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November
Happy All Saints Day. This day is the reason there is an All Hollows Eve Day. Seems the ghouls, goblins, witches and creatures of the night, pour out there worse upon us before having to go back and hide from the forces of good. In the Catholic faith this signifies the beginning of a new year, and they replace the now year old paschal candle with a brand new one. A new page in the book of the dead gets turned and life goes on.
Well I played some more.
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Very crude stuff I know, but the material is tricky stuff. I am learning as I go. I tried flaring out my Mare-A-Boo on the two on the left. At still there are two, when swimming they legs will drawn in tighter. They will resist this inward movement as they get pulled along and provide action. That’s the plan. Saw something similar on the interwebs. Of course everything has already been done.
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The jig on the right has some white Mare-A-Boo added to indicate there is a white belly, but it kind of gets buried some. Little things like that are where I am stuck now. I need to master technique in order to make beauty.
The grizzly hackles are soft and flexible and I want to try wrapping hackle vs tying chenille. I have watched some videos featuring this technique and think I could follow along fairly well. A hackle behind the jig head would offer some body without becoming a center of attention thingie. I want that eye to lead the way.
So far I am enjoying tying with feathers. They are difficult to work with as they are so flimsy but they offer plenty of whimsical rewards. Fly tyers must be a crazy lot as they detail they put into a fly is way too much. I am lucky if the feather points anywhere near in the right direction. LOL
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I have done a few with twisted and wrapped hackle. Also wrapped some hackle between the wraps of chenille. Gave kind of a wolly worm appearance
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Twisting hackle around close to the head gives a real nice furry collar. Adds a nice look. Try wrapping the marabow around the hook like you would chenlle...makes a real fluffy body and tail. It's lots of fun trying so many different ways to work with stuff. Keep up the good work.
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Nice ties,,,love those eyes
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Well tried my first hackle wrapping exercise, and it came out uneven. Still it is interesting. I think I need to watch a few more videos to understand the intricacies in manipulating feathers.
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I appreciated the idea of using Mare-A-Boo for my collars. I bet that is wild.
Here are a few tamer versions. This is more what I had envisioned when I selected my hackle.
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Still I am making the tails too long. I wet the marabou and then gauge the length, a few loosies and trim and wind down. Not sure why I am doing that.
The grizzly barred hackle sure looks cool running down the sides. To my eye it mimics a minnow. I imagine a man could simply use a magic marker and scribe slashes onto a material and skip the feather, but the feather would still look better.
I need to look at getting more materials. I see now how things go with this hobby. I almost stopped to collect the tail off a roadkill squirrel yesterday. Sad I know. Maybe I will get a squirrel tail today. Wonder what Crow feathers look like when lashed to steel. Hair of hog. Her Chihuahua is starting to get nervous and is avoiding me.
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Once it is in the water it should even itself out
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I watched some videos on wrapping Marabou, and saw how things are supposed to go. I must admit the feathers in the dry condition are very impressive, but when wet same same as not wrapping. Maybe they have an added attraction when being trolled, not sure. I know my first attempt left me with a really long tail for my size jig. I will try some more and see if I can do it without making a tail a dinosaur would be proud of.
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Thinking I should give away these to make room for the newer ones I intend to tie up. They all have their own flaws and such as I am just learning.
Watching videos and seeing a few new tools I need to acquire. Hackle pliers and a spinner. Whatever that thing is. Figure I will get another bobbin while I am at it. Wanting to try lots of the things I am seeing done. Some of the videos were basically showing techniques that can be done on a Norvise. Like $400 is worth being able to do this here boy. My Regal vice doesn’t spin round and round and I ain’t in no race, but dubbin seems popular and I want to try that, too.
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One good thing about tying tools is they don't take up a lot of room. The materials seem to be a different story
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Well I ordered some new tools. A dubbin spinner thingie and a new whip finishing tool and a hackle plier. I added some Fishair to my order just to see if I like it. Never know unless I try it.
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Saw some cool videos and got some ideas. Seems everyone does things differently.
My next batch of jig heads will be getting some paint. Thinking bright white
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The wings look great on those
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This one is seen head on. Kind of crammed him on to get the shot. Looks mean.
