10 Years of Davie McPhail on Youtube
Posted: Fri Aug 02, 2019 10:13 am
Though as far as I know his first tying videos were uploaded to a now defunct website called Hatches.tv in 2008, McPhail came on the YouTube scene in 2009 and immediately set a very high bar for video production quality, tying expertise and a flair for clear and concise presentation.
He is so good and to the point I have a difficult time watching other tyers and typically don't bother (except to get an idea on what a specific pattern looks like).
Though I understand him fine, the only critique I recall reading over the years was his Scottish accent leaving some viewers a bit confused.
He seems to have an encyclopedic knowledge of materials of all sorts, and on occasion has shared tactical fishing considerations for the pattern being presented.
I thought I could tie fairly well and knew my fair share about materials, but having McPhail videos to study over the years has helped my tying in countless ways. And yes, when I start a fly I often snap the thread tag off near the bend by hand, doing so with a smile – being well aware of McPhail's example.
McPhail's first video was split between nymphing a run on the River Ayr, employing a 9 ft. 5 wt Sage Z-Axis, and then tying a beadhead that had caught him a few on the Ayr.
[https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=3cnlHNUh3Ro]
Here is his River Wet Flies playlist. I particularly like "Red Clock" and "Rodent." The Glanrhos esque "Davie's Spider" that he ties along with a Stewart Black Spider is also useful and readily adapted to variants.
[https://m.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9 ... NVhQJX7FTY]
He is so good and to the point I have a difficult time watching other tyers and typically don't bother (except to get an idea on what a specific pattern looks like).
Though I understand him fine, the only critique I recall reading over the years was his Scottish accent leaving some viewers a bit confused.
He seems to have an encyclopedic knowledge of materials of all sorts, and on occasion has shared tactical fishing considerations for the pattern being presented.
I thought I could tie fairly well and knew my fair share about materials, but having McPhail videos to study over the years has helped my tying in countless ways. And yes, when I start a fly I often snap the thread tag off near the bend by hand, doing so with a smile – being well aware of McPhail's example.
McPhail's first video was split between nymphing a run on the River Ayr, employing a 9 ft. 5 wt Sage Z-Axis, and then tying a beadhead that had caught him a few on the Ayr.
[https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=3cnlHNUh3Ro]
Here is his River Wet Flies playlist. I particularly like "Red Clock" and "Rodent." The Glanrhos esque "Davie's Spider" that he ties along with a Stewart Black Spider is also useful and readily adapted to variants.
[https://m.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9 ... NVhQJX7FTY]