- ED HERBST'S ZAKHAMER EMERGER
- HANS WEILENMANN'S SIX FAVOURITE STREAM PATTERNS
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO'S WINGED PARALOOP DRY FLY
- HANS VAN KLINKEN ON HIS KLINKHAMER SPECIAL
- PETER BRIGG'S NEW WOLF SPIDER
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO'S EXTENDED BODY EMERGER
- FLY TYING COURSE
- ED HERBST'S SIX PACK OF FLIES
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO'S PALOMINO MIDGE
- GERALD PENKLER'S SMALL STREAM 6 PACK
- GERRIT REDPATH'S 6 PACK FOR RIVERS
- LEONARD FLEMMING'S TOP SIX STREAM PATTERNS
- ETHAFOAM EXTENDED BODY MAYFLY PATTERNS
- DARRYL LAMPERT'S TOP STREAM FLIES
- SIX FLIES FOR THE REST OF MY LIFE
- PETE BRIGGS TOP SIX SMALL STREAM PATTERNS
- LUCA MONTANARI'S SIX FAVOURITE STREAM FLIES
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO'S SPEEDY CATERPILLAR PATTERN
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO'S SPLIT-HACKLE DRY FLIES
- TYING ZAKS. CRITICAL SUCCESS FACTORS
- RAFFIA-BODIED MAYFLY EMERGER
- PALMER-BACK FOAM BEETLE
- THE BEST WAY TO LEARN FLY TYING
- THE GOOD DOCTOR'S BEETLE
- TYING THE RONCALLO SPECIAL
- TWISTED BODY MICRO CDC PATTERNS
- TYING AND FISHING THE MUDDLER MINNOW
- BENDING HOOKD FOR BETTER MAYFLY IMITATIONS
- BENDING HOOKS FOR BETTER MAYFLIES
- TYING THE PTN TO THE ORIGINAL PATTERN
- J BOBBIN REVIEW
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO TIES EXTENDED TUBE BODY MAYFLIES
- LA FONTAINE'S AIR HEAD
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO PARACHUTE FLY METHOD
- An egg laying mayfly imitation by Stanton Hector
- Ed Herbst on the evolution of the modern fly tying vise
- The Mirage mayfly imitation
- Luca Montanari - A yound Italian whose flies are out of this world
- Ed Herbst reviews the J Vice
- Bob Wyatt's Deer Hair Emerger
- Tying Ed Herbst's Hopper
- New dry fly - The halo-hackle RAB variant
- Tying the CdC Midge
- Tying the ND Dragonfly Nymph
- How to tie and fish the Red-eyed Damsel Nymph
- Tying the Halo Hackle Klinkhamer Emerger
- Tying the DDD
- Tying a High water RAB
- Tying the Zak
- FLY FISHING ON THE EDGE OF THE KAROO
- LATEST FLY FISHING NEWS
- CLLECTOR'S EDITION OF HUNTING TROUT
- THE RETURN OF HIGHLAND LODGE
- OPENING 2012 ON THE HOLSLOOT
- OPENING THE FISHING FOR 2012
- FISHING THE END OF 2011- PHOTO ESSAY
- THE BEST OF THISWEBSITE FOR 2011
- LIGHT LINE FISHING FOR BUFFALO
- HUNTING TROUT SECOND EDITION
- NEWS AND FEATURES COMING TOMORROW
- Ed Herbst is fishing again
- NOVEMBER 2011 NEWSLETTER
- Haernertsburg Centenary celebrations
- WHAT STREAM TROUT EAT
- BIRKHALL LAKE - A PHOTO ESSAY
- A DAY ON THE COLDBROOK
- RHODES SEPTEMBER 2011
- Fishing News
- ROCK ART ON THE SWITH STREAM
- HANDMADE LANDING NETS - THE NEW WAVE
- PHOTOGRAPHING INSECTS
- A DAY FISHING PONDS
- THE UNITY - A TRIB OF THE KARNEMELK
- FLY FISHING RHODES IN JULY 2011
- SNAKE AWARENESS COURSES
- 31 JULY 2011 NEWSLETTER
- TRAVERSING THE ENTIRE LENGTH OF THE ORANGE RIVER - A DVD
- UNDISCOVERED FLY STREAMS
- RANDOM THOUGHTS ON BAMBOO FLY RODS
- 3 July 2011 NEWSLETTER
- THE UGIE LADIES' FESTIVAL
- 12 June 2011 NEWSLETTER
- MAY 2011 FLY FISHING DIARY AND NOTES
- FLY FISHING THE RHODES AREA
- THE TITANIC TIGERFISH OF TANZANIA
- IMPRESSIONS FROM THE WILD TROUT ASSOCIATION FESTIVAL
- SNAKES IN STREAMS CAN HAPPEN!
