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albannachxcuileag

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Posts posted by albannachxcuileag

  1. More years ago than I care to remember I was a Bailiff on the river Tweed, duly appointed by the Secretary of State for Scotland covering our association waters. We, as bailiffs, had limited powers as far as poachers went because in the majority of cases we were told to Eff Off by the offending anglers who were fishing illegal methods and/or without the correct permit for the stretch of water. We had back up from the police but in those days contacting them meant a trip to a house or phone box as a mobile phone was something you just did not own and contacting the police to take action meant a lot of poachers/illegal anglers got away with their crime.

    We usually worked with the estate Ghillies as these guys were responsible for the riparian landowner's salmon waters and would let us know if there was something 'fishy' going on when we were in the area. Poaching trout never brought any substantial punishment but poaching salmon did. A former club member was caught poaching salmon and prosecuted and fined along with the destruction of his instruments of poaching - all of his tackle that was on him at the time. He also got a 'life' ban that was rescinded on appeal to 2 years.

    Poaching of any type is a crime and endangerment to the wildlife, punishment should reflect this and I wish that we had as rigid a system that you guys have in order to punish and deter the individuals involved. I think that they should also have removed their firearm licenses just to cap it all.

     

    Go Canada!

  2. I have often wondered about the fascination you guys and gals have with length as opposed to weight of a fish. I do a mix of river fishing on the Liffey and small lake fishing, any fish off the river is appreciated no mater it's size and if it gets over the 1lb mark then it brings a big smile to my face. On the other hand, when I am fishing small lakes the fish is always measured for weight not length and I always under estimate the weight rather than overestimate. One fish I put at a conservative 11lbs turned out to be 14lbs when it hit the scales making it my personal best but I fish for fishing's sake and not for boasting about the length of the one I caught or that got away.

    Give me a few hard fighting 2 to 3 lbers anytime compared to a 20lb pellet pig that I have seen some fishermen hold up smiling like lunatics as they pose for the photo.

    I am lucky in that the small lake fishery I use has cracking quality, fighting fit fish that range from 2 to 20lb and a good days fishing means not blanking but enjoying what it has to offer more than caring about length or weight.

  3. I spent a bit of time changing the set up I use for SBSs and instead of the frame with cards I cut it down to a disc and can attach it to my bobbin rest with a small bulldog clip. The reverse is a pale colour which also acts as a sight board. The camera is a Fuji S9600 set on ultra macro with white balance compensation on manual mode (this changes to full auto if I tie flies in the glasshouse). As you can see the fly is almost touching the lens filter (UV) when taking the pictures, I still need to sort out some incidental lighting to eliminate shadows but it works fine as it is.

     

    NewSetup.jpg

     

    and this from a review of the Peak PPPM package I did for our forum showing the camera mount that Tupps and I designed to suit it.

     

    Designed by a moron, executed by a chaos engineer -

     

    The Peak Fly Vice Camera Mount!

     

    CameraMount01.jpg

     

     

    This should now give me the repeatability that was lacking in all previous SBSs as I could not be arsed to use a tripod. This little device could be a promising little earner out there in fly tying world.

     

    Believe it or not, when the camera is swung out to the side it does not even make the vice unstable.

     

    Nice one, Tupps!

     

    Patents applied for, world wide rights owned, trademark established, 2X2 at hand for miscreants!

     

    Yes, that is a genuine 10 loonie note of the old school in the photo!

  4. still waiting on the last two tiers (albannachxcuileag and clyde)...last night to tie boys unless you plan on submitting tomorrow during the day...can't wait to see what you guys bring to the plate...

     

    Don't hold your breath! I mailed it today after struggling to get vice time.

     

    It will catch fish, that is about all I can say about it

  5. had to make my life hard huh, against albanna!

     

    no thin skin either

    GAH

     

    Hard lines Brent, it is not me you're up against but dryfly!

    I have the hardest problem as I have no feckin idea what to tie for this one and have the feeling I am going to get my ass kicked!

  6. Leave a longish tag on the thread so that it will stick out from the end of the abdomen

     

    Startthread.jpg

     

    Run the thread to the bend area and back up to the eye

     

    StartAbdomen.jpg

     

    Build up a smooth tapering abdomen with the thread. The advantage of the Krenik thread is that it does not give you a solid colour build up but has black flecks from the carrier thread that show in the abdomen as you build it up.

