Humpy Flymph
Moderators: William Anderson, letumgo
Humpy Flymph
Humpy Flymph
Hook: Daiichi 1640, size 12
Thread: Pale olive
Tail: Yellow mallard, 3-4 barbs
Hump: Tan ostrich, paraloop style pulled over the thread body
Hackle: Woodcock
Hook: Daiichi 1640, size 12
Thread: Pale olive
Tail: Yellow mallard, 3-4 barbs
Hump: Tan ostrich, paraloop style pulled over the thread body
Hackle: Woodcock
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Re: Humpy Flymph
Terrific fly, Vlad! Thanks for the inspiration. The paraloop technique looks pretty cool on a flymph.
Ray (letumgo)----<°))))))><
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Re: Humpy Flymph
Great idea! This will be a big hit for sure.
Mark
Mark
"I have the highest respect for the skilled wet-fly fisherman, as he has mastered an art of very great difficulty.” Edward R. Hewitt
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Re: Humpy Flymph
That's very innovative, Vlad. Nice tie.
Aaron
Aaron
Re: Humpy Flymph
Thanks guys! Spring is coming soon, and with it-the testing time...
Re: Humpy Flymph
That there's just beyootiful!!
Some of the same morons who throw their trash around in National parks also vote. That alone would explain the state of American politics. ~ John Gierach, "Still Life with Brook Trout"
- Hans Weilenmann
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Re: Humpy Flymph
Vlad,
Interesting concept. Thank you for sharing.
I am not convinced, though, it will prove durable enough for my liking, but am interested enough to tie up a few variations which I hope will be a little more durable when I sit down to tie at a show in Sweden tomorrow. We'll see
Cheers,
Hans W
Interesting concept. Thank you for sharing.
I am not convinced, though, it will prove durable enough for my liking, but am interested enough to tie up a few variations which I hope will be a little more durable when I sit down to tie at a show in Sweden tomorrow. We'll see
Cheers,
Hans W
Re: Humpy Flymph
Hans,
I agree... the durability might be the issue with this fly, but it is with many flies tied with soft, non-resilient materials. Short shank hook and small paraloop hump will minimize (hopefully) the exposure to trout teeth.
Thanks and have fun at the show,
Vlad
I agree... the durability might be the issue with this fly, but it is with many flies tied with soft, non-resilient materials. Short shank hook and small paraloop hump will minimize (hopefully) the exposure to trout teeth.
Thanks and have fun at the show,
Vlad
Re: Humpy Flymph
This is not point that I had previously considered. Will a short shank hook help here? This is not the same, but on salt water flies, I've deliberately used a long hook shank and tied the materials in near the tail so that the hook shank would act as a kind of wire leader to protect against teeth, but there it's the leader I'm trying to protect.Vlad wrote: Short shank hook ... will minimize (hopefully) the exposure to trout teeth.
My first reaction to the idea of protecting materials would be to tie on a longer shanked hook, but keep the body short. It seems to me that the hook must cross the teeth on a well hooked fish; on a short shanked hook, you're increasing the probability that you're crossing a point with delicate materials.
Does anyone have any practical experience in this regard? Usually with wingless wets, fly longevity isn't a major concern to me, so I haven't done the experiment.
Nice looking fly, BTW.
Bob