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Allys Shrimp (Copper Tube)

Allys Shrimp (Copper Tube)
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Our Price:  £1.25
List Price:  £2.01
Saving Of:  £0.76 (38%)
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Fly Size:   
 
 
 

Fly Categories:  Copper Tubes
Fulling Mill Equivalent:  1434
Price US:  $2.50
Price Euro:  €1.59
Part No:  EF-7500

Availability:  In Stock  In Stock


Allys Shrimp (Copper Tube) - Salmon Fly

Allys Shrimp (Copper Tube). The Allys Shrimp (Copper Tube) is a great Salmon Fly. This fly is fished in the style of Copper Tubes or Salmon Flies

Product Keywords: Allys Shrimp (Copper Tube), Allys Shrimp (Copper Tube) Salmon Flies, Allys Shrimp (Copper Tube) Salmon Fly


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Customer Reviews
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Average Rating:  5 Stars5 Stars5 Stars5 Stars5 Stars

Ally's copper tube
Thursday, 9 October 2008  -  Barry
Rating:  5 Stars5 Stars5 Stars5 Stars5 Stars
nice value for money

2 of 5 people found this review helpful.Was this helpful to you?  Yes  /  No
Related Products

Allys Cascade Shrimp (Double Hook)

Allys Cascade Shrimp (Double Hook)£1.50   £1.00Add to Trout / Salmon Fly Fishing Basket

Available in Fly Size(s)
4, 6, 8, 10, 12.

Allys Cascade Shrimp (Treble Hook)

Allys Cascade Shrimp (Treble Hook)£1.60   £1.05Add to Trout / Salmon Fly Fishing Basket

Available in Fly Size(s)
6, 8, 10.

Allys Shrimp (Nylon Tube)

Allys Shrimp (Nylon Tube)£1.45   £1.25Add to Trout / Salmon Fly Fishing Basket

Available in Fly Size(s)
3/4", 1-1/4", 1-1/2", 2".

MAKE SHOPPING EASY! - our Essential fly bundles. Complete bundled collections ready made for you. Alternatively use our site to select exactly the flies and sizes your require.   The Essential Fly Bundles

Tube Flies / Pot Bellied Pigs

Tube Flies / Pot Bellied Pigs

Tube flies now account for as many if not more fish each season than do traditional single hook flies. During the early season when the water is cold, tube flies offer the fly fisherman a lure/streamer large enough to tempt what can be very dour fish.

The advantages of the tube fly are impressive:

  1. Flies and hooks are separate so you can carry a lot of flies in your shirt pocket and the hooks in a film can.
  2. You can use non-stainless steel hooks (which are sharper and stronger) in salt water, just throw them away in a bin when you are finished fishing for the day.
  3. You can cater for barbed and barbed-less fishing. You can use treble hooks, or double hooks or single hooks. Most salmon fishermen use a treble hook but the beauty of tube flies is that you can choose what ever hook you want. You can vary the size and type to match the type of fish you are after, the water situation and regulations, quite often some waters will not allow treble hooks so doubles suffice.
  4. If the hook dulls, just replace it instead of sharpening it on the water.
  5. The flies are more durable, because when you hook the fish, the fly slides up the leader away from the mouth of the fish.
  6. You can tie huge flies without buying expensive long shanked hooks - indeed some say they swim better and look more natural
  7. You can have different weights of the same fly using copper or nylon tubes

To tie the fly onto the end of your leader, simply pull the hook from the rear of the plastic tube, tie the hook to your leader and re-insert the hook into the tube. If the hook becomes damaged it can be easily replaced without disposing the fly. If you have problems of the hook inserting itself up the tube thread on a bead at the rear of the tube just in front of the hook eye. Always have spare hooks with you!

Lighter tubes of nylon, in slow or medium flowing rivers, tends to flutter very attractively as it swings across the current mimicking the natural movement of bait fish or a shrimp. Use a fast sinking line to get the fly down to the required depth. It makes the fly swim more naturally. In deep water on lakes and reservoirs the copper weighted tube flies come into their own realm. 

Watch the Local Regulations! 

There is one disadvantage with using tube flies. It is nothing to do with the effectiveness of the fly at catching fish but more to do with the wording of local fishing regulations. An example of this is that in America, Washington State a tube fly is defined as a lure and not a fly under their State regulations and therefore can not be used on fly only water. Their regulations define a fly as 'a lure on which thread, feathers, hackle, or yarn cover a minimum of half of the hook shank of the hook'. We only sell plastic tubes. The regulations in Eastern Canada forbid the use of 'weighted flies' for Atlantic Salmon. Metal tube flies are considered 'Weighted flies'. Consult your local fishing regulations before using tube flies to see if they are so narrow minded as those of Washington State.

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