Rene I hate to say this.  I mean it really hurts but here
goes....................

DonO is RIGHT!

BobH

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of DonO
Sent: Friday, April 23, 2004 5:56 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [VFB] Coq D'Leon 

Rene,
First of all remember there are four basic products from a strain, the
Rooster neck and saddle, and the hen neck and saddle.� All are CdL
products and come in different grades and are quite different in
appearance.� There are different sub-strains and color variations,
also.� The hackles I'm using are Gold Grade Speckled Rooster Saddles for
the caddis I mentioned, and these are better than anything I've ever
seen, even the Spanish saddles I've see at the Fly Tackle Dealer Shows.�
What Dr. Tom's growing and harvesting now is so good I'm giving away the
old stuff from just a year ago, which is still�superior for tailing
material.
�
What I'll do is photograph these saddles and send you a pic to see for
yourself.� You probably won't be able to see the waxy sheen (shine) on
the spades, but the massiveness of the saddle and the speckling will
blow you away.� Even the very long saddle hackles are speckled all the
way to the tips.� Just awesome.
�
I don't know the price of these, but I doubt you'd touch one for under
$60, probbly more.�
�
Regards,
DonO
----- Original Message ----- 
From: Rene Zillmann 
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, April 23, 2004 12:33 PM
Subject: Re: [VFB] Coq D'Leon 

DonO,
here in Germany they sell CdL Necks and Capes labeled with the Whiting
logo. Are this old capes, or what do you mean with ... not available
....
BTW: On the sowbug there was a guy who sold CdL saddles whithout any
packaging, out of a bin. He said the necks where from Whiting. I bought
one for 11 bucks. WHat do you thing is the source of this necks.
Rene



--- DonO <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
...

  
I've been experimenting with Troth-style caddis using speckled Coq D
Leon
instead of elk.  I really like the results.  Just need to get better so
I
can try them out.  It takes a lot of barbs to make the wing, but the new
Whiting capes have tons of feathers with very long barbs.  This would
not be
commercially viable, though.
    



  


Reply via email to