- MARCH 2011 NEWSLETTER
- PORTRAIT OF AN ARTIST - PADDY STARLING
- Early morning hopper fishing - A photo essay
- Closed Cell Foam Strike Indicators
- Between the Storms - Reminiscences of a Fly Fishing Trip - Part 2
- Between the Storms - Reminiscences of a fly fishing trip
- Minor tactics in high wind
- Fishing with a geographer - photo essay
- A day on a mountain stream straight out of heaven
- October 2010 Newsletter
- Chris Bladen- Fly fishing in bronze
- Witels River Photo Essay
- SEPTEMBER DIARY
- The Lighter Side of Guiding
- Iceland Salmon
- Underwater Fly Fishing Photography
- Photographing Fish
- April May Newsletter and Diary
- March 2010
- February 2010
- A photo and word essay on South Island New Zealand by Gerhard Laubscher
- THE EXCITING DIEPSPRUIT RIVER
- OF GEORGE MAURER BAMBOO RODS AND WRITERS HARRY MIDDLETON AND JOHN GIERACH
- PIKE ON A FLY FROM THE THAMES
- FLATHEAD MULLET IN GRAAFF REINET
- GARY BORGER'S SMALL STREAM FLY SELECTION
- THE PATTERNS FRED STEYNBERG RELIES ON FOR RIVERS AND STREAMS
- David Kleyn's top six patterns for rivers and streams
- FLY FISHING THE KAROO
- AD MADDOX'S FLY FISHING ART
- RETURN TO PATAGONIA
- DORADO IN BOLIVIA
- A DAY ON THE WITTE
- KRAAI RIVER GRAND SLAM
- Don Phillips - The Everett Garrison of the space-age fly rod
- Red tag fools willow grub feeders
- From an artist in wood - Steve Boshoff
- Don Phillips solid boron fly rods
- FRESH WATER BONE FISH - THE NATAL SCALY
- FISHING THE DIEPSPRUIT NEAR BARKLY EAST
- SEATTLE and the SAGE ROD COMPANY
- MAGNETIC FLY HOLDER
- CAPE STREAMS REVISITED
- THE YEAR OF THE MOUSE - BROWN TROUT HEAVEN
- RHODES - THE GUIDED EXPERIENCE
- PROFILE ON DAVE WALKER
- FLY FISHING FOR TIGERS IN THE ZAMBEZI
- Dimpling Trout by Garret Evans
- REVISED CONVEX LEADERS FOR ULTRA-LIGHT RODS
- DAVID KLEYN'S FISHING AND IMAGES
- ALL YEAR ROUND FLY FISHING ON WTA WATERS
- THE WILD TROUT ASSOCIATION
- A VERY SPECIAL BAMBOO ROD RETURNS
- TYING THE TVN NYMPH
- AUCTION OF ED HERBST RODS AND REELS
- FLY FISHING RHODES IN MID WINTER
- The EFFTEX tackle show
- Pete Brigg's July paragraph
- TARPON FROM CUBA
- SOUTH AFRICA'S FLY OF THE CENTURY
- THE SOUTH AFRICAN GAME FAIR
- NEW ZEALAND - LEONARD FLEMMING'S END OF SEASON
- PETER BRIGG'S APRIL 2011 PARAGRAPH
- ESSAY ON THE JAN DU TOIT'S RIVER
- C & F Threader and clipper
- The river Nera in central Italy
- Pete Brigg's February 2011 Paragraph
- A fly tying DVD series by Ed Herbst and Andrew Ingram
- Pete Brigg's January Paragraph
- Incidental fly fishing in Utah
- New Zealand South Island Newsletter - Leonard Flemming
- Rod Dibble furled leaders by Ed Herbst
- Pete Brigg's December Paragraph
- Ed Herbst in search of the ultimate small stream fly rod
- Pete Briggs November Paragraph
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- Ed Herbst on new 'Whisper' rods
- Pete Brigg's paragraph - Third in the series
- Pete Brigg's August paragraph
- Pete Brigg's paragraph
- Ed's Column - July 2010
- Ed's Column - May/June 2010
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- Ed's Column - April 2010
- DRAGONS ON A DRY FLY
- STERKFONTEIN DAM - A DRAMATIC PLACE
- THE JDT's
- THE UPPER SAALBOOM RIVER
