OK, I’ll admit it, I feel like a dork about it too. :? I cant find the page that has “Gold Ribbed Hare’s Ear” on theis site. Pleeeease point me in the right direction.Yes , I need the pictures :oops:
Thanks
http://www.flyanglersonline.com/flytyin … 2fotw.html
This was the only one I could find here with pictures. Just leave off the rubber legs.
Joe
I just found this one:
http://www.flyanglersonline.com/flytyin … art11.html
Joe
[url=http://www.tie1on.net/hareartm.htm:e7cd6]HARE’S EAR NYMPH[/url:e7cd6]
[url=http://www.flyanglersonline.com/flytying/beginners/part11.html:e7cd6]All Time Favorites - Hare?s Ear and Pheasant Tail[/url:e7cd6]
This probably is a little highjack but seems like you got the info but it brings up a point…
If one goes to the fly archives here is there anyway to do a quick.search by fly name and come up with the fly?
Seems like you have to scroll through based on date…and hope you see it…yes, you can search the main website but you get [most of the time] huge results…
JC… not being critical …just wondering if there’s a way?
Hi Ducksterman,
I use Internet Explorer, so I’m not sure how general this is. Anyway, I go to the archive page (for Fly of the week, or Just Old Flies, etc) and under my browser’s Edit menu I choose the “Find on this page” option (or hit Ctrl-F) and this allows me to search for words on the web page.
This option, of course, is a function of the browser rather than of the BB and for those who use Macs, or Netscape, or some other browser, you might not have this option available (or you get to it differently).
I have no idea how easy or hard it would be to include a “search” option on such pages. I program computers, and I do realise that the “apparently simple” things are almost always really hard to do while the “That’s amazing!” stuff is often trivial. This could very well be one of those situations.
- Jeff
In the past I have googled the fly, then found the FAOL listing usualy in the top two or three listings of google. Its sometimes much easier than the FAOL search.
Eric
It all depends on what you mean, dry, wet, emerger or nymph. I just tried google with G.R.H.E. and got 10,000 results. Basicaly Gold Ribbed Hare’s Ear just describes the body of a fly, which can be any of the above.