- Видео 93
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Peter Collin
США
Добавлен 4 дек 2013
I'm a professional forester from western New York State. Join me for my woodworking, fishing, and chainsaw related adventures!
Jigging Lakers in My New(ish) Boat
I bought this Lund 17 footer to replace my 16 foot Smokercraft last fall. I have been dying to take it out on the big lake to jig up some big togue!
Просмотров: 291
Видео
Pileated Woodpecker Goes to Town #shorts
Просмотров 230Год назад
....and, yes, I live on the noisiest street in the known universe. #shorts
Tying the Apple Maggot Spey With Jay Peck
Просмотров 317Год назад
I got together with an old chum to talk about old times and tie up an old pattern.
Alain and Renee Come to Saw Some Cherry Logs
Просмотров 379Год назад
Because of the craziness the last few years, my friends from Canada haven't been able to visit for a few years. We spent the weekend making a nice batch of lumber for him to use in his shop.
Turkey Ridge Forest Fire 2022
Просмотров 1,7 тыс.Год назад
In the 30 years I have lived in western New York, this is the biggest forest fire I know about. Thanks to Todd Wallace, PeishTV, Colby Brewer, Anna Swanson, and John Kucko for stills and video!
Land of the Giant Oaks
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.2 года назад
For some woods, you just have to grab your camera.
Reach Out
Просмотров 3552 года назад
I am a pretty rusty player anymore. But last week I heard a song on the radio, and it popped into my head that I could probably work out a guitar arrangement. Just like how it used to be back in my playing days. So I overcame the inertia and learned this old one by the Four Tops. Performed on my homemade electric guitar.
Quick Laker Jigging Clip
Просмотров 7643 года назад
I had planned on a longer lake trout jigging video, but my camera cut out at an inopportune moment!
Tree Identification - Butternut
Просмотров 9 тыс.3 года назад
I was doing work in a woods that had an abundance of this relatively hard-to-find species.
Second Timber Harvest
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.3 года назад
It's great to be invited back to harvest a client's woods for the second time.
Tree Identification: Hackberry, Black Oak, Red Cedar
Просмотров 7 тыс.3 года назад
I was eager to do a shoot on the Indian Fort Nature Preserve, because I discovered that there were hackberry trees on the property, a species that can be hard to find in western New York State. Went over a few other species while I was there. www.geneseevalleyconservancy.org/indian-fort-nature-preserve
My Brother John Builds a Desk - Finale
Просмотров 6523 года назад
Just putting up the best part in case I never get around to editing all of the build video. You can see part 1 of the build here: ruclips.net/video/C6kPhyhai1A/видео.html You can get the plans to this desk for free at: ruclips.net/user/redirect?q=https://woodgears.ca/student-desk/index.html&event=video_description&v=C6kPhyhai1A&redir_token=QUFFLUhqbjYyZ21YUG5MTkVrMENmQkFhWERwbGxYS0w4Z3xBQ3Jtc0t...
My Brother John Builds a Desk (part 1)
Просмотров 3643 года назад
My younger brother wanted to try his hand at woodworking, so I took a week long staycation to mentor him along. Click here to see us assembling the finished project: ruclips.net/video/-_GWLKjxvQ8/видео.html We are using these free plans from the Woodgears website: woodgears.ca/student-desk/index.html
Forestry From a Helicopter
Просмотров 6484 года назад
31 years in forestry and I am still adding to my resume!
Sharpen Your Bandsaw With Harbor Freight Tool
Просмотров 36 тыс.4 года назад
Sharpen Your Bandsaw With Harbor Freight Tool
Mark Stothard's Infamous Salmon Snagging Tape
Просмотров 16 тыс.4 года назад
Mark Stothard's Infamous Salmon Snagging Tape
Lumber Grade - From Stump to Home Center
Просмотров 7 тыс.5 лет назад
Lumber Grade - From Stump to Home Center
Looks like a really good pattern. I tie a size 10 fly that has been successful on smb and most sunfish.. Beadchain eyes, orange dubbed body, a grizzley hackle losely palmered over the body and lastly a red squirrel tail wing. Fairly simple and effective. Works very well in the small creeks i wade fish here in middle TN abd can be fished on as light as a 2wt rod
BTW. Nice fly and thanks 4 posting
Is it a breath of fresh air to watch this 7 years old and see it where it's done where we didn't have UV resins and all these extra things😅 this is awesome it looks very authentic truly a fly for fly fishing in the more traditional sense
Wonderful job and great storytelling
Do you take off the leaders above the fish as you reel and land the fish if it’s on the bottom leader? Great Video! Thanks
@@sims2bavaroTd yes. Good luck!
I caught a big crayfish on the fly rod dragging a big lure along the bottom now I'm thinking this is what the trout are eating! Nice pattern
The two gashes in the clutch is for you to use a screwdriver or chisel with a hammer to tap the clutch for removal. There is clearly a sign that says 'OFF" so you hit it in the way of the grooves
@@TheMAC0876 the comments in this video have taught me that! At least I got the dang thing fixed back then.