- READER'S IMAGES PART 15 - NEIL HAYES-HILL ON THE OKAVANGO
- VALENTINE ATKINSON'S PHOTOGRAPHY
- READER'S IMAGES PART 14 - LOTHENI AND BUSHMAN'S
- READER'S IMAGES PART 13
- A day on the Bushman's and Lotheni
- MOLENAARS RIVER - SHARLAND URQUHART
- FISHING THE KOLA PENINSULA
- Trout in North Island New Zealand, fishing in snow in Rhodes and Japanese trout streams
- READER'S IMAGES PART 11 JADE DOS SANTOS
- READER'S IMAGES PART 10
- THE WOLF - A RARE GLIMPSE OF A LOVELY STREAM
- GERRIT REDPATH IN RHODES
- TOM LEWIN FISHES AN ITALIAN CHALKSTREAM
- READER'S IMAGES PART 9
- READER'S IMAGES PART 8
- MORE OF GERHARD LAUBSCHER'S WONDERFUL IMAGES
- READER'S IMAGES PART 7
- Gerhard Laubscher - State of the art fly fishing photography
- MORE GERRIT REDPATH IMAGES
- READER'S IMAGES PART 6
- GERRIT REDPATH - ACE FLY FISHING PHOTOGRAPHER
- THE LITTLE POTT WITH GEORGE BRITS
- READER'S IMAGES - PART 5
- READERS IMAGES PART 4
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- READERS PICTURES 2
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- Sage rod, Eclipse line, Rosenbauer book
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- FLY RODS FOR SALE 2 NOVEMBER 2011
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- OCTOBER 2011 ITEMS FOR SALE
- Secondhand Tackle and Books for Sale
Pete Brigg's Paragraph
Ed's Column - May/June 2010
Ed's Column - May/June 2010
| Friends' Columns |
Favourite internet rod building sites - Ed Herbst

Wild trout on a Boshoff rod
In the past thirty years I have searched constantly for the ultimate small stream fly rod. “Ultimate” in the sense of low mass, no flash and the lightest line possible – a rod that provides short range delicacy and accuracy and helps me compensate for my casting faults.
There have been some superb rods along the way.
They include the solid boron rods of Don Phillips, in particular his rendition of the Leonard Baby Catskill, the exquisite Archistrial composite models of Henry Haneda (http://libertydesignsinc.com/index.html) but, above all the ultra lights developed first by the late Howard Steere of Orvis and, subsequently, by Jerry Siem of Sage
This evolution has been well catalogued by Bill Byrd on his website:
My favourite website is the Ultra Light Fly Rod Forum:
http://ultralightflyfishing.yuku.com/ where one gets all the latest information on light-line fly rods.
There has been a resurgence of interest in fibreglass rods for small stream fly fishing and this forum provides a lot of useful information:
http://fiberglassflyrodders.yuku.com/
A custom rod maker whose work I find very interesting is “Tight Loop George: http://tightloopgeorge.blogspot.com/
Some of the finest Japanese split cane rod makers are featured on:
http://ff-pureland.com/bamboo_rod/
I asked three South African rod makers, Stephen Boshoff, who has a link on this site, Stephen Dugmore (www.freestonerods.co.za) of Cape Town and Mario Geldenhuys of www.customflyrods.co.za of Aliwal North to list their favourite rod building websites. Tom Sutcliffe and I agreed such a site would not be complete without one of the ‘Dark Side’s’ (bamboo fly rods) chief protagonists, Tom Lewin.

