This young man, up in Townsend, TN one of Warren's favorite places to slip off to occasionally, is tying some spectacular flies: http://traddsflies.blogspot.com/
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This young man, up in Townsend, TN one of Warren's favorite places to slip off to occasionally, is tying some spectacular flies: http://traddsflies.blogspot.com/
I have watched him tie at SowBug.
Very good tier.
Rick
If that is the future of flytying, things are in good shape. BTW, when I was 12, the only flies I knew about were the ones I was shagging in the outfield.
Regards,
Scott
I was a late bloomer, I started tying when I was 14. :)
Larry ---sagefisher---
I didn't start tying until my early 20's. But at 12 I was slogging through creekbottoms morning and night with a trap basket and a. 22 rifle. Through the fall and winter. Started trapping at 10. Summers we're groundhogs and baseball.
When I was 12, I was stuck in this place, in College Park, GA. The only time I ever got out of there was maybe on a weekend pass...Tie flies?Go fishing ? How about marching around all the time or visiting another campus as a member of a sports team...
http://i305.photobucket.com/albums/n...pskxp7wtis.jpg
PT/TB :p
It must have been tough on you and I bet it was a hard decision made by your mom. To be fulfilled, her gift had to be shared. She was a very pretty and talented actress who made many people happy.
I was fishing, hunting, and playing any kind of sport. My buddy and I trapped muskrat, fox, and coons. Man, getting up at 5 AM and going out in well below freezing temperatures to check our traps, before we went to school, was tough.
My best friend's son had a learning disability, he was told Woodward was the only place in Atlanta equipped to deal with it. He was among the last youngster to be boarded there, where he graduated and got a degree from Loyola in New Orleans. He is now a successful advertising or marketing (I's not sure which or what the difference is) exec in NYC.
I think the word is gifted..this kid is in my book awesome!
If you did not..check out his fish pics!! Safe to say he's a better trout Fisher than I...but I'm a smallmouth guy at heart! Lol n pike n pickrel going to head for my first foray into steelhead/salmon shortly..
At 12, i was buying flies for $.10 each at the local sporting goods store. At 18 I was tying my own flies. Neither the store bought flies nor the ones I tied at 18 looked nearly as good as this kid's.
At 12, I was tying flies that caught fish, but they certainly weren't in the same class as that kid's.
And fifty-one years later, they still aren't.
I must have been pretty busy to have missed this last year. Talent like this is a gift from above....can't be taught or externally inspired. Our sport has a bright future.
I wasn't aware of fly fishing when I was 12. The first time I ever saw anyone fly fish was when I was in college in the mid-70s in NW Tennesse. One of my drinking buddies asked me if I wanted to go fishing at one our English profs farm pond. He showed up carrying a fly rod. On that day my Jitterbug was king. Still it planted a seed which really didn't sprout till the late 90's when I was 50. It took a year or two before I put the spinning gear away for fresh water and a another year or two before I put the same gear away for salt water. I started tying about the same time, and I've slowly gotten better. A tip of the hat to you Roger Peacock, for planting the seed that turned into a passion
Why can't I get this young gut's site to download ?
I started tying flies and making lures when I was about 10. 36 or so years ago. I've fished forever. It's just been a part of life as much as eating and sleeping. There have been periodic lulls in my fly fishing, but I've never stopped fishing, having moved all over the country. Work and other obligations get in the way. The kid is very talented but not a miracle worker. He does very good work.
Jesse, The war was just over a few months back and my Dad and I were in Baja California fishing for albacore. The government
had just put all the used landing craft on the surplus market and anyone with a few bucks bought them up, had the front landing
ramp welded up and rigged them up for fishing. Believe me there were hundreds of "em out there. Everybody was fishing for
albacore. That in its self, drove the market way down. Dad said when the market drops below $400.00 a ton it wasn't worth
even goin out, clearing for Mexico and spending all summer trying to make a living. We did stick it out for a couple more years
as we had a boat that would ice down about 8 ton and store about 4 more on deck. We did tie many of our own flies for trolling.
Just big lead heads that we tied feathers to of various sizes and shapes on. Not to bad, as we always off loaded in San Diego
with a full load. Then it was clear for Mexico again. One more trip and it was back to school for me.
Crunchy
That boy far surpasses any tying I will ever do, and I have been tying about 40 years!
There are always certain people in all human endeavors who are able to surpass most everyone else in those endeavors, and in a very short time. Imagine what that lad will be able to tie when he's in his 60's ....if he sticks with it.
Quite amazing!