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These have nice profiles with their beer bellies.
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I have to accompany her majesty to the Festival. Oh joy. Walk around and look at other people’s junk. Hmmmmm wonder why they felt that someone would want to actually buy that. Still I endeavor to persevere. Working on the boat later today when I get done doing the things I am told to do. More like ignoring a few items on the list. Maybe if I get rip roaring drunk and lay down on the hallway floor I can be excused from my duties.
At least I don’t have to start wallpapering until her Halloween decorations come down. Rest assured as soon as they do it will be time to get started. Not looking forward to doing that you know. I mean you could have guessed that I guess.
I bought my family turkey the other day at $40. That’s right $40. Big Old Butterball. Family coming over for Thanksgiving and I wanted them to keep the tradition going. Did I mention it was $40. Double what I expect to pay normally. Food prices are through the roof and set to get much worse. Gird your loins.
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Some awesome work! Love this one.
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I like those barred feathers also. Awesome
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These are from my purple and pank collection.
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Pank and white.
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Blue and white.
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I think I have learned something about working with marabou. Instead of wetting down an entire feather and lashing it to the hook shank, instead peel off a few sections of a single feather and lash those down. The thinner tail shows fine but will produce more action. A few whispy feathers vs a bundle of crowded feathers. In the second picture you can see where I was thick, and where I went thin with this.
I am trying to establish some base colors that can be included regularly in any of my jigs and I think I found two of these. White and chartreuse yellow.
Pink and WHITE
Blue and WHITE
Purple and WHITE
Chartreuse and WHITE
White goes well with all four of these other colors and can be a major color for me. I can add white to just about any jig and enhance the appearance. Makes sense, as minnow bellies have a light tone to contrast against a dark. Two tone. White shows well in the stained waters of my local lakes and can be easily spotted as well.
The second color that goes well with other colors is chartreuse yellow. Bright bright as you can get yellow. It has a universal appeal similar to white.
Pink and YELLOW
Purple and YELLOW
Blue and YELLOW
Green and YELLOW
And of course WHITE and YELLOW
You get the idea. Have a solid base color and simply add other colors to enhance it from there. Start with a white jig and add a splash of another color to it. Of course this is not some sort of news to some of you but I have been on this site for two years and have seen very little, if anything, discussed about this concept.
Take a look at the heads I recently made. What theme do you see.
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That is right….white. A white jig head, and I added a color from there. The white makes the other color pop right out at you. It compliments the color I want to show. I want you to see green, so I apply it to a white background and you see green.
I am going to be painting more heads soon and will use some yellow powder paint as well. Bright as I can get. LOL
I think Marabou is not going to be of much value to me as my technique is to troll at a constant speed. Marabou really shines when the jig is still. I am thinking I need some synthetic fibres and will be trying some. I also like the idea of artic fox tail in……wait for it……wait…..WHITE and YELLOW. LOL
Anyways, just a few thoughts to share regarding what colors I think the fish will respond to. Just trying to assemble a small collection of GO-TO jigs.
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The quality of hackle makes a huge difference when wrapping hackle. I have plenty of squirrel tails. PM your address and I will send you a few to play with.
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These are from my Pink Period. I have confidence in pink/white/chartreuse combinations. Had a few issues with the design, but the bottom jig in the bottom picture came out nicely. White marabou on the bottom with the chartreuse on top of that ( fish’s view bottom). It certainly looks good to me. Those pink eyes pop nicely on that white powder paint.
Got some of this stuff. Here it is in a UV light.
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I made a few jigs using it as my chartreuse enhancement. It’s OK I guess, but really is little more than Flashabou stuff. Fine hairs in a synthetic of some fashion. I thought synthetics would have a big advantage over natural hair but apparently that is just not so. I read that deer tail hair has a long taper that synthetics do not possess. It is also hollow so as you bring the thread tight, it flares as the sides get crushed. Interesting. I will need to get me some deer tails. Everyone wants the Big Northern Buck Tails, but I suspect many of these are doe tails. LOL. I am gonna look for regular cheap ones as even those inferior hairs will still be too long for my short shank jigs. Not sure about colors, but white definitely. If the dyed tails are not bright bright I will pass on those and look for alternatives in synthetic. I mean the color of the synthetic is very bright and some are UV enhanced, such as this one.
