Guys we seem to be MISSING SOMETHING>>>>>>>
VFB SWAPS PAGE: OrangeFly Swap The late great loveley Linda Foote tied:::: Ye Carrot nymph http://www.virtualflybox.com/patterns/pattern.php?swap_id=32&id=314
A resource we could check first when looking for patterns mebe?? Only 1177 listed at present but .......
KP IOFF Scribe Of Ye Gobbledegook
----- Original Message ----- From: "Paul Marriner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, December 29, 2004 1:58 PM
Subject: Re: [VFB] Carrot nymph recipe
I would be somewhat surprised if the word "nymph" appeared in a UK fly
name prior to the 1920's. Skues says that while some wet-fly patterns
resembled nymphs, he referred to none actually called so.
I checked a half-dozen UK references and found no reference to "carrot"
in any context.
Helleckson says that the Carrot Nymph was created by a BC native for
fishing in lakes.
There is a Reuben Cross nymph, circa 1936, called the Carrot and Black.
While digging into the Cross reference I rediscovered a list of patterns
popular in 1884 (US). One of those being the Queen of the Water, a
pattern that was recommended to me the other day for sea-run brook
trout; guess the trout's tastes haven't changed in the past 120 years.
BTW, does this cement my place as an IOFF charter member?
Cheers,
Paul
http://www.galesendpress.com
--
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.
