Olive Perdigon ( Competitive fly fishing/tying)

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  • Опубликовано: 1 июл 2022
  • In this video I am tying one of my favourite nymphs. Super useful for spooky fish when too flashy and screaming nymphs just won't do the job. I am also discussing few points regarding competitive fly fishing and flies for it.
    Hope you will find it useful
    Cheers
    Vladimir
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Комментарии • 47

  • @turninflat
    @turninflat 2 года назад +4

    This is my "go to" fly on the Snake River in Jackson Wyoming. With a Euro-Nymphing technique using this fly on the dropper it has been amazingly productive. Once again appreciate the refined detail in your videos. I have recommended so many to your channel. Simply superior.

    • @Oholisfliesandfishing
      @Oholisfliesandfishing  2 года назад

      Thanks so much. It is indeed great pattern. It worked great for me everywhere i went.
      Thank you for your support
      Cheers
      Vladimir 🍺

  • @kerryjordan7746
    @kerryjordan7746 2 года назад +2

    The lead in the bead slot is a great tip - thank you.

  • @adicelhasic4990
    @adicelhasic4990 4 месяца назад +1

    U are best!
    Thank you for the best videos on youtube!

    • @Oholisfliesandfishing
      @Oholisfliesandfishing  4 месяца назад

      Thanks so much for such a nice comment. I appreciate it.
      Cheers
      Vladimir 🍻🍻

  • @oldsmugglerflyfishing
    @oldsmugglerflyfishing 2 года назад +1

    Nice looking perdigon! It is true, sometimes flashy don't do the job.

    • @Oholisfliesandfishing
      @Oholisfliesandfishing  2 года назад +1

      Thanks. Funny enough, when very sunny i reach for flashy ones. 😀

  • @randydeskins9359
    @randydeskins9359 Год назад +1

    Awesome fly and great tips. 🎣

  • @jpabferreira
    @jpabferreira Год назад +1

    Pretty cool as usual!
    Best regards from Portugal! 😉

  • @ivandelevic
    @ivandelevic 2 года назад +1

    One of my favorites nymphs! Great video Oholi bro! ;-)

  • @PeachyFlyFishing
    @PeachyFlyFishing 2 года назад +1

    Excellent, thanks Vladimir!

  • @benfranks6375
    @benfranks6375 8 месяцев назад +1

    This will do good in my home waters! TY!

  • @GaryHanke
    @GaryHanke 2 года назад +1

    As always buddy a great tutorial on technique and procedure. Thread control is paramount on most good Perdigones and all flies in general. Keeping it simple is a great approach. Tying in the round keeps the pattern stable in presentation with no up or down positioning to the fish. Well done.

    • @Oholisfliesandfishing
      @Oholisfliesandfishing  2 года назад

      Thank you so much my friend. Perdigons are so simple but so many get them all wrong. As you say, thread control makes a kot of difference.
      Cheers 😀🍺

  • @deiseban
    @deiseban 2 года назад +1

    Great tye as always, one of the very best on RUclips. More comp flies please Vladimir.

    • @Oholisfliesandfishing
      @Oholisfliesandfishing  2 года назад

      Thank you so much for your support.
      As for competition flies.... Its just flies i would use any time... Prrsentation matters in competition. And how you approach your beat. 😀🍺

  • @RETCAP10
    @RETCAP10 2 года назад +1

    Perdigons are my go-to during the winter months when the Brookies are hugging the stream bed. For nymphing, I’ve found Tenkara/Keiryu rods give the best line control through the rod’s length: no line mending or frozen guides are a nice bonus.
    Many thanks for helping us to develop into better tyers and anglers.

    • @Oholisfliesandfishing
      @Oholisfliesandfishing  2 года назад +1

      Thanks so much, glad i could help, Good choice, perdigons... I tried tenkara once. The only thing i didn't like is that line/leader is longer than rod. So usually I need to grab the line to land a fish..
      Trout in Serbia is off season in winter so no problem with freezing 😀
      Although i can see benefits that you mentioned. Plus its light gear and less weight on angler overall.

