The Orvis Beginner's Guide to Carp Flies: 101 Patterns & How and When to Use Them (Orvis Guides)
M**N
Excellent book, but title might be misleading
I really like how Mr. Fraiser breaks down carp flies into categories based on carps' feeding habits, habitat type, and available food items. The descriptions contained in this book helped me understand what a carp is doing when it exhibits certain behaviors in certain habitats.I do, however, think that the title "beginner's guide to carp flies" is somewhat misleading because it implies that the book, at least, will have specifics on how to put together the fly patterns contained therein. This book does not do that. It does contain ingredients lists. But it contains neither notes on how to put those flies together, nor information on how to design and create your own flies, an activity that I believe most carpers would acknowledge is integral to maximizing a carper's ability to put their local fish in the bag. I would recommend purchasing Jay Zimmerman's book for that kind of information.Because of the valuable information on feeding habits, habitat type, available food items, and flies associated with the various kinds of these criteria that this book contains, I would highly recommend purchasing The Orvis Beginner's Guide to Carp Flies.
C**.
A must-read for the carp fly angler
I decided to buy this book after listening to interviews with Dan Frasier on the Orvis Fly Fishing Podcast. The book is more than a beginner's guide, and it is not just about carp flies. It has everything you need to know to be successful fly fishing for carp. The book includes detailed photos of all types of carp flies, with materials lists. If you need detailed tying instructions, this book can serve as a launchpad for researching flies to tie for your next carp fishing adventure.
J**M
An Excellent Resource
Dan does a great job of explaining how to evaluate different carp behavior which helps the angler determine what flies to use and how to approach the fish. The book is divided into easy to follow sections based on the type of forage you are trying to imitate. I appreciate how Dan not only provides recipes for 101 carp flies he explains how to present the flies to fish. Presentation is critical to the carp angler’s success.I’m entering my 12th season of fly fishing for carp. Back when I started I was hungry to learn; I organized and participated in carp fly swaps. There was such a wide range of “made up stuff” that guys exchanged. Many of those early swap flies had never caught a carp and some of them had never even been in the water. Dan’s book has 101 flies that have all caught carp. These are proven patterns; they won’t all work where a person lives but some of them will definitely work for you. This book will be a collector's item someday. Thanks for a job well done, Dan!
T**N
a collection of fly pattern that can be found online
The book is mostly a regurgitation of what can be found online. The book can be summarized in 1 basic message, observe what carp eats in your body of water, and you'll catch fish if you understand that. Then the author goes on to show you 101 files that worked for someone at some point. His work was mainly organizing all that fly patterns into 5 different categories: meat, nymph, dry flies, super meat, and universal. Prior to reading the book, I've already read about all that from blogs like flycarpin and fishhunterchronicles.What I was most disappointed about was the fact that there is very little information about carp biology / physiology / ecology. For that, I would find any European blogs on carp, which details much more precisely what color carp can see and the mechanics of how carp inhale food, all essential to thing good carp flies.If there was any redeeming quality to this approach to writing a book on carp fly fishing, the author could have at least show you step by step how to tie those carp flies, give you a sense of what's important in the fly pattern like how to get the fly to ride hook up or reduce splash while throwing weight flies. But none of that is available... (these are essential information that is available in Jay Zimmerman's book).In the end, the book is a bunch of anecdotal account of a bunch of flies that had worked for others, fly patterns that had been collected from other sources that can be found online, without a more fundamental understanding of why and how they work. Ok, the fish are it... It's pretty much a complete waste of money for me. You're better off reading Zimerman's book and some European blog.
J**E
109 page meat sandwich
Fantastic resource for tackling carp on the fly. Solid information about forage, carp behavior, and techniques to help you make the right fly selection in a number of probable situations. Patterns are presented with pictures, recipes and characteristics. A few of the reviews have pointed out that there are no step by step tying steps and that is correct, however many of the pictures and recipes should provide sufficient information to tie most if not all the patterns on your own. This book provides sufficient information to both the tyer and non tyer alike IMO. This is 109 page meat sandwich, however if you're looking for something a bit longer winded, the Orvis guide to fly fishing for carp might be what you want instead.
