I have just started flyfishing. I am not ready to start tying at this point, I figure I should learn how to casr a fly before I try tying them. So I am looking for some insight as to good online sights to buy flies. Any insight would be helpful
Teach someone to fish and you will be rewarded ten times over.
Well, Cabelas (www.cabelas.com), Orvis (www.orvis.com), Feather Craft (www.feather-craft.com) and Kaufmann’s Streamborn ( 1-800-442-4359) all offer catalogs (for free, I believe) that have a great selection of flies. Alternatively, let me know where you fish/what you fish for and I’ll come up with a good selection for you at a reasonable price. You might try your local fly shop as well (though I know that can be a bit pricey- my uncle spends a good $40-50 every year at this one shop when we go to Sun River to fish the Fall). Anyway, hope this helps.
I tie my own when I can and buy from my local shop when I can’t. But I’ll endorse JC on this. Go to the FAOL home page, click on sponsors and you’ll find links to Online fly sources that will give you good flies at great prices.
As mentioned previously, Hills Discount flies is a sponsor with excellent prices & they have fantastic sales.
If you fish warmwater for panfish, pick up a bunch of ants & some wooly worms (yellow with grizzly hackle & red tail are my favorites).
By the way, welcome to the best site ANYWHERE!!!
Mike
My advice…get a Fly-Tying Kit and roll your own! That’s at least half the fun, if not more…! Tying your own flies is almost as satisfying as fishing with them. I’ve seen beginner kits on EBay for as little as $20.00, but I would recommend getting one new from Cabela’s or similar retailer, just to be sure you get a good basic start-up of the proper materials.
Beware…it is very additive. I’ve been lucky. I probably spent over $50.00 this year so far on feathers, fur, Sea Fiber, prismatic markers, hooks, etc…, and I tie at least a couple of flies 6 out of 7 days a week on average, and I have been accused by my wife of locking myself in the studio for days on end tying, only comming out to eat and and take care of other necesary biological functions, but it hasn’t become an obsession, yet.
I can say that both Harry Mason’s TroutFlies and Hill’s Discount Flies are great sources of bugs. Even though I do most of my tying now, these companies offer very good products at reasonable prices. The quality has always been very good.