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Submitted by joel on

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MY GOODNESS! You are good friend, fisherman, rancher and artist too! Thanks for sharing your talent with us.

I do fly thing video's and have a huge red beard. My earlier films used to have my beard in the video. I thought for a sec, after seeing this screen shot that it was one of mine! HAHA Thats almost my exact beard color too!

I like your vice!

Martin, if you had a such a lovely pair as per the top photo, you might have a lot more fishing "friends" :)

Submitted by chong vincent on

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This presentation is so much simpler. Definitely a must try to see if the fishes will be willing to take a nip the next trip.

Submitted by chong vincent on

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Very useful tips for those who will try this technique for experiment purpose.

Very clever tie Dan. I'll have to give it a try after I find the right hackle. I think I would put the red spot a little more caudally so that its out of the way of the eyes.

This looks a lot like Dave's NearNuff Sculpin. The video is on this site in the pattern library. I'm thinking that changing the color pattern to white and using plastic bead chain eyes would make this a good snook fly.

Joe Mahler of Fort Myers Florida showed me a cool trick to keep the hook eye free of cement when cementing heads. Simply use a stick of cheap, generic lip balm ( Brand name Chapstick in the US) to coat the eye before applying cement. Not only does this keep the eye clear, but it lubricates the knot when tying on the tippet. No more putting the dirty line in your mouth and possibly hooking yourself when tying the fly onto the tippet. One stick should last for years. When breaking hard cement out of a hook eye, there may still be a rough edge that could weaken a fine tippet.

Submitted by John Black on

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As usual Dave a great fly.Dave I always have trouble winging flies any tips.

Submitted by Heath Miller on

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Occasional and closer shots of the fly hitting the water and fish ripping into would add excitement...great casting!

Submitted by Dan Cuomo on

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Very nice job! The music complements the film beautifully. What is the title, and who is it by, please?

Dave,

The debate about vise vs. vice pops up now and then and is probably as old as the tool itself. http://grammarist.com/spelling/vice-vise/

And no, it's not as simple as "a vise, not a vice". Both are fine and the spelling depends on what kind of English you write - and the writers mood.

For a non-English person like myself, I couldn't care less. I understand that a vice is not a bad habit of the tier (or is that tyer?), but the tool he uses - or rather doesn't use in this case.

Lately I have started writing vise rather than vice, but then the Brits (and The Aussies and the Kiwis, maybe?) are on my case.

Martin

Submitted by Dave White on

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Tied in the hand, means sans vise, not sans vice. One could say that salmon fly tying is a vice, however the tool that is omitted is a vise... :)

dw

Submitted by Camper Van Ren… on

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Iceland sure has many great fishing waters, both lakes and rivers. Two difficulties is that you have to book in advance on so many places. And with advance bookings I mean like even December the year before. Then we have the price tag on the best rivers. There are other ways you can fish in Iceland. Here is one of them. http://www.rent.is/blog/fishing-in-iceland/

Tight lines!

Submitted by Shawn on

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So I thought I responded to this already... Sorry if it ends up responding twice...

Thanks pj! I am partial to this fly. I've also been working hard to improve my vids.

Yes your right. It is a rooster... I said "grizzly saddle hackle" and I should have said rooster in there somewhere also. My apology. When making these vids I always end up leaving something out... Darn.

Just don't go use your dry fly hackle... You can get away with the hackle you use for wooly buggers or small streamers.

Submitted by Shawn on

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It is rooster, sorry I didn't specify on the video I guess... I think all I said was "grizzly saddle hackle". My apology. It is the cheaper streamer stuff though. I use this for wooly buggers and the line also. It's not dry fly hackle, so don't spend the money on that for this fly, or waste your good dry fly hackle either...

Submitted by Shawn on

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Do you guys like the new video format? I've been working on improving them. Let me know what you think.

Submitted by Arthur Ofieldstream on

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Martin .. a fabulous article on the root basics of tying big flies. I am passing this article around the horn. Great reference material here for all levels of fly-tying. Kudos! Another big winner. -AOF

Submitted by Larry Glenn on

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How do you keep the thread from cutting into the squirmy stuff when anchoring it down to shank of the hook?
I know--soft turns but the the squirmy stuff rolls around the hook..

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