DonO:  I got it to work for me.  On the outside chance that it might work, I 
have forwarded the image itself, rather than the email, which might not open 
for you..........  Good luck with it.  I love the horsetail body because you 
can control the colors quite easily.  The wing (on the flies in the images) 
were apparently made by turning the horsetail (or  squirrel tail )around and 
forcing them toward the bend, then tying them down.  Some of the "mite" flies 
that I remember were made with a process that would weave the horsetail at the 
collar, and they would exit the woven collar facing back toward the bend.  I 
never did learn how this was done.  A lot of the older flyfishers in this area 
would use Sandy Mites almost exclusively, esp. on the small streams that flow 
from the Wasatch here in central Utah.  Good luck.

Larry Johnson

Larry Johnson 

>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 12/03/04 03:44PM >>>
Rene,
Lots of pop-ups, no photo.  Asking me to enable cookies.  No can do-  junk-mail 
follows.

DonO
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Rene Zillmann 
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Sent: Friday, December 03, 2004 1:33 PM
  Subject: Re: [VFB] Sandy Mite fly- photo


  try:

  http://rzillmann.tripod.com/flies/don.htm 

  hope it works

  Best
  Rene

  Sorry for the adds, it's a free site.

  DonO wrote:

I have a good photo here of the Sandy Mite that I have, alongside one I
tied.
Can someone post it for me and post the url?

DonO


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Paul Marriner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "DonO" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, December 03, 2004 12:38 PM
Subject: Re: [VFB] Sandy Mite fly


  No Don, the material isn't about weaving hair hackles (regardless of the
title), it's specifically about weaving the body. It's likely worth
sending it all to you.
cheers,
Paul
-- 
Paul Marriner
Outdoor Writing & Photography. Owner: Gale's End Press. Member: OWAA &
OWC.
Author of Stillwater Fly Fishing: Tools & Tactics, How to Choose & Use
Fly-tying Thread, Modern Atlantic Salmon Flies, Miramichi River Journal,
Ausable River Journal, and Atlantic Salmon.

    


  

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