     

    Buildup.jpg

     

    Once you have done this apply 3 half hitches behind the eye and cut off the thread

     

    Giveitahitch.jpg

     

    Apply a drop of varnish behind the eye to secure

     

    Justadab.jpg

     

    Tease out the metallic part from the carrier thread and remove the carrier thread. Trim the metallic thread to about 8 - 10mm and you are ready to go.

     

    Completed-1.jpg

     

    You can also coat the buzzer with varnish, superglue or epoxy if you wish but I can tell you that it is extremely effective as it is accounted for 4 fish netted and 6 lost on the take in an afternoon of difficult fishing for other anglers at my local lake.

  7. Krenik metallic thread first came to my attention in an SBS from a South African tyer who used the material stripped down for the metallic component only. Off to the local crafts & Knitting emporium and try and find the stuff, I managed to get Red and Blue, the blue being the one sought for the South African nymph pattern, the red? Well it is shiny and no fly tyer can resist seeing shiny things!

     

    TheKrenik.jpg

     

    So, 6 months down the line and the Red had not seen light of day until looking at a different buzzer pattern I thought about it again and dragged it out for a play and thus the Krenik Red was born!

     

    Materials:-

     

     

    Hook - Grip 14723BL Size 12 - you can use any curved hook such as Kamasan B100s etc

    Bead - Red Gutermann Rocailles 9/0 Art. No 773875

    Thread - Krenik Metallics Ruby Shade 061

     

     

    Assemblage of the bobbin

     

    Take a used small bobbin and tape the end of the thread to the spool

     

    Spooling.jpg

     

    Stuff a pencil or similar object in the hole and start winding on the thread and fill the bobbin. I stuck the Krenik spool onto the end of my bobbin rest arm for easy turning as I filled the spool

     

    PencilWork.jpg

     

    Fit the small bobbin to a standard bobbin holder or a wide one using Mr Tupp's incredible reducers

     

    LoadedBobbin.jpg

     

    Mount a bead on your hook of choice and secure in the vice

     

    BeadonHook-1.jpg

  8. Is that the Liffey that flows through Dublin?

     

    Yes, it is. I am a member of the North Kildare Angling Association and we have 30 miles of fishing on the Liffey, I also fish the Clane Association waters on the Liffey as well and that is where that was caught.

  9. Wriggle and twist the wire to break it off

     

    Ribbed.jpg

     

    Take a strand of Zelon as it comes and double this over and secure with a couple of turns just back from the eye

     

    TieinZelon.jpg

     

    Fold this over and secure well , trimming the wing to length

     

    TieinWinging.jpg

     

    Tie in your hackle

     

    TieinHackle-1.jpg

     

    Form about 3 to 4 wraps and tie in removing the excess hackle

     

    ReadytoWhip.jpg

     

    Whip finish and your Zelon Caddis is completed after you add a touch of varnish to the threads.

     

    CompletedCaddisFLy.jpg

  10. Well I bought the stuff so I suppose I had better do something with it!

     

    This is a very simple Caddis pattern and is not restricted to Zelon or to the colouration used but as I had a nice Ginger cape I thought I had better use it as well.

     

    Materials:-

     

    Hook - Grip 14723BL Size 12

    Thread - Olive UTC 140 Denier

    Rib - UTC Hot Yellow Brassie size

    Dubbing - Mix of Olive and Dirty Olive Seal's Fur

    Wing - Ginger Zelon

    Hackle - Ginger Cock

     

    Assuming right handed tying for this one

     

    Mount your hook in your vice

     

    MountHook.jpg

     

    Run your thread from eye to bend

     

    ThreadHook-1.jpg

     

    Tie in the ribbing wire bearing in mind Tango's advice to keep it on top of the hook to keep the abdomen slim

     

    TieinWire-2.jpg

     

    Dub your Seal's fur mix on to the thread - not too much

     

    DubThread.jpg

     

    Wrap the dubbing to a point behind the eye - not too close!

     

    Dubbed-2.jpg

     

    Follow this with the ribbing wire and tie in at the same point

     

    WrapRib.jpg

  11. dbt,

     

    I have no objections at all to what anyone does to something I created, that is what fly tying is about. Create an idea, throw it out and see what happens. There are too many who try to 'patent' flies' for their moment of fame and I am not one of those.

