I believe alot of poppers use balsa wood. I know Bass and Gill poppers employ the wood, but I have not heard of any other patterns calling for wood. Would be very interesting. Maybe a mottled shellback using thin balsa wood? Wood swap anyone? <g>
Iced over here, about 2 inches of ice under neath 6 of snow. Really pretty but driving is impossible, and walking is near impossible.
-Eddie Dillon Tidewater Fly Co.
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Rene Zillmann) Reply-To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: Re: [VFB] Off Subject- Chemistry -->> Now ff-related <G> Date: Fri, 06 Feb 2004 22:35:20 +0100
BTW:
are there any pattern around that uses wood? One I saw some ants tied with balsa wood.
Wondering in Germany and have a great weekend
Rene
Mark Delaney schrieb:
Not if you renmove alll the water, no longer carmel..more carbon...but yes you are right when heated on a limited basis
Paul MacDonald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
--- Mark Delaney wrote: > Allan is correct, this is the basis for making > charcoal. > sugar in a test tube over a Bunsen burner. You'll > see water come off and produce a black substance, > which is mainly carbon. This is how Carmel is produced - and it can be used to darken many things - rum included! Have a nice day Paul
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So much water, so little time!
Website: http://chemprof.tripod.com/fishing.html
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