All articles from section
Editorial content tagged with Dry flies
| Title | Body | Published | Time ago |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tutus |
These flies get their name from the Tutu, the short skirt worn by female ballet dancers |
4 months ago | |
| Photographing Floating Flies |
Getting a decent macro image of a dry fly sitting on water is one of the hardest shots to pull off |
1 year ago | |
| Sillikix |
I like rubber legs on dry flies. Their suggestion of something edible is the fish equivalent of ringing a dinner gong. |
2 years ago | |
| Stealth Stonefly |
This is a dual purpose stonefly pattern tied on a jig hook. It can act both as a dry fly and an indicator |
3 years ago | |
| Softly Softly |
The Partridge Parachute Emerger – or PPE for short – is a soft hackle dry fly, all limp and spindly |
3 years ago | |
| Betters' Flies |
Fran Betters was a creative tyer and originated several patterns that have become quite famous. Mike Hogue covers four of them in this article. |
5 years ago | |
| Moulin’s Deer Hair Parachute |
Swiss/Norwegian tyer Fabien Moulin stumbled upon a seemingly new way of creating a parachute hackle and wing in one. |
5 years ago | |
| Narova Foam Beetle |
Russian Dmitri Tseliaritski's Narova foam dry fly is an easy and robust pattern template for terrestrials, beetles in particular |
8 years ago | |
| Tup's Indispensable |
Tup's Indispensable is a fly originated by R.S. Austin in 1890, utilizing a quite exotic material as dubbing. |
8 years ago | |
| Wings with CDC |
CDC wings are good looking and makes a dry fly a great floater. Here's a few tips on getting them perfect. |
10 years ago | |
| Taming the Humpy |
The Humpy might be the greatest surface fly ever devised, but it also has a reputation of being difficult to tie. Learn to tame it here. |
10 years ago | |
| Buying some Schwiebert flies |
A story about a group buying some of the Ernie Schwiebert fly collection. |
10 years ago | |
| The Rising Salar |
The video starts out nicely sketching the contrast between work and fishing as many of us recognize it. Dennis the businessman getting up in the darkness at 6:30 and going to work, struggling to find space in the boot for his briefcase because of the fishing tackle stuffed in there. A gear mess on the back seat and flies on the dashboard. The mention of Norway in his boss' presentation ringing as Dennis dozes off and dreams of salmon fishing. He has to go "for some fresh air" and then scoots off to Norway where he meets up with his friends Henrik and Roar. |
11 years ago | |
| A Newfoundland Adventure |
When Danish angler Jesper Fohrmann was a child, he had the book The Atlantic Salmon by Lee Wulff on the shelf next to Batman and Donald Duck. Ever since then he dreamed of one day visiting the rivers that Lee Wulff fished. |
11 years ago | |
| X-Factor |
South African summer is here and the fish are rising. And the X-factor fly makes them even keener to go for the surface fly |
11 years ago | |
| This fly is NOT called Europe! |
The name of this renowned fly is Europea 12 - with an a in the end - oftentimes just called E-12. It's a true European classic, a great caddis imitation and even easy to tie. |
12 years ago | |
| The CDC & Elk family |
Hans Weilenmann's CDC & Elk is a fly as good as they come. Still a lot of people - including Hans himself and the author of this article - have made variations. The article covers a whole bunch of CDC & Elk variations. |
14 years ago | |
| River Academy |
I have chosen to review these three DVD's in one review, mostly because they are part of a series and very consistent in concept and production. There's also a fourth in the series, which I don't have. |
14 years ago | |
| Mayfly Madness |
This is a little and all too unknown fishing video gem. Swedish anglers Johan Klingberg and Ulf Börjesson take us on a charming row of fishing trips iun the lush southern Swedish landscapes hunting mayfly hatches... and trout! |
15 years ago | |
| Internet Flies |
All of a sudden, the new season or a spontaneous fly fishing trip with your best buddy is imminent. At that stage, you may think about ordering flies through an online shop. |
16 years ago | |
| Green Machine |
The Green Machine is a classic salmon fly from the Eastern part of Canada. It's fished as a wet fly in spite of being tied with deer hair and a hackle like a bomber. This article shows you step by step how to tie it and shows an alternative and easier way to create the green body. |
17 years ago | |
| Goosewing Coachman? |
Hey - why not? |
18 years ago | |
| Dry-Fly Patterns for the New Millenium |
The flies represented vary from classics tied by recognized experts to contemporary patterns, terrestrials, and extra-terrestrials. |
22 years ago | |
| Tying Flies the Paraloop Way |
My first thought was probably the same as yours - what is "paraloop"? Paraloop is part technique, part style. Take a piece of a parachute, a bit of a thorax dun, and some thoughts of a comparadun, mix, and you'll arrive at a paraloop. |
22 years ago | |
| Comparadone! |
Comparaduns are one of the most versatile mayfly patterns in existence representing a low-riding mayfly to near perfection. However, many tiers shy this simple pattern due to the perceived complexity of tying the deer hair wings. Learn to master the technique with GFF partner Steve Schweitzer. |
23 years ago | |
| Fly gallery 2002 |
Just some flies that passed by the table and lens of GFF partner Martin Joergensen. No strings attached, no patterns, just nice to look at. |
23 years ago | |
| Woodchuck |
Now is the time of year to experiment with new materials. If you haven't had the pleasure of using groundhog/woodchuck, I recommend you give it a try. |
24 years ago | |
| The Flex Hex |
The fly that did the Limbata as told by Jim Hauer |
28 years ago | |
| Poul Jorgensen flies |
Salmon fly tyer Poul Jorgensen. |
29 years ago | |
| Grey Duster |
Later my friend and I ran into problems on our favorite stream, when the tiny Caënis dayflies hatched. The trout sipped the fresh emerged flies all over the water - but they rejected all the flies we offered. Then we found a note in a magazine saying, that the fly with the peculiar name - the 'Grey Duster' - should be the right medicine, if it was tied with a parachute hackle. |
29 years ago | |
| The Jassid |
The headline contains some truth in the sense: When trout/graylings eat tiny surface-food, they only nead to open their mouth to a narrow slot and sip the fly in. If one presents them with a fly with a broad hackle - then they can’t suck it in through their narrow mouth. |
29 years ago | |
| Two flies in one |
The small dipterae - Simulium sp. - has always been a problem - they are tiny and shows up in fantastic numbers. Why should a trout prefer our imitations when there are so many all over the water? |
29 years ago | |
| A.K.'s Fly Box |
A.K. should be fairly well known. The term 'production fly tyer' is very suitable for him. He counts his flies in hundreds of dozens and has before demonstrated his ability to write books about this kind of tying. |
29 years ago | |
| CDC&Elk |
Hans Weilenmann's classical contemporary sedge fly. |
29 years ago | |
| Flytyers Masterclass |
When you take into consideration the size and volume of this book: large format and app. 250 pages, and the fact that it 'only' deals with 20 flies, it should be obvious that each fly is described in minute details. And it sure is. |
30 years ago | |
| The art of the trout fly |
Seriously. This is a book that I like just to touch. The print renders the photos in an excellent quality, and leaves the reader with a feeling that the flies are as textured, translucent and subtle as they actually are. |
30 years ago |
