All articles from section
Editorial content tagged with Wet flies
| Title | Body | Published | Time ago |
|---|---|---|---|
| Silk Sakasa |
This pattern is tied with natural silk ribbon, using the product of one insect to imitate another |
2 months ago | |
| The March Brown Legacy |
The March Brown is one of the all time classic fly patterns, the origin of which must go back almost centuries. |
6 years ago | |
| The March Brown Odyssey |
My venture into the history and legacy of the classic March Brown led to a whole lot of variations over the theme |
6 years ago | |
| Creative GeWe Wet Flies |
A wonderful little book with Belgian Geert Werbrouck's beautiful wet flies. Lots of pictures, lots of patterns, lots of tying and material tips. |
6 years ago | |
| Perrault's Standard |
This might not look like the most exciting book I own. It isn't valuable. It isn't particularly beautiful either – rather ugly actually. Still it's one of the gems in my collection. |
9 years ago | |
| Hutch's Pennell |
This is a classic UK wet fly for stillwaters. Good looking, easy to find materials, easy to tie. Why not tie it for the Baltic sea runs? |
9 years ago | |
| The North Country Fly |
When it comes to books, there's nothing I like more than focus. A book that has a well defined subject and covers in depth rather than broad has my vote already before I have opened it. |
10 years ago | |
| Wet Flies |
Wet flies are once again very popular, but most we see are tied for presentation and not so much for fishing. Bob Petti enjoys tying wet flies and tries to style his after the fishing flies that are popular in the UK using colors and materials that work well in the water. |
11 years ago | |
| Wet Flies |
Japanese author, angler and fly-tyer Ken Sawada is an odd character... not meant in any insulting way at all, but more like an expression of my admiration. Sawada has been around almost as long as I have been fly-fishing and fly-tying, and particularly his beautiful salmon flies have always been favorites of mine. Whenever his name comes up, there's always something interesting going on. He seems to be a person who does things in his own way, but still respects tradition and history. |
12 years ago | |
| Buying Soft Hackle |
The soft hackle is supposed to be - as the name implies - soft. Soft hackle can come from many birds. Chickens, gamebirds like partridge, grouse and quail, pheasant and even crows and jackdaws. |
12 years ago | |
| Discovering the Marbury Lake Flies |
If today's tyer wants to tie the Mary Orvis Marbury Lake flies, they would be wise to think 'old school', and transport themselves back to a time when the hooks had blind eyes, the materials were natural, and the flies were colorful and uniquely adapted to the American fly fishing experience by Mary Orvis Marbury and her crew of women tyers. |
12 years ago | |
| Plu Stiniog |
This book is based on a collection of 133 Welsh flies, collected and documented by the author, and photographed by his son-in-law. |
14 years ago | |
| Modern fly fishing |
The Swedish video producer Mountain Media has been doing fishing videos for (almost) as long as I can remember... for a long time at least. Many of these videos used to be targeted towards the Swedish market or at least Scandinavia. |
14 years ago | |
| Tying and Fishing Soft-Hackled Nymphs |
To borrow a phrase from the great G.E.M. Skues, wet fly fishing continues to be a minor tactic among fly anglers. Granted, there has been an increase in the amount of print (and electronic) media devoted to all manor of wet flies, but if you inspect the bins of your local fly shop or glossy catalog, dry flies and nymphs still rule the trout waters of America. It is not surprising, then, that fishing wet flies, and to a large extent their distant cousin streamers, is the realm of fly tyers who provide their own flies. |
18 years ago | |
| Hen Hackle |
Awhile back, I received a shipment of hen necks and saddles from Whiting Farms. The saddles struck me with their intense colors and solid web, then necks with their stem length and shortish barbs. These feathers were perfect for the wet flies I was working on. |
19 years ago | |
| Wingless Wets |
On a shelf in the shop was a little book that was propped open. It was Leisenring and Hidy's The Art of Tying The Wet-Fly and Fishing The Flymph. Inside, I found a treasure of patterns and some fishing instructions and I suddenly switched gears and began fishing these great little flies. |
19 years ago | |
| Classic Wet Flies |
Wet flies have been around as long as fly fishing itself. Are they starting to see a renaissance? In fly tying circles at least, that may be the case, as tyers look for new challenges and new sources of inspiritaion. |
19 years ago | |
| Tribute to MOM |
The flies Mary documented were, invariably, ornate wet flies. They were, and are, the legacy of centuries of British salmon fly design spiced by the natural resources and original thinking available to their American interpreters. |
19 years ago | |
| Box of Wets |
Got Wet Fly Fever |
20 years ago | |
| Waterhen Bloa |
All trout anglers should tie one |
21 years ago | |
| La mosca ahogada |
Spanish flies are different! At least the ones that are shown in this book. The flies that this book treats are not only tied in a very special fashion, but almost all use Coq de Leon feathers. Read our review of La mosca ahogada. |
26 years ago | |
| Francois le Ny |
The french pediatrician Jean-Paul Pequegnot has written a book about french flies - "Repertoire des Mouches Artificielles Français". 1975. It is translated to english in the last years. He gives among others also descriptions of flies from Britanny. |
29 years ago |