Ed Herbst using a Boshoff bamboo rod
Stephen Boshoff

Steve Boshoff
Forums: http://clarksclassicflyrodforum.yuku.com/
A substantial and very active gathering of people interested in bamboo rod making; this site contains a wealth of information on every aspect of rod making from the technical, historical and biographical to regular photo contributions on newly completed rods by well known makers.
Components: http://www.wagnerrods.com/
The site of Jeff and Casimira Wagner, master bamboo rod makers. I order components from them occasionally. Their work is exquisite, and their mail-order service personal and without fault.
Organisations: http://www.rodmakers.it/
The Italian Bamboo Rodmakers’ Association. Their on-line journal, based on the US-based Power Fibers website is exceptional. It combines contributions on technique, history and life into memorable collections celebrating our craft and passion.
As regards individual rod makers, I am drawn more and more to Japanese makers (within the constraints of language and the capabilities of Google “translate”). Their work is extraordinarily refined and often innovative, specifically in the smaller rods I prefer. There are many makers and sites, not generally known outside of Japan, but the work of Asama, Akimaru, Kawatsura, Miyuki and Studio Line is exceptional.
I relation to those working in the west without personal web-sites, I use keep track of the work of Tom Moran and Mario Wojnicki through the websites of those who hold their work in high regard and also through the split cane rod forums.
Stephen Dugmore

Steve Dugmore
The rodmaking websites I visit most frequently are:
http://www.bamboorodmaking.com/ This is Todd Talsma’ site. It is a great repository of tips gleaned and selected by Todd from the Rodmaker’s list. If you want to know anything about bamboo rod making you will find something on it in the ‘tips’ section. The ‘contraptions’ section is also very interesting – all sorts of useful rodmaking devices and gadgets and different variations on them.
http://clarksclassicflyrodforum.yuku.com/ This site originated as Clark Davis’ ‘Classic Bamboo Rod Forum’. There are a number of extremely knowledgeable members on this forum, both collectors and rodmakers. If you need to know the history on any rod or rodmaker this is the place to start. There is also great information to be had on rod making itself and some fun stuff on fishing with bamboo rods. Classic tapers and rods are regularly discussed and many current makers post examples of their work.

A bevy of Dugmore beauties
http://www.rodbuildingforum.com I don’t visit this site as regularly as the other two but usually find interesting and useful information when I do. It is similar to Clark’s in many respects but has the advantage of not being limited to bamboo – there are great techniques used by graphite rod builders that are applicable to bamboo as well. There are also a number of very knowledgeable members who are at home here and don’t post as often on Clark’s. It is interesting to read what they have to share
Mario Geldenhuys will submit his sites in due course.
Tom Lewin

Tom Lewin - bamboo fly rod expert
http://clarksclassicflyrodforum.yuku.com/
The Classic Fly Rod Forum or “Clark’s” as it is known, is the most informative site you will ever visit on matters bamboo. I have learned so much from this community over the years and have made some wonderful friends too. This is where the global who’s who of bamboo fly-rods hangs out: from world-class makers and restorers to serious collectors, dealers and hard-core fisherman. The guys in this community share knowledge freely on a wide range of related topics and the forum is properly moderated - no inane drivel tolerated here. If there is one site to save to your “favorites” this has to be it. I spend more time here than I’m prepared to admit to.
Colorado-based Mike Clark is one of the most famous bamboo rod makers alive today. His rods command top-dollar and are so exquisite in finish and feel that fishing a South Creek Limited rod verges on an out-of-body experience. I was lucky enough to sneak on to Mike’s waiting list before he stopped taking orders indefinitely and in around seven years time I expect to take delivery of my rod. Over the years I have become good friends with Mike and his assistant Kathy Jensen and have spent some memorable times fishing in the Rocky Mountains with them, so I’m not going to shy away from the fact that this is a shameless plug for Mike and Cathy – rod makers extraordinaire and two of the nicest people you could ever share a stream with. Mike’s website, like his fly-rods is high quality and well worth visiting.
