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Dye a line…

Posted in How To by Jim Williams on July 4, 2012 10 Comments

Having posted on Facebook recently an image of a #3 Barrio fly line I’d dyed, Andrew Parker got in touch and asked for a ‘How To’… this ones for you Andrew – hope it helps.

Barrio #3 Fly Line

The exact process followed to secure the above colour in the fly line using Rit Dye – Dark Green No.35

Rit Dye

1 – Wipe clean fly line area to be dyed with a minute amount of fairy liquid on a damp cloth.

2 – Run hot tap as hot as it’ll go – in my case circa 50 degrees centigrade, and fill bucket with 5ltrs.

3 – Empty sachet of Dye into bucket of water and stir until dissolved.

4 – Put required part of fly line to be dyed into bucket.

5 – Bring one kettle full of water to the boil and add to bucket, move fly line to one side whilst pouring.

6 – Using anything (Excluding your best cutlery or finger) gently agitate/stir the water around the fly line to be dyed until desired shade achieved, the change in colour happens quite quickly so don’t take your eyes of it for a moment.

7 – Once happy with shade remove it immediately and rinse the fly line in cold water.

8 – Finish by wiping with a cloth. (I didn’t treat afterwards)

I am still using this fly line regularly as you’ll see in recent blog post pictures, the coating is still perfect, it floats as it did when I bought it and is still bullet straight.

This method works for me every time and has done so on 6 other previous occasions with absolutely no issues… these include RIO, Wulff and Snowbee fly lines.

Choosing to follow this method is at your own risk. I’ll not be responsible for how your fly line ends up nor any burns you acquire whilst doing it ~ Best of luck then!

PS: I’ve not tried on any mono core fly lines, only braided ones.

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Ready & Wylye-ing

Posted in River Wylye by Jim Williams on May 18, 2012 2 Comments

Having acquired the river and completed the hard bit: that being trimming, strimming and tidying

Wylye

It was now time for the even harder bit… to fish it, in anticipation I feel this part of the Wylye has barely seen a fly rod, nor the fish an imitation of a fly probably, hopefully – what a challenge!

It’s critical that one’s in the right frame of mind, nowt sorts it out better than a cup ‘o’ tea. Having donned wellies and with rod ready to go it’s now a game of patience… and mines slowly running out

Jim Williams

there’s a rise and so to it I go… what remains in my cup tells me there’s a hatch of midgeSick smile

'F' Fly

A few casts of the above ‘F’ fly beneath the upstream canopy and I’m into a fish, surprisingly it’s a grayling… pleased as punch I am… it means some possible winter fishing on here then me thinks.

A pretty we Lady she is

Wylye Grayling

Moving on and being stimulated by more frequent rises, all be it seemingly from the same fish I make some basic numpty errors on otherwise spooky fish by positioning myself too close to the bank to get a clearer view & cast – consequently putting them down.

I decide to go long on the leader, with my new system I’ve changed in mere minutes to 14 feet without affecting the front taper, using my ever faithful 10ft #2 (a length of which I’ve used exclusively now for the last 3 seasons) I stay well back from the edge whilst still very much in touch with the line, leader and more importantly the fish.

Wylye

The fish rises on a further 3 occasions before I make a covering cast… that’ll do for me as I nail it on the fourth. The #2 weight buckles as the trout sets off downstream, this fish feels far bigger on the rod than off it, I’m tickled pink as it lunges skyward only to fall with a mighty splash… you can’t buy fun like this – it’s like a hard 5lb fish on a #6 weight.

Just gorgeous – a wild trout, bloody livid if you ask me… impressed to be caught it was not

Wylye Trout

That beautiful blue hue on the gill plate

Wylye Trout

Alarm bells had obviously sounded across the pond so to speak… following it’s release everything went still, very still. Impatience got the better of me so I thought I’d give a nymph a wetting – I couldn’t resist offering a Red Neck PTN to the current. Changing the leader to a shorter 7 foot length yet again with ease I dropped the fly into the murky depth and drifted the fly some 8ft towards a grassy outcrop on the right bank… a twitch in the line was followed by yet another grayling, a wee bit smaller than the first – like a really care.

She parts company none the worse for wear

Wylye grayling

Through the interruption and need of another cuppa there is but a brief hatch of Mayfly, does counting half a dozen actually count as a hatch?

Wylye mayfly

None the less I tie on a nice silhouetting Mohican and cast at some casual rises… rises of which are not at the Mayfly I see – what the heck, in for a penny.

Mohican fly

In quick time a number of pretty wild’uns come to the fore, pictures of which don’t do them justice.

Wylye wild trout

Today was a great success in many ways… the water has got fish in it and nice ones at that, my new leader system worked a treat, and the #3 hi-vis Barrio line I recently dyed at the tip didn’t mess with my head, nor did it seem to have an impact on the fish… now onto reading currents with it.

The 10 foot dyed tip is inconspicuous… a result

Wylye - Barrio fly line

I’ve yet to hear of any significant Mayfly hatches as yet from friends and colleagues, the water temperatures are still cold… for me I think June will be the killer month, May is pretty much written off already, I hope however it’s not so for you ~ enjoy your fishing regardless.

 

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