Crane Fly Larva

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  • Опубликовано: 24 янв 2025

Комментарии • 39

  • @philipjones6083
    @philipjones6083 3 месяца назад

    Great video and instructions brilliant stuff

  • @TenkaraGuides
    @TenkaraGuides 11 лет назад +8

    Thanks for the shout out. This has been a great bug for us. We tie it from huge to tiny and it works everywhere.

    • @DeeMoback
      @DeeMoback 4 года назад

      Yes! ..... huge is good .... #8 hook size really produces for me

  • @tightlinevideo
    @tightlinevideo  12 лет назад +3

    Thanks Jason. Your killer-bug-addict story was amazing (wish I could post the link here). I laughed, I cried, I forwarded, then went in search of yarn.

  • @troutbum61
    @troutbum61 9 лет назад +4

    Have been subscribed and watching your videos for some time now. I greatly appreciate your quality of video, great detail of methods and multitude of patterns covered. I also think its great when you mention or give credit to other tiers, as you did in this one.

  • @bazlur-Vancouver
    @bazlur-Vancouver 10 лет назад +3

    Clean video. Nicely described. You have rare nice voice for news casters or narrator voice use mostly for doc, wild life , like national geographic etc. I'm a foreigner and english is not my first or even 2nd language, but a few people do speak in clean English. George Page had unique and mellifluous voice. He created the PBS series Nature, and hosted and narrated it for 20 years.

  • @termite122
    @termite122 9 лет назад +1

    great video! the trout at the end was great ending..

  • @slickydicky
    @slickydicky 5 лет назад +1

    That sure was a beautiful fish at the end of the video

  • @CombatFlyFishing
    @CombatFlyFishing 11 лет назад

    I really like the technique you used to wrap the thread to form the body shape near the weight. Great video. Now if you'll excuse me, I'm going to watch some more of your videos.
    -Tim

  • @blablabla5113
    @blablabla5113 11 лет назад

    Great vid! All of them by the way. I have to confess i almos never fish dry fly's. I even sold my winston boron IIt to buy a sage 99. I am really addicted to killer bugs. Through this vid i end up at the article of jason klass and i went through te same. Unfortunately i still didnt manage to rehab so i still fish nymphs 99.8% of the time. I comfort myself with the idea that i rarely use a strike indicator :P. Killer bugs rock! Greetings from the Netherlands and a big compliment for al the tying!

  • @jasonklass6
    @jasonklass6 12 лет назад +2

    Nice video and thanks for the mention!

  • @tightlinevideo
    @tightlinevideo  12 лет назад

    Most of the time I don't use a strike indicator and just carefully watch the end of the fly line or the leader for movement. In fast water with a lot of line out, I do like to use them to better see any movement that might indicate a take.

  • @wanazeman05
    @wanazeman05 3 года назад

    Ahhh this makes it more appetizing for z e fish

  • @flyman451
    @flyman451 12 лет назад +1

    Very nicely done! You have are a good teacher. Mind telling us where you bought that yarn?

  • @seizedcarcass8440
    @seizedcarcass8440 Год назад

    You should do a video on the Utah killer bug as well as the original. Basically the cousins of the Walt’s

  • @ArkRed1
    @ArkRed1 11 лет назад

    Will the TMC 200R # 10 and # 12 work if the the Dai-Riki 285 is not available? I tied this fly today and it was very productive. It will be better when I get the proper UTC floursescent pink thread. I had to use just regular pink sewing thread. Thanks.

  • @98dfree
    @98dfree 12 лет назад

    Could you incorporate a tail, maybe the tips of a CDC puff? Also what part of this fly derives at all from a walt's worm?

  • @Thebazzman
    @Thebazzman 4 года назад

    I don't see any Drake fly patterns in your repertoire, do you have a green drake pattern?

  • @flyfishjones
    @flyfishjones 12 лет назад

    That was a nice wild brown (the adipose fin was bright red). Do you nymph fish with strike indicators? I'm mainly a dry fly fisherman don't know much about nymphs.

  • @brooktroutangler5917
    @brooktroutangler5917 4 года назад

    what hooks are you switching to after Dai-Riki?

  • @bentpolski
    @bentpolski 4 года назад

    I use Hackle Pliers on the end of the wool

  • @edwardlindhorn538
    @edwardlindhorn538 2 года назад

    where did you get that yarn?

  • @macke889
    @macke889 12 лет назад

    wow awsome fly

  • @lancegurney3764
    @lancegurney3764 12 лет назад

    Thanks for the video

  • @harleymandk
    @harleymandk 4 года назад

    what vice do you use?

  • @croughsjacques8088
    @croughsjacques8088 12 лет назад

    cette larve est aussi une variante du célèbre "Killer bug" de Sawyer...

  • @richmason4680
    @richmason4680 8 лет назад +2

    www.lovecrochet.com/us/jamiesons-shetland-spindrift Here is the link for the shop I found mine.
    Had to wait awhile
    ,as it had to come from England.

  • @biologistangler7901
    @biologistangler7901 7 лет назад

    It looks like a more socially acceptable version of the mop fly, which can often be criticized for not being true fly. I wonder if it works as well?

    • @jacobstarr9010
      @jacobstarr9010 3 года назад +1

      Who cares if it's socially "acceptable"? If it catches fish it simply works in my opinion.

  • @ejuicebox0x013
    @ejuicebox0x013 7 лет назад +1

    Oh oh oh oh ho ho hoooo no.

  • @Boon-ie1rq
    @Boon-ie1rq Год назад

    Crane fly larvae flies are obsolete now. They've been replaced by a newer technology called mop flies. 😂 Jkjk. ..

  • @Lewis5z
    @Lewis5z 10 лет назад

    Where do you purchase this yarn? I'm having trouble finding it.

    • @tightlinevideo
      @tightlinevideo  10 лет назад

      Currently it is very difficult to find. The source I had is completely out. That said, any yarn looking remotely similar will work just fine.