I've come to the realization that I have wasted a good amount of time and
some money trying different types of foam that just didn't measure up as a
fly tying material. The Wally World craft foams, flip-flop foams, etc. just
don't float well enough!

I have found only two foams that I like.  The first is the Rainy Float Foam
cord that comes in small, medium and large diameters and in black, white,
yellow and orange.  I use the black, and really feel limited by the color
selection.  Also, tying with the stuff may require some creativity as you
are dealing with a round cord rather than a flat sheet of foam. Rainy Float
Foam is easy to work with, floats reliably, and is ridiculously expensive.
Buying a large quantity years ago would have been a better investment than
the stock market.  *grumble*

The best floating foam made is the squishy white foam that used to be used
in life vests.  These days, that foam is hard to find, and when you find
some, often the interior of the foam is a tan color, not pure white.
Michael Bliss found some pure white that was the interior of an athletic
pad, which is my current source of the material.  Another source are white
keychain floats, but you do have to buy samples to find those that have pure
white interiors.  Some don't.  I finally have found a reliably source for
pure white keychain floats, marketed by a sporting goods retailer called G.I.
Joes.  If you need colors, simply apply a craft marker or a Sharpie.

If you want to make a popper or slider, etc., then the standard rigid foam
popper heads are probably the best choice. The large diameter Rainy Float
Foam could easily be adapted to make good panfish popper heads.

Wes Wada
Bend, Oregon





On 2/6/07, Ed Roden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Sorry, it's not the foam on the back of the carpet - it's more like the
flipflop foam - the squares that you buy for kids with the alphabet cutouts,
link together, etc.....These are just large ones that are meant for an
at-home exercise floor, etc....we just decided to use them under the area
rug of our wood floor.

On 2/5/07, Jack Lehman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>  I didn't want to be negative??  If this foam is anything like what they
> used on my carpet, its too fragile, too soft.  It wouldn't hold up to fish.
> I have much better luck using the denser foam from flipflops - we
> generically call it a shoefly popper.  Plus its easily shaped using a dremel
> and an emory board.  Let me know if you need more info.
>
> Jack
> Austin
>

Reply via email to