I would also like to get in on this swap. I would be willing to
pluck!!!!! Need Cree!!

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
On Behalf Of Byard Miller
Sent: November 25, 2002 11:48 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [VFB] Whiting Co-op Swap


>Do this swap through Byard for purchasing the saddles .  He can order
what
>he doesn't have.
>He may even be able to divide the necks and send them to the individual
>swappers.  Mind you, I'm not volunteering him for anything.



THANKS DonO...and yes that was stated factitiously...;^) It never 
fails...a surprise always awaits my return!

OK folks here are my suggestions...

I get to weasel out of the drudgery due to a contract that I signed 
with Whiting Farms that forbids the changing of any packaging. For 
instance, I am not allowed to divide a full cape into a half cape...I 
must purchase the partial capes from Whiting. So plucking and sorting 
and dividing is contractually disallowed...<VBG>

Since there appears to be quite a bit of interest in a Whiting Co-op 
Swap I'll use the following numbers scenario. It can of course be 
adjusted. Twelve swappers join in...six full bronze saddles of 
different colors are purchased (hopefully from Line's End...<g>). You 
discuss amongst yourselves which six participants get to do the grunt 
work. Each of those six receives one of the saddles and twelve long 
zip-locks. They will pluck out all of the dry fly feathers and divide 
them equitably among the twelve bags and mail them out to the rest of 
the group. Those six will be doing all the work but there will be a 
benefit for their labors...they get to keep the plucked cape which 
contains some nice webby bugger hackle and fluffy marabou.

Each bronze saddle will hackle a minimum of 500 dry flies. I just 
randomly picked a bronze saddle and counted 220 usable feathers...at 
a very conservative five flies per feather that actually equates to 
1100 flies. But using this as an example you should each get about 18 
feathers per color, which exceeds the quantity in a typical 100 pack.

The only stumbling block that I foresee is the postal cost from 
plucker to swapper. It should only cost about sixty cents per 
mailing...or $6.60 per batch. I guess if you each ante up an extra 
$4, I could forward a portion of the cash with each of the saddles 
being sent to the pluckers.

The cost for each participant would be $24 (6 saddles @$40 + the 
extra postage, divided by 12), for which you would each receive the 
equivalent of six 'fat' 100 packs...a $66 value.

Looks like it could work. We are now open for discussion.

keep tyin'...byard



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