I would never have thought that plumbers tape would come into fly tying. Another excellent video Lindsay. Have you ever tied a buzzer using plumbers tape? Just thinking about the body/thorax. Maybe another video in the making and how it works on still waters. Keep up the great work you are doing in your videos.
@lindsayiflyfish11 ай бұрын
It is used a lot on Okey Dokey flies might try it on a few other patterns. Thanks for watching 👍
@johnlindsay320211 ай бұрын
nice tying looks very impressive shall be tying a few thanks again Lindsay
@lindsayiflyfish11 ай бұрын
Good stuff pal always have a few in the box.
@seanbenstead765011 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing i will try tying that later , your tutorials really are great go me as being a beginner to fly tying you explain every stage so well many thanks for sharing and keep them coming , I now have a fly box with over 100 home tied flies thanks to your tutorials ,
@lindsayiflyfish11 ай бұрын
Hi Sean, thanks for the feedback, glad they are helpful 👍
@seanbenstead765011 ай бұрын
@@lindsayiflyfish I'm off to Dever on Monday looking forward to the day
@wvlongshooter391211 ай бұрын
Thank you for an awesome tie. I’m using this type of fly on the Stillwater’s here in Wv USA with little success and I can’t figure out why they aren’t producing more eats. I can catch some on them but I seem to catch more on other methods. I use them on d3, intermediate and floating lines. I use them usually with a washing line technique. I’m not giving up, I’ll still try to figure it out. I even bought some of Howard Crostons that he sells. Still, with little success. Is there any basic information I’m missing out on ? Thanks!!!!
@lindsayiflyfish11 ай бұрын
Have a watch of this first. I will do another video when the season starts. kzbin.info/www/bejne/ZommpoyLrs9oa6csi=SrOP3-yUhW_FSj5l
@wvlongshooter391211 ай бұрын
@@lindsayiflyfish ok, watching your other videos now. Looking forward to the next ones!! Thanks!!
@mattbray8511 ай бұрын
Tidy looking fly. Any tips on getting marabou tails perfectly in the comp gauge? I find I'm always trying to fiddle about with the last few millimeters of fibres that are poking out, and then by the time I'm done it's always too short! 😂