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Thread: Good idea turns to hard labor

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Sep 2000
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    Carmel, ME USA
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    3,685

    Default Good idea turns to hard labor

    Before unpacking my traveling tying kit assembled for the Idaho Fish-In, I decided that this would be a good time to clean up my tying area. You know, find those 20 spools of fine oval tinsel that are hidden under the clutter, I know that there are at least four pairs of scisssors on that desk somewhere, not to mention a couple of dry fly necks that I haven't seen in a month of Sundays.

    Brilliant me says to VEE, lets reorganize our tying stuff and make it more user friendly. Yeah right. Takes VEE twenty minutes and she's watching TV and having a cup of coffee. Me, I'm halfway through day 3 and seeing no end in sight.

    First step is organizing feathers. Settled on three large totes that seal (36"X18"X7"). One for pheasant skins and other special skins like my Jungle Cock full skin, One for dry fly hackle (fills the container to about half), and one for wet fly hackle and wings (also about half full). Also put in fresh No-Pest strips to protect the investment (read kids college fund).

    My sixteen drawers in the tying bench are slowly being sorted, one for chenille, one for wool and synthetic yarn, one for small packeages of furs (note to self, buy another tote for full animal skins) and so on. About half the drawers are filled and I can almost see the top of my tying desk. Yes, it is white, just as I thought.

    I'd like to be done before midnight tonite (yeah, right) so I'd better get back at it. Still gotta reorganize hook storage, that should be fun.

    Anyone else had this problem with your tying area, fly fishing gear?

    Let me know I'm not suffering alone. Please!

    REE
    Happiness is wading boots that never have a chance to dry out.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2003
    Location
    Dubuque, IA USA
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    248

    Default Re: Good idea turns to hard labor

    I clean up my tying bench 3 or 4 times a year, and reorganize the drawers so that I can find everything without digging through them. After about a week of tying, I'm back to digging again until the next clean-up. I've decided that I need a bigger desk to work on, and a better way of sorting thing out in the drawers. I have an old oak teacher's desk that needs to be refinished. It has about one and a half times the surface space as the one I'm using, with bigger drawers. I keep putting it on my list of summer projects, but it keeps getting bumped down the list. One of these days.
    CJ

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    Auckland, New Zealand
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    2,555

    Default Re: Good idea turns to hard labor

    I live in an apartment, so my tying "desk" is just a TV dinner table. I keep everything in a large plastic toolbox (well, a collection of tool boxes actually). I keep a small container on the "table" that contains partially used feathers. This means I have access to a lot of materials that I've been using, without having to dig through the box every time I want to use a new feather for tail or legs. Still, materials I've not used for awhile will migrate to the bottom of the box, and then it can be a bit of an Easter Egg hunt to find specific things.

    - Jeff
    Am fear a chailleas a chanain caillidh e a shaoghal. -

    He who loses his language loses his world.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
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    SoCAL
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    Default Re: Good idea turns to hard labor

    I've got a rather larger tackle box with a large top section and a side section that fits four large compartment type boxes. I've exchanged 2 of those boxes for one large deep box to fit my dry fly capes and my wet fly skins. I've got another 3 draw box where I keep extras. Although, that is not to say I've got stuff I thought I'd need but have yet to touch and a small collection of you never know

    I'd be scared if I had a room or let alone a desk just for tying....now the garage is another story...clearing out a section that looks like it could fit a small rod building shop...or at least make it work
    Sometimes a crowd can be the loneliest place

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    Golden, Co. USA
    Posts
    798

    Default Re: Good idea turns to hard labor

    I feel your pain. I have a good amount of stuff and am in the process of moving.
    Most of my belongings are packed, except my tying stuff. You never know, I may need to tie that special fly before I leave.
    My dilemma is, do I sort it all out? Or do I throw it in boxes because as previous posters have noted, sorting doesn't seem to last very long.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Mar 2004
    Location
    Nunica Mi U S A
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    2,511

    Default Re: Good idea turns to hard labor

    Don't feel too bad Ron. I have been trying to organize my library for several years now. New books get piled on the spare bed until I need to use it or the pile gets unstable as I keep falling farther behind. Then they get crammed onto a shelf or into a drawer at random without being cataloged. I think there were five or six hundred books when I started and and a lot more than that now. I almost cried when the index to the ones I did have put away was accidentally deleted about a year ago and I knew the backup disc was way out of date. I am not nearly crazy or ambitious enough to try to do the tying materials at the same time. That's why I have three grizzly necks and at last four packs of olive zonker strips but no white zonker strips and only a well picked over brown neck (that I know of).
    I can think of few acts more selfish than refusing a vaccination.

  7. #7

    Default Re: Good idea turns to hard labor

    Ron,

    You do realize that it's futile? That this is a never ending project that will repeat itself over and over and over and over ... . Out of curiousity, how many cups of coffee will VEE consume waiting for you to finish?
    Trout don't speak Latin.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    Western New York (Steelhead Country)
    Posts
    209

    Default Re: Good idea turns to hard labor

    Ron it all sounds good, but give it a week of heavy fishing and losing flies and it will be back to its old self just like it should be
    Catch and Release So Others Can Enjoy Them

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    The Island Nation of Ohio
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    2,996

    Default Re: Good idea turns to hard labor

    To put it in its simplest form, I have come to embrace the hell hole I call my "corner of the basement," and to accept it for what it is...a hell hole. Fly tying, rod building, wood working & general storage of my "stuff." I need to make room for the mini lathe and vacuum system before the weather goes south. Hmmmmmm, what can I pile on top of what to make more room? The problem is there are too many horizontal surfaces to pile stuff on.Get rid of them and the problems go away....right?

    Joseph the Peaceful

    Joe Valencic
    Life Member FFF
    Rod Builder in Chains

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Sep 2000
    Location
    Carmel, ME USA
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    3,685

    Default Re: Good idea turns to hard labor

    CJ, you clean your bench 3 or 4 times a year. Man, what a glutton for punishment. Bet you don't have twenty spools of tinsel though. Good on ya. I get to mine every 3 or 4 years.

    Joe,

    Like your basement idea. Our situation is a llittle diferent though. Our tying area used to be our dinning room. My lovely fly tying wife said, "Who needs a dinning room, we can eat at the coffee table. We need a tying area." When non-fly fishing people come over (We actually know a few, but are trying to distance ourselves from them.) they get a little disturbed by the squirrel tails, mole skins, and various bird parts that adorn my desk top. Not to mention their children stubbing their tiny toes on size 1/0 salmon hooks that have fallen on the carpet unnoticed.

    Somehow VEE manages to keep her area neat (I should say areas, one for trout, one for Dremel bugs, and one for classic salmon flies) while my one area turns to a jumbled mess at a single glance.

    Glad to know I'm not alone in this terrible suffering. I'll try to get a pic of the area before I start tying again.

    REE
    Happiness is wading boots that never have a chance to dry out.

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