Rick Sorenson of West Slope Classic Fly Tackle is a dealer who sells previously-owned bamboo fly-rods and also represents some of the world’s leading bamboo fly-rod makers. This is a great site and when I’m in the mood for a little dreaming I visit it and imagine what it would be like to buy a Payne or a Brandin with the click of a mouse. If you want to browse the finest rods on earth until you’re giddy, this is where to be. This is rod porn out of the top drawer!
Spotted! A bumper-sticker:-
SAY NO TO PLASTIC – FISH A BAMBOO FLY ROD!
Mario Geldenhuys

Mario Geldenhuys with a Lesotho Brown trout caught on a Sage #00
Most of the sites I visit have a strong “cottage-style” or small home builder style to them, as that is essentially the position that I find myself in (as I would imagine many other rodbuilders in the world as well).
The tips and tricks that one can pick up from these sites are all based on the publishers largely being forced to be extremely innovative and produce high-quality products and components from run-of-the-mill and non-specialist items.
I still primarily work in graphite (affectionately known as plastic by the bamboo guys) but have recently begun to dip into the “dark side” of the art of making rods from bamboo.
My “plastic” background thus reflects strongly in my selection of sites:
http://www.rodbuildingforum.com
A true “vault” of information on all that is rodbuilding. With a large base of active members, all of them willing to share their knowledge, the site is a must-add to any serious rod-builder’s Bookmarks. The site is forum-based, so makes for fantastic interaction, and thus provides the user to post problems/questions to be discussed and answered.
http://www.bamboorodmaking.com/
Dedicated to ‘boo, the site does also offer major info that can be applied to plastic rods and rodbuilding. What makes me revisit the site regularly are the home-built machines and equipment that the rodmakers use to complete their bamboo rods. The site lacks interaction, since it is not forum-based, but with the sheer amount of information on the site, you quickly find that to not be a bother.
Most any Japanese rodbuilding site:
This might sound a little vague, but limiting myself to a Japanese site to recommend is simply not possible for me. Fortunately with Google Translate and a number of other translation sites available, the Japanese Craftsmen’s sites have become understandable, and a whole new world has been opened to me. The exquisite attention to detail in their craft is simply staggering, and their innovation and use of non-traditional methods of building and making rods simply boggles the mind. What attracts me most to the Japanese “style” of making and building rods, is the use of traditional methods and hand-tools. Truly something to aspire to in today’s age of mechanizing everything.
Last word from Ed- The first rule for successful fly fishing
Persuading a fish that is aware of the angler’s presence and disturbed by this to take a fly is difficult if not impossible.
It is therefore axiomatic that the first rule of successful fly fishing is to avoid being spotted by your quarry.
My particular interest – indeed my only interest – is fishing small streams for trout and every book I have read on the subject makes the point that if you cast from a kneeling position with a low, side-arm cast, your chances of success increase exponentially.
On my streams however, in the mountains near Cape Town in South Africa, the stream bed consists of football-size boulders and little else. Kneeling is rarely less than discomforting and often quite painful.
A few years ago, a fellow member of the Cape Piscatorial Society, (www.piscator.co.za) made me aware of a new neoprene product called Airprene and referred me to a local wetsuit manufacturer, Coral Wetsuit (www.coralwetsuits.co.za).

Elaine Mouton
There I was to meet the proprietors, Elaine Mouton and Irene Morris and they told me that this thin neoprene was developed for the motion picture industry because extras clad in wetsuits often spend hours waiting for an episode to be filmed.
They were happy to make kneepads from the material because they already had a template – the kneepads they make for abalone divers.
In the summer heat, I wear the Airprene version but, when it gets colder, I use the 2mm version. Neither inhibit movement and while they don’t totally obviate the occasional wince-inducing fall or stumble where your knee takes the brunt of the impact, they do offer very worthwhile protection.
What is more important, is that they provide a greater incentive to lower your profile and increase your strike rate by kneeling.
Coral can also make gravel guards and offer an Airprene sock, ideal for wading, that is half the cost of the imported versions.
You can phone Elaine and Irene on 021 447-1985.
Until next time, Ed