Here I made a few jigs using this synthetic hair.
Purple and white with chartreuse highlights. (bad picture for color)
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Pink and white with chartreuse.
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Green and white with chartreuse.
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On the right I made an orange and white with chartreuse, but quickly got distracted.
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Tried some fake fur I found in a bag that I bought long time ago and made the jig on the bottom left. Crinkled hairs. I was thinking I would try it as a replacement for marabou, but I don’t think it is gonna make the grade. You can see it is kind of sparse. Maybe it was intended for adding to something else, or perhaps as dubbing. I don’t remember what I ordered but it was dirt cheap on Amazon. Got like a dozen colors of the stuff.
Top jig is kind of interesting. Obviously I was thinking orange, but wanted to try something new. The tail is Peacock Herl. When you look at a peacock tail feather these herls run along the length of the stem.
Here is a peacock, male bird, in full display.
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You can see the feathers have an Eye. Look down at the lowest part of his fan, and you will see two swords, each sticking out to the side, left and right. These swords are used for special flies. I am interested in getting some swords to fiddle with.
Here is the tail feather up close.
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You can see the herls very easily. They are single feathers extending away from the main stem. They have an iridescence that is absolutely beautiful. A shimmering green like the color of an insect’s eye. These are used to wrap around the hook shank, hackle feather fashion, to create the body of a bug for small flies. I didn’t do that, but instead simply lashed them down to fashion up a tail ( picture above- top jig ). It looks much better in hand I assure you.
Finally, a few more natural types that I made up last time at the vise.
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White marabout tails, with different enhancements. Top jig I added Crystal Flash and some of that yellow hair stuff. Left hand side jig I added my grizzly feathers. Man I love those things. Then on the right same same but switched up and added peacock herls. I suspect my herls will succumb to a tragically short life once fish begin gnawing at them. Buying fresh herls is key and I got lucky, As they age they get brittle and break easily. Even fresh they are fragile, but still fun.
The bottom left jig is gonna be hard to improve upon. It offers so much to see, and is a great color. You cannot see it in the picture, but I eased a piece of Magnum Flashabou behind each grizzly feather. As you hold the jig the flash is tempered just so and the effect is much like the flash a minnow offers when near the surface. It is there, but kind of intermittent. I plan to do more of that.
Looks like some squirrel tail is coming my way. I wonder what I will be doing with that. LOL
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You can get very nice effects with deer hair. I enjoyed using it
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I used Mylar ribbon to wrap the shank of the hook. Not really excited about this.
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Here I used grizzly hackle feather to wrap the hook shank and it gives the illusion of a body.
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Old rubber legs still make a nice effect.
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Hackle feather down each side is still my favorite I think.
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This one is wrapped peacock herl feather. It is a nice effect however I suspect that a nice chenille would best this stuff. Be more durable and thicker. I still like the look of the herl extending into the marabou as a tail enhancer.
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I was piddling again this morning.
Bottom left is a 1/2 ounce head using the same favorite hook of mine. I made a few of these to run right beside and below the back of the boat. Tried to paint crinkle fashion but didn’t get much flow. When hit with the UV light they look very nice though. Reptilian even. I need to add some eyes. The tail has some peacock herl mixed in with the marabou.
The orange jig top left also has some peacock herl in the tail. The light dances off the stuff and provides a nice effect. Top right is my favorite of the bunch. Mr. Crappie told me that blue and white is one of his most favorite combinations. Well, in fact he told everyone that watched the video, but still I want to try it. Never fished that color combo before.
I am getting much better at limiting the amount of marabou being applied, both in length and in density. I want whispy thin undulating as it moves through the water column at a constant speed.
I got excited with this marabou material and have studied some regarding materials and ordered up some new to me stuff. A natural white Arctic Fox tail is the centerpiece. The rings they slice off a tail are almost $10, but an entire tail is but $20. Saw a few from Ukraine that looked awesome but of course actually getting the thing is a risk.