@@petercollin5670 lol that’s the good thing about educational videos. We all learn something new to make our jobs easier the next time around 😊
I live in Avoca NY and was on canandaigua lake over the 4th of July weekend and got a nice small mouth on a spinner I made. We hit Hemlock lake a few weekends before and I lost a monster double digit laker trolling a big deep cup Colorado blade spinner I made with a dressed treble hook I did with craft fur and luminescent flashabou. I lost it at the boat and was the only one we had on that day.
What were the numbers from the current cruise? Be interesting to compare them to what it was back in 2006.
This was an excellent video. I think it's the best tree identification video on RUclips. Of course there are various type Maples and Oaks rather just broadly identifying Red or White, but you have the basis here of telling the difference between the two major categories. Unfortunately for me I'm in the deep South so the exquisitely beautiful Fall Aspen tree just isn't an option. Perhaps the highest elevations of The Smokey Mountain range might support them. This Gentleman did a fantastic job with his video.
One major mistake, comparing butternuts with walnuts, is not stating whether it's a 'white' or 'black' walnut tree. Toss 'white' (English soft shell) walnuts into the equation & i'll be a happy camper, & you'll be correct. Please do a WHITE vrs BLACK walnut tree comparison!? I need to ID the difference in leaves, bark, nut size, shape & taste. THANKS
@@jdoboy6835 that's the problem with unscripted videos. I always forget to mention something!
@@petercollin5670 Would you happen to know the differences in leave shapes, between white & black walnut trees? I searched everywhere. I know the smooth looking bark of White varieties,, but that trait won't show it's hand for 2-3 years. I have dozens of walnut trees popping up out of the ground, way back around my orchard & I don't want to mower them down till I check & know for sure. Sure don't want to mow down any soft shells! Thanks
@@jdoboy6835 butternut twigs and leaf stems often feel sticky. Butternut has fewer leaves in a cluster, but can't give you a count orfhand.
@@petercollin5670 THANKS. So far, after searching around everywhere, looks like BLACK walnut has anywhere from 17-23 leaves on a stem, & the leaves are way more pointy. And there seems to be just 9 on a White. Then you gotta fugure in the leaves on a Heartnut,,, right in between those numbers. I'll look for your Email, & send you some pics.
3:50 many trees grow well will Juglans sp. Maple, oak, mulberry, apple, peach and paw paw (Asimnia) are some. Other plants that grow very well under Juglans are echinacea, nigella, raspberries, cilantro, elderberry, foxglove, comfrey, and many others. These are the plants I have personal experience with.
2:49 the best way to tell if a tree is in the Juglans family is to crush a smell a leaf. Once youre familiar with the smell, you know it. Closely similar trees sumac (has no smell) and Ailanthus (stinks very bad) are also easy to differentiate this way.
Nice Peter!! 👏👏👏👏
Very nice! Tight lines🕷️🐜🐛
Thanks for sharing this.
R.I.P Mark.
best crayfish i have seen here... thank you
That is a huge pheasant tail
I have some beautiful canker free Butternut trees here in central NY. I've also have some all cankered up and dying and dead ones. My observations over the last 20 years leads me to believe there are some strains naturally more resistant and also certain that Butternut thrives in deep loamy fertile soil with a pH between 6.8-7.2. Definitely does not like hard or wet clay.
I dont think Ive ever seen an apple maggot... but i imagine this fly looks tasty to the fish.
For a shell I've often used brown plastic from a tater bag.
Great video! I started my fly tying journey when I was 14, tied till I was 17 and then found "other interests" now after I've retired at 62 I've taken it up again, times and methods sure have changed, I'm glad I watched your video, it has shown me I need to educate myself on the new techniques, thanks!
0:00 Wineberry (Rubus phoenicolasius)
Shellbark Hickory (C. Laciniosa) can easily be mistaken for Shagbark Hickory (C. Ovata) where their populations overlap. Shellbark hickory is similar to shagbark (Carya ovata) in its bark that peels away in plates. Trees of shellbark tend to be shorter and with heavier branches than shagbark, and the bark plates of shellbark hickory are straighter (with less curve).
how can you tell that was a scarlet oak leaf and not a pin oak? I struggle to tell those two apart. I've seen that the scarlet oak usually has more C-shaped sinuses whereas pin oak will have more U-shaped sinuses, but there's so much variability within and among individuals thatI feel like I can never be certain. Thanks for the great vids Peter.
Off the tree, it can be hard. But a pin oak, standing, you can't miss. It will have many skinny, dead limbs all the way to the ground. Pin oaks just don't seem to self-prune the way other oaks do.
@@petercollin5670 Thanks!
Nice pattern!
