Jump to content

Urbs

Registrants
  • Posts

    117
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Urbs

  1. 43 minutes ago, Kev-mo said:

    I got bit by the BFS bug and trout fishing about 6 years ago. There's a glass rod that Daiwa makes that I'm drooling over.... wife would be okay with it but i need to convince myself haha

    i’m not ashamed to admit best day i’ve ever had in the driftless was on panther martins! it is a blast  

  2. 34 minutes ago, Ben K. said:

    There’s some serious ground between a 6w and 9w.  Don’t count out a 7 or 8 weight for potential trophy bass on decent sized water. They are ideal for casting heavy or bushy predator flys. 

    i hear ya. but from the euro rods and small crick driftless glass rods i’ve bought lately i’m getting serious stink eye from my old lady!

  3. 8 minutes ago, Ben K. said:

    Nice bugger.  Weight might be an issue, but casting and casting well are two different things. Flipping these out from the bank might be all you need with a 9ft rod. Now if you’re looking for a big double haul cast… try not to ping it off your rod…  I’ve got a 7w on its way to TFO, I’m speaking  from experience. 
     

    that estaz looks pretty bushy but I’d still try and wrap the hackle feather from the tail to the head instead of just a collar. It helps give the fly more body and taper.  Looking good tho! Report back on how it goes. 

     

    yea i got lazy and didn’t feel like counter wrapping with wire. 

    i hear you on the double haul. i’d also like to not smack myself in the back of the head!

  4. 28 minutes ago, Kev-mo said:

    Those look really good! I'd be curious on weight... they look 1/16 or 1/8. How heavy of stuff can you guys throw? I mean I get that it's all related/relative (line, rod etc.) working together. But at what point would you be better off just using spinning or baitcasting gear? Or would you just up a rod and line rating to be able to throw a heavier fly?

    I think you’re correct at 1/16th. 

    and great point. i’ve seen a lot of use of the “mono rig” lately. like a 50 foot section of 8 pound mono so that the fly line never leaves the reel. in order to cast need more weight. but aren’t we converging on spin casting?

    and for me personally: this is as heavy of a fly as I’ll use. the cast is not pretty: at this point i’m “water loading” on the back cast. probably the word “flinging” is the best description. I go as high as using a 6 weight rod. for me that rod is as heavy as I want to use (from the level of enjoyment). I have a 10 foot 9 weight that is a broomstick. 

  5. 9 minutes ago, John Gillio said:

    I used 12# also. I’ve had good luck in the past with a small articulated seducer with the back hook cut off at the bend, unweighted, in shallow quiet pools or drifted slowly along shallow downed logs. The trombone is the first weighted articulated fly I’ve tied. It looks to be the same size as yours. I’m Interested in seeing how well it works.

     

    the lead eyes here will get it down but with all the material certainly takes a bit to get down. bet your trombone works great!

  6. 30 minutes ago, John Gillio said:

    Fine looking fly. Looks very similar to the Rusty trombone I just tied a couple weeks back. I used the same colors for the most part. I used a glass bead and mono to articulate the fly. Wondering how you did yours?

     

    exactly: couple of glass beads and 12pb Ultragreen. and yes very similar to a rusty trombone. difference is lead eyes and fiber brush 

  7. 12 hours ago, rich mc said:

    nice strong hook,  what size ?     could also be cast with spinning gear once it gets wet too.

     

    I believe this is a size 2. and yes: I bet if I added some lead wire to the shank you could cast this a country mile. and frankly, probably more effective on a spinning rod especially in the winter

  8. 8 minutes ago, Rob G said:

    Very nice craw ! 

    I don't know why but I stink at fishing craws, I'm probably just not patient enough to work something slowly and I hate not seeing the take as so often I set the hook well before I feel anything but rather the moment my baitfish "disappears".

     

    thank you!  honestly baitfish are much more fun to fish but I figure I’d better have a few of these if it’s “one of those days.” but again: seeing them ambush a baitfish never gets old

  9. On 5/16/2023 at 10:10 PM, Rob G said:

    Finally got a chance to christen the new glass rod that I built this winter.  No pigs like some of you have landed recently but I'll take fat 17's all day long on glass.  Lotta fun.  

     

    bb.jpg

     

     

    Very nice; I have the 5 weight Moonlit S-Glass (8 foot in blue). Paired it with their $45 ShadowCAST rod. Very fun rod. 

  10. 32 minutes ago, Ben K. said:

    Nice, I bet it will come alive in the water.  
     

    If you’re looking for cheap dubbing in a ton of options check out flytyersdungeon.com I’ve been happy with their prices and they gave some great streamer materials. 

    it came alive in the sink just now lol 

     

    and thanks for the tip! always looking for cheap materials. 

×
×
  • Create New...