Showing posts with label spinning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spinning. Show all posts
Friday, 11 December 2015
Clog Fly Fishing, Asp streamer
This is a little fly tying video of a spinning fly for Asp, but it looks something I could knock up for a bit of ultralight perch fishing on spinning set up. Check out the channel and the blog http://clogflyfishing.blogspot.co.uk/
Monday, 3 September 2012
Lure Making School
Image Above: Salmon Parr Casting Spoon Prototype
Image Below Right: The Original with a Cole Fish
I spent the day trying out some new ideas I had come up with while making spinners from scrap. I have been putting off buying some kind of wire former hoping I could come up with a homemade alternative a little more suited to my needs. It is not that I am against buying tools, far from it; it is just that because I never went to lure making school I find myself doing things in a way that requires tools that as yet don’t exist and then in the process of making tools a whole new field of opportunities and ideas opens up. So from scrap spinners I jumped to wire forming jigs and lead moulds and decided to have another go at wiring an old prototype that I have never gotten round to finishing despite being the first lure I ever cast out of resin: The result is above; a trout or salmon parr casting spoon which is through wired and weighted and waiting for paint and epoxy. The original prototype took a fish on its first cast which I lost close to the boat but I got another on the second cast so I am hoping for good things.
Labels:
cole fish,
fish,
fishing,
lead,
lure,
making,
parr,
polyurethane,
resin. wire,
salomn parr,
school,
spinner,
spinners,
spinning,
trout
Monday, 23 April 2012
Another 9am, Another Monday morning
I was a little late to the lake this morning. The workmen
who had begun exploring whether the hole in lake was fixable on my last visit were already on
site with a pump churning up the water. I asked how they were getting on and a guy
in waders told me that the hole was a little larger than they had first thought
and it would probably call for an excavator to continue. As to whether they
could fix it that may depend on when the money runs out.
I moved a little further down the bank and set up my spinning
rod with a new prototype lure I had come to test. As yet I hadn’t given it a paint job; I was
looking to see how it swam and what it was like to cast before investing in
finishes. It did what it was supposed to do, but it lacked that certain
something so I unhitched it from the trace and clipped on my devil minnow. Half a dozen casts later and I was into a
pike that felt a little larger than the jacks I had caught here previously,
maybe it was the ten pounder I had let slip out of the landing net a week or so
earlier.
It rumbled to the surface and gave a few kicks before I had it
to the bank, a fellow angler had is landing net at the ready to help out and
came in without much of a struggle. Unhooking was a bit of an operation even with
a pair of long nosed pliers and forceps as the hooks had embroiled its jaw in
the net and it took a moment to figure out which was the best way to free
it. A little audience had gathered, dog
walkers and workmen so I finally got a picture of me holding a fish. Despite
forgetting the old trick of pushing the fish towards the lens to make it look
bigger the consensus formed that it was about six pounds (fishermen’s estimate)
not a monster but nice to start to a day’s work with. After a bit of a tail
pulling in the shallows it recovered and sped off into the murk.
A little stunned by my early success I ambled around the
rest of lake for an hour before heading home with big plans to turn my minnow
prototype into a sellable lure. Two trips and two successes have to count for
something.
Over the weekend my sister came up for a visit and agreed to feature in one of my adverts as long I made her unrecognisable.
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