Garry, As a manager I can solve this for you. Here are the alternatives:
1. Throw the hook away and count it as excess raw material and factor it into your cost per fly 2. Donate it to a qualified charity and write it off 3. Save the hook in your inventory and when you have sufficient excess raw materials, produce flies that will be have inventory (at least of hooks) cost free. 4. Tie one for yourself 5. Get professional help for the compulsive behavior ;>) Mike On 4/9/07, Jonathan Clark <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I'm surprised with all the scroungers around here that no one offered to take it off you hands... LOL So I will! LOL Tying has made me into some sort of pack rat. I have so much "junk" around that MIGHT be used on a fly pattern it's rediculous. I've stuff in boxes and drawers everywhere. LOL Jonathan Duct tape is like the Force. It has a light side & a dark side, and it holds the universe together. >From: "Garry V. Wiles" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >Reply-To: <[email protected]> >To: <[email protected]> >Subject: [VFB] Hot Dogs and Hooks >Date: Sat, 07 Apr 2007 22:32:59 -0400 > >Listers, > >OK, this is ON TOPIC and goes along with the subject lines. As I stated in >my reply to Jimmy and his snowfall, I bought materials and hooks on >Thursday with intentions of tieing a bunch during my up and coming hernia >operation and the down time afterwards. Today started some warm up and >I've tied 2 dozen size 10 Red Tag variants out of a box of 25 hooks. (see >my tie in to hot dogs - dogs in packs of 10 and buns in packs of 8). I >don't normally sit down and tie a box of the same or similar patterns that >often and I don't really notice the extra hook. But TODAY, I now have 4 >sets of 1/2 doz each of the variants, leaving me the 1 hook left over. My >question is for the bulk or professional tiers -- what do you end up doing >w/the extra hook? Normally, if I were tieing for someone, I'd give them an >extra fly or keep that one for myself as a pattern; but the ones for today >were pretty much for my and my kids' use. Now I have 1 pattern with an >uneven amount. This lack of equality gnaws at my personal obsessive >compulsive disorder and is hard to tolerate - next time I might try the 5 >patterns of 5, since that goes evenly into boxes of 25 and/or 50. HOWEVER, >it goes against the 3,6,12 quantities of tieing a pattern. > >HELP!!! > > >Garry > _________________________________________________________________ The average US Credit Score is 675. The cost to see yours: $0 by Experian. http://www.freecreditreport.com/pm/default.aspx?sc=660600&bcd=EMAILFOOTERAVERAGE
