Congrats. Hope it’s a good book for you.
I seem to always be looking at how to do things a bit different, better, etc. Well I happened onto an Idea of looking at fly tying books. Since tying jigs and tying flies are pretty close in practice and use mostly the same materials. I been looking for a particular book and finally found a copy, which I'm waiting for in the mail. It's a used copy of The Benchside Introduction to Fly Tying written by Ted Leeson and Jim Schollmeyer. It's spiral bound which means it will lay flat when open. 164 pages. It's said to be in very good shape and price wise, this ones not bad. I've seen this book as high as $78.00, but this ones a lot less at $31.47 with shipping. Should be able to convert some of them flies over to jig format, hoping anyway. Just thought I'd share this info. Eric.
Proud to have served with and supported the Units I was in: 1st IDF, 9th INF, 558th USAAG (Greece), 7th Transportation Brigade, 6th MEDSOM (Korea), III Corp, 8th IDF, 3rd Armor Div.
1980 Ebbtide Dyna-Trak 160 Evinrude 65 TriumphSuperDave336, S10CHEVY LIKED above post
The Fly Tier's Benchside Reference to Techniques by Ted Leeson & Jim Schollmeyer is the one to get.
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Look forward to seeing your results
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heavenornot.netJamesdean thanked you for this post
Proud to have served with and supported the Units I was in: 1st IDF, 9th INF, 558th USAAG (Greece), 7th Transportation Brigade, 6th MEDSOM (Korea), III Corp, 8th IDF, 3rd Armor Div.
1980 Ebbtide Dyna-Trak 160 Evinrude 65 Triumph
When I first started tying 30 + years ago I bought a fly tying book by Skip Morris and it had 20 different patterns of flies. Started tying wooly buggers on fly hooks. I showed them to my wife who doesn't fish and she said it would look better with eyes so started painting eyes on jig heads using the fly patterns from the book. Loved tying wooly bugger jigs and caught a lot of fish on them buggers. Then I bought some mallard flank feathers and after tying a few went fishing and first trip caught over 100+ fish. Been tying them ever since. That book was a huge help getting me started and there was a pattern with duck feathers in the book. I just changed a couple things and made it my own. Books are great tools.
good topic. fly tying and tying for gear are very closely related. the preacher jigs are nothing but a deceiver tied on a big jig. the old dan gapen ugly bug is very close to the teqeelly fly. lately anglers are tying material on a ned head jig. not to mention tying material on a chatterbait/spinnerbait for creativity and durability. and in recent years the gear anglers have taken the balanced fly and created the hover jig.
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Start tying jigs in 1961. I learned by a commercial ladies that tied flies for Paulson in Portland, Oregon he distribute flies throughout the northwest. I used to watch her by the hours we learn a lot from her incorporated that to the jigs and also I tied a lot of trout flies years ago, but we’ve been doing it ever since 1961 I did read a few books, but there wasn’t a lot wrote a lot of exotic trout flies, which we never used basic patterns many of the patterns of the basic ones could be used on our jigs that we used today.
Thank you Jim. I am currently trying to find me a source of some Flank Feathers now. As you stated in another thread on Crappie.Com, the tying shops are quite pricy...I've reached out to a couple folks, and one said he would check with a couple folks. I have a few, so I may end up paying the big money for some, but still looking. Thank you for your info for sure.
Proud to have served with and supported the Units I was in: 1st IDF, 9th INF, 558th USAAG (Greece), 7th Transportation Brigade, 6th MEDSOM (Korea), III Corp, 8th IDF, 3rd Armor Div.
1980 Ebbtide Dyna-Trak 160 Evinrude 65 Triumph