Awesome presentation. Sycamore balls make fun target practice for a boy with a .22 rifle. That was our Tannerite before we had Tannerite.🙂 I will add that beechwood provided my family with a good bit of monetary security. National Brush had a factory in Glasgow KY and produced wooden brush handles from the very dense hard wood. They didn't apply the bristles at that facility. They processed thousands of board feet of beech lumber into brush handles of all shapes annually. The plant had planers, edgers, molders, and shapers. Some of the machines were very high speed in order to achieve a smooth cut. They required special electrical power and motors for the high speed. My family had an electrical service business. We had someone in that factory nearly every day for ~50 years. Dad would bring pickup loads of the drop trimmings home to burn for heat. We also got sawdust and shavings for the chicken house. Very few wood brush handles now they are PLASTIC.
I met an Amish outfit that made yo-yos from beech.
@@petercollin5670 I'm betting they weren't hand whittling those yo-yos.😂
Thanks Peter, every fly fisher has this river, locally or just maybe the perfect spot on their favorite reach. If you don’t have a place like this find one, the happenings there and the people you will meet will change your life forever
Junipes are the main host of Apple Cedar Rust and Quince Rust which decimates Apple/Hawthorne, quince and serviceberry crops. So orchards have to remove these trees which disrupts the funguses lifecycle
Nice job.was the windmill making that screeching sound?
Yes. I had done a job about 9 years before, near that same windmill, and it was whistling back then.
The leaf scars are a great way to differentiate Butternut from Black Walnut in the winter time. Especially on small trees below my height. Butternut leaf scars look like a goat face🐐. Black walnut leaf scars look more like a monkey at least how i describe it.
stun taeser gun
to whom it may concern :- please grow it from now future ants
reflects n resembles mi case mek it
electricute taaser police gun
if u can please mi case mek it crew of ants 1000 gigantic ants
colony of ants government police
tool shed 1st floor home n living
gigantic dinosaur ants
I love your pattern and I will tie some up But, I will be using spider wire and zap-a-gap (super glue) to secure my wire onto both hooks.I learned my lesson by loosing a 13 -17 lb. Kokanee Salmon.I got him up to the boat and then lost him. I later found I had hooked him on the trailing hook which was no longer attached. Nice fish though. Oh and by the way that is not Ostrich, it's Peacock hurl. tight lines.
Did I say ostrich? I had better start listening to what I say! Hope you catch a bunch,,!
It's reverse threaded then?
Yes
you can also use "dirty bug yarn ,it comes in 2 strands. What a cool pattern Peter I have been tying for 55+YRS.. AND YOUR FLY IS BY FAR THE BEST I'VE SEEN .I have all the material you use and I will definitely be tying a bunch of these up .Thanx so much. Tight lines from Ken in Calgary Alberta Canada.✌
My uncle tom knew him aswell. He was fortunate enough to have fished the oak back in the glory days aswell and took me out there twice back then but i never got to meet him myself. I remember when this fly was just a rumor and nobody quite knew exactly how to tie it. Thanks to you keeping his memory alive we can. We talked to some folks recently who had been fishing the oak for nearly 20 yrs but had never even heard marks story. Was kinda sad to hear he has sorta vanished to most these days. Although we purchased a few of these flies at orleans outdoors fly shop. But like you said they were very small flies. I just purchased everything i need to tie some up thanks to your video. Atleast his fly lives on aswell as his memory we a select few of us. God bless! Fish on!!🐟🎣
What's that tool u are using to park the thread?
It's a part of the vise itself.
@@petercollin5670 which one do you recommend?
@@iklink the one in the video is a renzetti traveller. It's a popular model. Lots of used ones out there as good as the day they were made.
"Hardwoods is anything with leaves on it, softwoods is anything with needles on it" - this is a common misunderstanding of the two wood types. Hardwoods are from Angiosperm (flowering) trees while Softwood is from Gymnosperm (seed producing) trees. Either can be deciduous or evergreen.
pre-historic ice -age dinosaur detectives cops army soldiers
bull ants bullet ants bulldog🐜
Calvary dinosaurs ants 🐜
radiation ☢️ radio-‼️‼️‼️active☢️✴️⛔️🛑📛🚫🚷‼️
Nice video. You'd think after all the wonderful invasive gifts we've gotten from Asia (Brown stink bugs, emerald ash borers, spotted lantern flies, certain lady beetles, chestnut blight etc etc etc) that we would learn to be a little more careful and quit bringing many things here from other regions of the world so haphazardly. Then there's white nose that's killing brown bats from Europe.... The Chestnut Blight should have been the last time anything like that ever happened. The mountains I hunt and hike in are called the Chestnut Ridges because that was the dominant tree there. Now, you'll rarely find one popping up from roots that rarely make it more than 5 feet before they are killed by the blight. I sure hope scientists are able to bring them back with their breeding programs.