R**D
Excellent
I highly recommend this book for any fly angler interested in going for carp. No, there aren't step by step instructions for the flies, but most tiers will already know the basic principles and techniques of the flies. The ones I have needed more help on I just looked up online. The book would be worthwhile in itself if it was just recipes and pictures of flies, but Frasier also gives advice on fly selection, presentation, etc. that really makes this book great.
A**K
Extremely helpful book for those looking to get started
Very detailed book that not only took the time to explain the different fly types and where one might use them but also why one would choose that fly. Understanding the why allows these principles to be applied to the thousands of variations on different flies.
R**.
the Orvis Beginner's guide is a good and clear guide for people in my situation
I am a begineer in carp fishing, I fished trouts more than 30 years, but carps I am just starting, the Orvis Beginner's guide is a good and clear guide for people in my situation, I found very usefull information and sugestions in this book, I am starting to put in practice this sugestions and a little improvement has being reached, I ecomend this guide for beginners like me.
D**N
Sorry Orvis Its not that Great a Book
I was expecting 101 designs with instructions on how to tie them, what I got was a book with 101 pictures and absolutely no information on how to put the designs into practice, ok you get a list of materials used but its akin to buying a book on baking cakes that lists ingredients and shows some fancy end product but without the "bones" of the recipe to put it together as it was intended, maybe I was asking too much of it? .... Having said that locating carp and how to fly fish for them is covered in an excellent well thought out way. I come from a course fishing and specimen background and some of what is written rings very true and may well be what the fly fisherman would need to know but not until they had decided to fish for carp on the fly. For those targeting carp on the fly then it is probably going to be more of a read to them.
M**M
Five Stars
Interesting
D**H
Invaluable aid to Fly Fishin for Carp.
In North America, even within the boundaries of major cities, most carp live in a state of nature. If they were trout, bass, or pike, in the same state, `they would be easily caught by simply throwing an attractor fly in their direction. Carp are somewhat different, even undisturbed populations are not easy to catch, unless by blind luck you do about 6 things right at the same timeThis book is built around the puzzle of catching carp, and is one of the best values in a fly fishing book ever brought to market. It is really a how-to catch carp book, but it starts from the flies, not a lengthy and difficult to follow discussion of everything else. The book is divided into sections for the basic food forms carp feed on. It describes the habitat those foods are found in; what carp behaviour indicates a feeding fish; whether they are feeding on the prey you assume; how to present that type of fly; and then what flies to tie/buy or use.To use the book consider your fishing area. Shallow flat. What are the fish finding there? Might be crayfish or clams, say. Go to those sections and you should be quickly able to figure out whether the muddy or rocky bottoms favour one or the other species. Go to the relevant section and review the fish behaviour, if the clues add up, study the fishing techniques and select some flies and you have at least a starting point. There are tips on how to find solve problems outside of the scope of the book.The book has 101 pattern recipes with excellent descriptions. The book could not be as concise or as reasonably priced had it included more detailed pattern information. There are however a few problems with this format.:1) The field of carp flies is growing and experimental. Most of the flies are very simple, save a few classic dries. The new flies, however, often use new approaches and tricks that make a big difference to otherwise simple looking flies. One would be hard put to be sure in every case that one had tied these flies as intended, just from a picture. However, there is so much information on the internet that even if one needed such help, it is often found on Youtube or the web. What the book does so well is provide a comprehensive listing; and a good photo; a list of materials.2) The other problem is that the descriptions include few common materials. Again, the web may provide info on substitutions. On the positive, these are presumably the real recipes. But not even a dozen Orvis stores probably stock all these materials.There is another carp fly book out this spring and it has fewer patterns, but step by step descriptions of the tying process that may be helpful to some.This book will be beneficial to non-tiers because of the excellent fishing instructions, and catalog of flies.Additional books are the recently released Best Carp Flies, Carp on the Fly; and the Clouser fly tying book.Tremendous value at the price of some magazines.
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