …


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