I also decided to try some rabbit Zonkers, again in bright white. Magnum size. These are supposed to be wrapped and dangled but I plan to trim the hair from the hide and lash it down. Looks interesting to me.
Carefully considered Buck tail but in the end decided to pass. The hair is stiff and durable but I think I want soft and fluffy. Read about deer belly hair and went for a swank of that stuff, again in bright white. It is said to be a better choice than buck tail and I plan to see what happens when I lash it down.
Got a patch of gray fox that looked very interesting. Similar in patterning to squirrel I guess, but I wanted to try it out. I also got some UV enhanced marabou in white to try out.
The pattern here is white tails obviously. White looks very nice to my eye and any additions to the tail are easily seen. In the picture you can see I used white marabou to tone down the blue marabou in the tail. This softens the color some and makes for a nice appearance. Once I decide the type of hair I like best, I will buy dyed versions and live happily ever after.
There is a huge hurricane over top of me right now. It is not one of the string ones we see in late Summer though. Rains and winds. I have seen a gust that was close to 30 mph, but really not much of an even. We are getting heavy rains from it though. Most workers have the day off. My beautiful wife has off today due to storm, Friday due to Veterans Day and the weekend. She thinks she is so smart. I have to work today and tomorrow. If I was starting all over all over again, I would get a government job. Any government job.
At least I will not have to see boats on the lake as I drive past. Ha Ha Ha……no one is fishing today. LOL
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Never liked those really wet storms. Didn't take much wind to topple a tree when the ground is saturated
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Peacock herl is brittle/fragile but it's iridescence is amazing. You can make it more durable by wrapping it and your thread at the same time. Good luck.
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I was thinking as I lay in bed last night. Imagining what I might make in the morning. I like the two tone look of mixed marabou in the tail. I like a slim skunk stripe along the length of the chenille. So…….
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Wally Marshall says his favorite color combination is blue and white. Here I have two ways of showing blue and white. White body - blue tail - whisp of white marabou, with chartreuse stripe. White tail, whisp of blue marabou, blue body, white skunk stripe.
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Wally also likes white and chartreuse and lime and chartreuse. I like purple and chartreuse and orange and chartreuse.
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Pink and white is also a favorite of mine. That bottom jig looks really nice in hand. I managed isolate some whispy feathers and lash them in. Pink atop, white belly.
The peacock herls might be fragile and may disappear and falter in action, but boy do they look cool when you have the jig in hand. The light dances much like the flash of a minnow just under the surface. You see it but then it’s gone. My lakes are all stained tanic brown. The degree to which varies for some reason. Different lakes, different times of the year, etc. So a touch of flash might be attractive, might not, but it certainly cannot be if it doesn’t exist. The tinsels seem to provide good flash but I tend to add too much of the stuff. I go wild and end up trimming away once finished tying.
BTW- that bottom jig last shot has a different head. It has the same 6.5 mm neon rhinestone eye, but on a 1/24th oz head. The others are 1/10th ounce. Then there is this one at 1/2 ounce.
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This is for dropping almost straight down beside the boat. I can accurately gauge the depth of the jig because the line is short and I can lift rod and gauge it. I like to run these just up from the bottom, maybe two feet up. My lakes are shallow affairs, average depth about six feet. So easy to run these at four feet deep.
I have no idea how well these will work, but imagine they will equal my best plastic baits.
The club called my boss and demanded that he let me attend the next meeting. I thought that was very nice. I wonder what they need me to do. LOL. I plan to carry along a pile of my jigs, both hand ties and plastics to gift away to the old todgers that can barely walk. Let them grope a handful for themselves to take home and imagine fishing with. Sucks to be 97 years old. You might think otherwise but at some point a man gets trapped inside a useless body. The young girls no longer notice, and if they do they just giggle. I am telling you it ain’t for everybody.
A long long time ago a very wise embalmer told me something. He said don’t go jogging around the neighborhood. He said flatly, you will live longer if you sit in the shade and drink beer. Good advice of you live in Florida. If I get to 75 I will be happy with my lot and have no grievances when I meet the maker. I might change my mind once I get close, but being in pain and such all day everyday isn’t for this boy.
