Thursday, 26 November 2009

Towards the end of a long year it's good to find new energy and creative spirit. Anish Kapoor at the RA, London thrilled me.


The photography here isn't great... but you should get a good steer on what I'm trying to do.
I use a simple compact digital to crop this...

to this...

This fly could cover both pupa and emerger: simple, quick, robust but as yet unproven.

And this is a #28 a diptera emerger... build the thorax with a blend of cheek hair and short belly hair from a pine squirrel pelt. Niche Midge Wing is easily handled and gives off a cool shimmer for the wing case.


Still compressed...

Monday, 23 November 2009

Compressed

... that's the flow of new posts until Christmas...


TMC 200R #22, add a wisp of Fly-rite #28 to a split thread
and cord up TIGHT to rib
gloss up the head with Hard As Nails



Same again but Fly-rite Clear Antron replaces the Reddish Brown


Last trout of 2009, #24 quill-bodied paraduns (TMC101, Grip 19111BL, Daiichi 1110) reigned out-right during the last six weeks of the season.


Roy Christie's RPE is a design he invites tiers to develop new patterns with.
Peccary is strong and makes sublime bodies on small flies.
In a #20 this fly will last two dozen fish plus.



A good place to start.
The Partridge K1A Vince Marinaro Midge Hook (full title...) features an off-set bend with exceptional hooking
properties, and a discrete dark (not black) nickel finish.
In a #28 the shank profile makes for a sublimely proportioned midge pupa.
Simply run thread from eye-to-bend-to-eye-to-bend, cord up TIGHT,
colour thread with marker and rib neatly.


A local stream had good hatches of full #18 olives in 2009...





Tuesday, 10 November 2009

Modern Midges


Modern Midges (Headwater Books, 2009)
Rick Takahashi & Jerry Hubka

A book review is long overdue on this blog - there's some simply fantastic small tying and fishing books out there, especially from the States. Publishers to look out for are Stackpole Books and Headwater Books.

This is a timely review with Modern Midges hitting the shelves very recently. Notice of this book's publication came via an article in Fly Fisherman earlier this year, and a gentle reminder from Roy Christie (whose patterns feature in the book) last month that I really should order a copy.

There are numerous branches to our sport - each evolving over time as technique and approach are developed and refined by specialists and passed on. This is very much the case with midge fishing and tying. The simple, generic patterns developed in the States during the 1970's were the precursor to a fantastically diverse scene today. Modern Midges very much captures the state-of-the-art in contemporary midge tying and fishing.

Firstly, this is a big book at 288 pages measuring 8.5" x 11" in hardback. It delivers a lot of bang for your buck! The first section makes the case for midge fishing and describes the midge lifecycle. This is a brilliantly judged introduction - concise and complete. It sets the scene perfectly before we get to the (main) tying section. This is organised in to the key developmental stages of midges: larva, pupa, emerger and adult. Each section opens with a handful of proven patterns presented in step-by-step sequence. These are trusted and effective patterns tied by the authors, and photographed extremely clearly.

What follows in each section is at first a little overwhelming... this is a compendium of patterns, tied and supplied from a global congregation of fly fisherman. The book features over a thousand patterns, with a clear photograph and menu included for every fly. You may not fully appreciate just how good this book is at first, the depth and scale of what has been put together here is vast. I've had the book for seven weeks now, and I'm still discovering jaw-dropping patterns.

The final section covers midge fishing technique - and the approach here is as unique and effective as elsewhere. Rather than write extended pieces on midge fishing, the authors invited articles from recognised experts covering a broad range of subjects. Each piece is concise, yet highly focused and rewards the reader with insight and knowledge.

There is an assumed simplicity to tying midges. Certainly, there are brilliantly simple patterns comprising nothing more than hook and thread - and these provide a good place to start. But in time, you may want experiment a little more, widen your prespectives, the posibilities are endless as evidenced in Modern Midges. Some of what is presented here is breathtaking.

And there's some simply wonderful #32's for the hardcore midge-heads.

This is an absolutely essential book if you dig small flies.