Recent comments
Hi Kirk,
When I know that I'm fishing on a bottom where I am going to hook a stick or two, I do a couple of things. And with the early season Largemouths feeding on my hellgramite immitations like crazy these days and the Hickory Shad run starting to get going here on the Potomac, I am fishing deep right now. OK. Two things. I tie my flies on a slightly finer hook. Just a lighter guage or two than I usually tie on. The other thing is to use a heavier tippet. I usually fish for bass with a six. Now I use and eight or a ten. This lets me pull straight back on the line and the lighter hook will straighten a tiny bit and release. It doesn't pull it completely straight. Just enough to free it. I have done this about twenty timres already this Spring and I just bend the hook into a curve with needle nose and it is fine. On the river I keep a small stone in my vest because the fly often hooks on rocks, so touching up the tip is a good idea. The only fly I have broken off this year was on an old dock post. I burried it deep and there was just no way. Another thing this lets me do is rid the pond I am fishing in of sticks. With the heavier leader you reel a lot of them in.
Bob Abrams
McLean, Virginia
- Log in to post comments
I'm the next candidate, Martin
and I'm sure there's more than enough others too to cover your costs...
Tom
- Log in to post comments
Hey! It looks like a killer bonefish fly to me?!* 8)
Not that I know, but I am just assuming...*
But just in case...will tie some ASAP!
T :wink:
- Log in to post comments
The single egg, or "Glow Hook" is a great pattern. We've used it here for Steelhead, Coho Salmon, sea run cutties and Bull trout in our rivers for years. Tied in colours anywhere from deep red to chartreuse and mixing colours is always a good bet. It's a very simple pattern to tie and if you asked the multitudes of fish we've caught with it, being totally realistic isn't really necessary. As long as it's trimmed properly and while fishing you trim off any loose yarn and keep it egg looking, it will catch lots of fish.
- Log in to post comments
Hi Paul Please could you tell me the location of that lake that your friend Martin had his Photograph taken on one of your web sites.This has been debated with my friends on the exact location of this lake in the Beacons.
- Log in to post comments
Great! Thanks for the tips, regards, Adam
I was just tying one egg , this pattern looks much more natural then the single. i'll have to give it a shot.
thanks,
kirk
- Log in to post comments
[quote:f77d091039="revolution.kirk"]I know there once was GFF hats made, but aparently it didn't work out.. I don't know if it makes any sense, or if it is worth it, but i would definitly buy one.[/quote:f77d091039]
Kirk,
We spent quite a lot of money on producing some really nice stritched caps once back when. But what was supposed to be a small source of income to pay for hosting and other expenses on the site turned out to be a very slow business. And the people who ordered were spread all over the world and it cost us a fortune in postage.
We could consider doing another batch, but we'd probably have to take in orders before having them produced and have people pay the full postage for them. But we certainly have a lot more people visiting the site today, and might actually make some money to cover expenses.
I'll discuss it with the guys
Martin
- Log in to post comments
FlyBandit,
Nice footage! I particularly like seeing the fish in the water.
Martin
- Log in to post comments
Kirk,
You maight have solved your problem, but just in case: [url=http://globalflyfisher.com/tiebetter/eggs/]Making the egg cluster, an article right here on GFF[/url]
Martin
- Log in to post comments
This is an excellent article. I am going to PA for 23 days starting Mar. 31, 2006. After reading this article I get the "real" picture.
- Log in to post comments
Hi Steve, i wanted to first of all thank you for this web site. It really does fill a void. Your photos and detailed info leave little to the imagination and this is the way it should be.
I do have a couple of questions though. 1. Do you use this midge in both moving water and in still water ie.lakes etc ? In each case what fishing technique do u use? So do u use a strike indicator in one or both cases or do you prefer to fish without the indicators. Sometimes i like to grease a leader up to a certain point behind the fly and occasionally pull on the line to simulate the vertical movement one can observe the critters engage in as they make their way uo the water column. I observed this activity through the use of an aquarium. So tell me what techniqes you prefer to us and when. Thanks Mike Lombardo
- Log in to post comments
Nice fly. Guess it would be somewhat transulant in the water. Should attract the seatrout.
- Log in to post comments
[quote:2ba09b3efe="revolution.kirk"]I know there once was GFF hats made, but aparently it didn't work out.. Anyway, I know this is a pretty good site to get custom hats and shirts made through:[url]http://www.cafepress.com/[/url] . I don't know if it makes any sense, or if it is worth it, but i would definitly buy one.[/quote:2ba09b3efe]
I think I'd buy one or three myself...... :)
- Log in to post comments
I know there once was GFF hats made, but aparently it didn't work out.. Anyway, I know this is a pretty good site to get custom hats and shirts made through:[url]http://www.cafepress.com/[/url] . I don't know if it makes any sense, or if it is worth it, but i would definitly buy one.
- Log in to post comments
19 trip coldspell broken? that's gotta feel good! Interesting podcast, keep em' coming.
- Log in to post comments
Enjoyed your article on the Lamiglas "blue ridge" blanks, but where can
you purchase them? I tried the Lamiglas web page and the Mudhole
catalog among others and can't seem to find them.
- Log in to post comments