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Those aches and pains creep up on a fellow and have a way of adding up. Lord knows I have my share
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Went out yesterday shopping for a shed. Not happy to be spending that kind of money, but it will be worth having access to storage. She has lots of junk to store and I listened carefully as she explained that the $6,000 shed was what she wanted. Only I know her and ain’t now $6,000 shed made that can hold her junk. I want the $ 8,000 shed as I see the smaller unit as being a waste of money if it can’t do what we need done.
I learn from others pretty well and I see plenty of folks that have small sheds. Usually they have a pair of them. LOL
12 x 20 is $ 8,000. Typical construction for our area. It will withstand hurricane strength winds for five whole seconds, and that rating is so helpful. Delivery and setup included, tax is additional. YUCK…….
The plan is to get shed, and fill it with all the stuff that is in our extra bedrooms, and the garage. The garage is a finished garage in that it has finished drywall. I plan to remove the garage door, and build a wall in it’s place with windows and a door for entry. This will add 600 square feet to the size of the house and make back every penny spent on the shed.
The garage will be our studio mostly. I will move my tackle stuff in there, and she her art stuff, and other things. The garage will be open to the main house and have a/c and heat. The heat pump unit we have now is too small to manage the extra space, but the good news is it is also twenty years old and needing replaced anyways. I have a good friend in the a/c business and he can get me a large unit and air handler and all for about half what I would pay otherwise.
Then I will add a lean to roof extending out over the new wall and over the concrete drive. She can pull up and hide under the roof while it is raining and take her time opening the door. She is excited to organize her stuff, and I am excited to absorb the garage space into the home. The floor height does not match the main house as it is a tad lower, so a step will be there.
The sales creature at one place seemed to be ambivalent about his hot customer on the lot. At another she had us in the office seated at the desk ready to go. I backed away from her and we left before she could run my credit score. I don’t like being lead about when it involves my money and my home. She seemed to know exactly what to say to my wife, and did her best to somewhat acknowledge me in between commentary with her.
I plan to call about one shed we saw and liked. I pay $500 over the phone, and they come and install and I pay remainder. My gate is 14” so I am limited in width, with 12 feet being max. The wife was trying to pick a shed that match the color of the house. I told her that the shed is always going to look like a shed and will never match the house. Even if it could, we plan to paint the house a different color anyways. She doesn’t care for the mold that grows on the walls that are shaded by the grand daddy oak trees. I think they make a mold resistant paint for that.
The inside is wood studs and I can add plywood shelving fairly easily. It will be expensive to outfit it, but it can be done. The sheds we saw were all wired for a light, but I have no plans to run a hot wire to it. I think some windows will work out just fine. The one we liked had a ridge vent that ran the length of the peak. It will be set back in a shady area so heat is not going to be excessive. Power wash it every year when the mold creeps up on it.
I told her I had no plans to store my zero turn mower in it, so we didn’t need a garage style roll up door, nor double doors that are doomed to fail. They use cheap stuff to build these things. I worked as a carpenter for a period of time and could build a very nice shed that would match the house, but SHE CAN”T WAIT FOR ANY OF THAT. I understand lumber costs are high now anyways. I can always build a shed later and make it a shop with a concrete floor. Man Cave style. That would cost about $20,000 to do right. Currently she has spent that money on her plans to install a metal roof, gutters, tile floors, and new paint and shutters, and landscaping stuff.
I am telling you that girl is as expensive as she is cute. Oh and now she is ready for me to get a dog. Oh joy, a replacement for my little buddy that died a few months back. I cringe because I know all my hard earned training will be utterly destroyed with her spoiling. I know she will do that and I will have to live disappointed in a dog that begs. House training I have down pat. I pee outside and the puppy pees with me, and after a few trips outside he will have it down. “This is where us big dogs go to pee”. This has worked six times in a row BTW.