    • @RETCAP10
      @RETCAP10 2 года назад

      @@Oholisfliesandfishing I understand, which is why I only use a level line. I usually use a length of 12-15 lb fluoro (#3 or #3.5 in Japanese rating) which is 80% of the rod’s length, then whatever length of 6X fluoro to my fly.
      It’s not for everyone, and I had some growing pains on my initial outings with fixed-line fishing. The results were worth the pain and I’m now a 90% Tenkara/10% fly fishing guy.
      Please keep generating these tutorial videos where you explain the reasons of your methods.

    • @Oholisfliesandfishing
      @Oholisfliesandfishing  2 года назад

      @@RETCAP10 its not. But its fun for me.
      Thank you for your kind words and support 😀😀

  • @Tjk186
    @Tjk186 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for another great video Vladimir...very helpful as always...I so enjoy tying all my own flies these days since following your RUclips channel...you have quite a library these days full of tips...I think the techniques and experiences you share with us are more valuable than the actual patterns you tie...although they're pretty good too :)

    • @Oholisfliesandfishing
      @Oholisfliesandfishing  2 года назад

      Thanks so much. I agree, tips and techniques are better thing to pick up. 😀😀🍺

    • @Tjk186
      @Tjk186 Год назад +1

      Very happy to learn from a world class competition angler ...thank you very much for sharing so openly with us Vladimir...I do not have your abilities but take comfort from at least being steered on the right tracks regarding effective flies and their fishing techniques ...it makes for a more enjoyable and confident day out on the river...happy Christmas to you and your family and all the best for 2023

    • @Oholisfliesandfishing
      @Oholisfliesandfishing  Год назад

      Thank you so much for your kind words and support. Spending time by the river or tying is important. Skill level is not. As long as we enjoy the ride.
      Merry Christmas and all the best to you and your family 🎄

  • @randydeskins9359
    @randydeskins9359 2 года назад +1

    Great job and tips.

  • @N_Co_Fish
    @N_Co_Fish 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for the shout out! Love your channel!

    • @Oholisfliesandfishing
      @Oholisfliesandfishing  2 года назад

      Good luck with competition. But i know that you guys will do great. J remember US team being suoer focused and dedicated in two worlds i had been to.
      Thanks for watching my channel. Hope it will help you
      🍺😀

  • @jrbass328
    @jrbass328 2 года назад +1

    Another great tutorial, thanks man hope the family is doing well!!

  • @BP-1988
    @BP-1988 2 года назад +1

    Great looking fly! Can't wait to tie some and try them out on my next trip. I didn't catch it but what size thread did you use for ribbing? Look forward to seeing your next video.

    • @Oholisfliesandfishing
      @Oholisfliesandfishing  2 года назад

      Thanks so much. Sorry for the late reply, i just checked and its 170den. But its sort of micro floss
      Cheers

  • @wtw406
    @wtw406 2 года назад

    I tried to use a lighter as you did to darken the bead but the beads I have don’t change color. Any suggestions?

    • @Oholisfliesandfishing
      @Oholisfliesandfishing  2 года назад

      Did you use golden colour tungsten bead?
      I do it only with golden ones. Brass(as a material) probably won't work. Also, try using tip of the flame..

    • @wtw406
      @wtw406 2 года назад +1

      Thanks. I may have tried with copper. I’ll try again.

    • @wtw406
      @wtw406 2 года назад +1

      Gold is the ticket. Thanks

    • @Oholisfliesandfishing
      @Oholisfliesandfishing  2 года назад +1

      @@wtw406 glad we solved it 😀🍺

  • @Butcher-xk9wc
    @Butcher-xk9wc Год назад

    Pliva’s Perdigon

    • @Oholisfliesandfishing
      @Oholisfliesandfishing  Год назад

      Yes and no... Pliva perdigon is inspired by bosnian flies, same as this one. Devin got his inspiration from guides that showed him flies during his preps for world fly fishing competition in Bosnia in 2015. I was competing for Serbian team at that competition