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Fly tying: Super glue maintenance
I've never been a big fan of super glue in my fly tying, and not because it doesn't work—it most definitely does. I don't like it because, after a few uses, the bottle seizes up and I invariably end up wasting much of the product inside because it simply becomes too much of a pain…
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Fly tying: The Chubby Chernobyl
Everybody loves the venerable Chernoble Ant—the high-floating foam creation that late-summer trout simply can't seem to resisit. Video of Chubby ChernobylAbove, Tim Flagler ties his Chubby Chernobyl, and even gawdier, nuclear-inspired critter that "floats like a cork and works like a charm." Indeed, it is "Hopper Season," after all—there's no better time to tie up…
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Fly tying: The GFA Hopper
For me and other dry-fly enthusiasts (and that's putting it mildly, at least in my opinion), this month is the month. It's "hopper time." Here in Idaho, our backcountry streams are in great shape–runoff is well past done, night-time temperatures are a bit chilly, whcih serves to keep our high-country streams cold. The warm summer…
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Fly tying: The Bluegill Belly Bean
Here in the West, we're officially in the Dog Days — it's hot. As Niel Simon wrote in Biloxi Blues, "Man, it's hot. It's like Africa hot. Tarzan couldn't take this kind of hot." OK, maybe I'm being a little dramatic. But, when it gets this hot, it stresses our lower-elevation trout strea ms—water temperatures…
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Fly tying: CDC Micro Caddis
How many times have you stood at the tail of a run that's just boiling with rising fish, but you have no idea what, exactly, they're after? Yeah, dozens, right? Me, too. Video of CDC Micro CaddisAbove, Tim Flagler of Tightline Productions, ties his CDC Micro Caddis, a fly that he uses in these situations…
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Fly tying: SBR Light Cahill Nymph
Fly fishers on the East Coast are likely familiar with Cahill nymph patterns. From the Housatonic to the Delaware, the Cahill patterns, both nymph and dry, are go-to flies in the late spring and summer. Video of SBR Light Cahill NymphAbove, Tim Flagler ties his version of the SBR (South Branch Raritan) Light Cahill Nymph,…
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Fly tying: The Squirmie Worm
With all the new synthetic tying materials available today, it's becoming easier and easier to craft patterns that are at the same time wickedly accurate imitations of natural fish food and oddly surreal. A couple weeks back, my son and I spent eight days chasing pike in northern Manitoba, where I put to use the…
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