Anyways, I have been experimenting with various materials and designs and ideas for tying jigs. Attempting various techniques has been both fun and challenging. Dubbing is not as easy at it looks on videos. I need three hands, six thumbs and seventeen fingers to manage everything. Still I shall endeavor to persevere. I plan to gift my experiments to the crappie club members who may not have an hand ties of their own. Put them in bags and let the club sell them to members for $ 1 a bag. I also plan to dump a few pounds of jigs with plastic baits attached, and some jig heads unadorned.
Caught up in the fever of life I am.
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I like the belly stripes on the jigs. I tie mine using braid, not as bulky as chenille and it's flashier and resembles scales. Good stuff..
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Nice box of jigs. A pup will do ya good.
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I need to get a glass filter that I can lay over top of these before taking the shot. Tanic stained would be nice. Lay it over top and the jigs would disappear and then we could see what they really look like underwater. LOL
Anyways, I wanted to get some experience and make some jigs to gift to the club and I have done that. I doubt those old farts will appreciate any of it, but a few of the few good guys in the club surely will. Most show up at the last minute, eat and leave right away. Afraid someone might ask them to do something. I excuse anyone over the age of 97 from having to help, but them guys that ain’t but 92 should get their butts in early and set up tables and such. They were excited to see me come along, but only for this reason I suspect.
Now I plan to sort through the piles of jigs and cherry pick a few for me to keep at the ready. I am fond of a few and wish to copy them later lest I forget what I like. I am thinking that the men should have to pay something, so they can pay the club their money.
Years ago a man in the club began making jigs for the club, and the club was so pleased that they paid for his tools and materials and stuff. Then he died or moved away or something and all that stuff was gathered up and brought to the club. Then the club decided that Old So-N-So would be the new jig maker and they gave him all of the stuff. Then he decided that the stuff was actually intended for him and a few select buddies of his. The club got no more jigs. Then along comes me and soon everything will change. The club doesn’t have to give me anything at all, but I might be sporadic in my supply too though. They get what they get.
I lose about three jigs a year to toothie beasts lurking in the depths. I make a lot of jigs. So it is good to have a place to dump the ones that I used to like. Sort of similar to women I guess. Years ago after a golf tournament, Lee Travino had won and the men gathered at the bar there and listened as he described what happened at the various holes. Then right in the middle of it all, this drop dead gorgeous woman walked past and everyone got quiet and everyone stared at the beautiful woman. After she had passed by in review and walked away, Lee said-“Men…….somewhere there is a man that is tired of that”. The crowd erupted in laughter because they all knew it was true. My attraction to my jigs is short lived. Pretty now, but soon I grow weary and want something new. Fickle maybe.
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Variety is the spice of life as they say
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Waiting on delivery of new shed. Supposed to arrive around 10:00 am. Way too much money, but hey I got to have it. After it is set I am heading off to work.
I am making my famous deviled eggs so she who must be obeyed can be a show off at the office party.
I start with a boiling pot. Lay eggs in gently and boil for 13 minutes- timed. Place pot in sink and start with a mild stream of tap water to replace the hot water, then after a minute turn on high and cool the eggs. Then remove and into the fridge they go. Cold eggs cut better and hold their shape better. You want the eggs to look good or people will not eat them. Then mix yolks with mayo, a tad bit of sweet relish, and a dash of horseradish. Mix and put mixture into a Ziploc bag and work it towards a bottom corner. Then snip the corner of the bag off and use the bag as a pipping bag to apply the mixture. Sprinkle paprika to finish. Everything gets set into a Tupperware egg transporter and set back in fridge and away she goes.
MCG1……your package has arrived safely. Thank you very much. You let me know what I can send you in return please. I was expecting one squirrel tail, not four. LOL. Look here what I started out using it for.
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Arctic Fox Tail, Squirrel Tail, and varigated chenille in tan and black. Keep an eye out as I have some plans for the squirrel tail.
Meanwhile, I made up some dumb old regular boring type jigs.
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I wanted to get a Garmin trolling motor, but decided that instead I need to get a roof over top of my boat. Boring but I need to keep the boat nice or don’t bother making jigs any more. LoL
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Between the two boxes above and this thingie, I suspect the men will be happy.
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