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  2. Manufacturers of fly tying materials and tools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manufacturers_of_fly_tying...

    Manufacturers of fly tying materials and tools produce products specifically designed for tying artificial flies used in fly fishing. For the most part, the materials and tools from manufacturers are sold to fly tyers through fly fishing retail outlets, both brick and mortar and online stores that buy in bulk from the manufacturers.

  3. Fly tying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fly_tying

    These materials consists mostly of feathers, fur/animal hairs, threads, and various synthetic materials. Fly tying equipment enables the fly tyer to efficiently and effectively assemble and secure the materials on the hook to produce a particular type of fly. Fly tying materials were originally limited to various furs, feathers, threads and hooks.

  4. Hare's Ear - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hare's_Ear

    When this fly is immersed, the stiff fibers in the dubbing stand out and imitate the legs of an insect. Fish this lure below the surface with or without a small strike indicator and split-shot to help it sink. It is an effective pattern throughout the year because it covers a broad spectrum of prey that are active in every season.

  5. Terrestrial flies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terrestrial_flies

    Some of these flies were undoubtedly replicating terrestrial insects. The Palmer Worm of the 17th century was a heavily hackled fly that resembled a common fuzzy caterpillar, yet as Andrew Herd in The Fly-Two Thousand Years of Fly Fishing (2003) relates, palmer worms were never found in or on the water. [3]

  6. Artificial fly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_fly

    A tube fly is a general tying style of artificial fly. Tube flies differ from traditional artificial flies as they are tied on small diameter tubes, not hooks. Tube flies were originated in Aberdeen, Scotland by fly-dresser Minnie Morawski for Atlantic salmon anglers around 1945. [42]

  7. Woolly Bugger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woolly_Bugger

    Although the original Woolly Bugger pattern was believed to have been created by Pennsylvania fly tyer Russell Blessing as early as 1967 to resemble a hellgrammite, or dobsonfly nymph, its precise origin is unknown, but is clearly an evolution of the Woolly Worm fly, [4] which itself is a variation—intentional or not—of the British palmer fly, which dates back to Walton and beyond.

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