     

    I might give your idea a whirl too!

     

    For the people by the people! :lol:

  12. My gear regularly gets a soaking in the rivers but as everyone says, once or twice a season give it a damn good clean and lubrication. Getting the cork wet is different, my rods are brought in and taken out the bag and left to dry naturally.

     

    Smelly, rotting backing? I would not have thought this would have applied to today's modern synthetics but I will have a sniff and find out. :P

  13. Tie this in securely and again return the thread to the start point ready for the body material. Trim the length of the marabou to that of the Crystal Hair by pinching the excess off with your nails.

     

    Tailtiedin01.jpg

     

    I use Veniard's Ice Straggle here but you can use any similar product. Tie it in and run the thread up the body and leave hanging below the eyes as this will keep it out of the way.

     

    TieinUVStraggle.jpg

     

    Wrap the straggle in touching turns up the body stroking the fibres back to avoid trapping them with the next turn.

     

    UVStraggled.jpg

     

    Cut the excess straggle off and secure well behind the eyes. Make a whip finish in front of the eyes and varnish the thread.

     

    WhipFinished.jpg

     

    Using your dubbing needle take a small drop of the glass paint and cover the domed part of the eye on both sides. The eyes I use have a very slight ridge on the edge and I ease the paint into this. This glass paint is the translucent type and does not require a thick covering as you want the reflective property of the silver to shine through the paint.

     

    Applyingtheeye.jpg

     

    Your completed Jazzed Up Damsel should look like this at the end. When the glass paint dries the effect is much more pronounced on the eye.

     

    CompletedDamselNymph.jpg

     

    Fish as you would a normal Damsel over the weed beds and along the margins using a jerky figure of eight retrieve, vary the speed during the retrieve for effect.

     

    Another variation of this uses black marabou with strands of Krenik metallic thread in the tail and a black UV straggle by Veniard's with the eyes painted red.

     

    TLs

     

    I need to learn to spell properly and avoid all the mods!

  14. This little feller has been good to me since leaving the vice a few months back and is well worth inclusion in your box for still water fishing for Browns and Rainbows. A nice easy tie and effective to boot!

     

    Materials:-

     

    Hook - Partridge Big Mouth Nymph Size 14

    Thread - Olive UTC 140 Denier

    Tail Flash - Mother of Pearl Crystal Hair or similar

    Tail - Olive Marabou

    Body - Veniard's Olive Ice Straggle

    Eyes - 3mm Plain Silver Dumbbell painted with yellow glass paint. (I have used Lefranc & Bourgeois No. 144 Sun Yellow. This make is the better of the two brands commonly available in craft shops, the other has a tendency to harden in the pot after a while)

     

    The tying

     

    Mount your hook in the vice. I have taken a liking to these hooks for mini lure styles as they give you great hooking capability on heavily dressed flies. Their quoted size belies the actual appearance resembling an ultra short shanked 8 rather than the size 14 it really is.

     

    TheHook.jpg

     

    Start your thread at the eye and run it back along the shank for about 4 mm in preparation for attaching the eyes.

     

    InitialThreadPosition.jpg

     

    Tie in the dumbbell eyes with figure of eight tyings, you can secure this further by applying a drop of liquid super glue or varnish if required.

     

    EyesTiedin.jpg

     

    Run your thread along the shank to the start of the bend ready to construct the tail.

     

    StartPosition.jpg

     

    Fold a single strand of Crystal Hair or similar material twice and tie it onto the hook returning the thread to the start point at the bend. Trim this to about two hook lengths, if longer you will get fish nipping at the tail and miss the take.

     

    CrystalHairAttached.jpg

     

    Take a medium sized clump of marabou and prepare it by stripping the flue from the stems using your thumbnail, this avoids bulking up the body too much.

     

    PreparedMarabou.jpg

  15. While you guys and gals are hacking your way through the ice and dodging bergs on the rivers we have been enjoying some good early season fishing across here.

     

    ClaneLiffey.jpg

     

    The Liffey above Clane Bridge

     

    LiffeySilver01.jpg

     

    Beautiful little fellow who took my Gold Headed Rusty Nail from the pool in the photograph above.

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