Floatant

Wetswinger

Beneath the surface of the mud, there’s more mud.
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I’ve been out of dry fly action for years. So I’m wondering if there has been any new, fabulous changes in fly floatant, as I start re-equipping my gear. What is working for you all.?
 
I also use gink on the rare occasions I fish a dry. I have also got a patch of amadou on my lanyard that dries flies out pretty quickly, with no chemical action.
 
Loon Aquel.
SF
 
Best floatant I've ever used (because it works, is easy to apply, and it's so dang cheap): Rain-X spray. It's silicone-based, like Loon Aquel, so less toxic than some others, but far easier to apply and won't leave you covered in shit and doesn't gum up fine fibers like CDC and dubbing. It seems to last a LOT longer, is a hell of a lot cheaper than Loon, gink, etc., and you can use it for other things.

To apply, maybe once or twice a season, I just open up my dry fly boxes, spritz them a few times and leave them to dry for a bit.



EDIT: Forgot an apostrophe, or, as Evan calls it, "God's Comma".
 
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I have been using Fly-Rite Dilly Wax (made in the UK) when I tie on a dry fly for a very long time. I was getting it from Doug Swisher until he retired. Swisher claimed it was the best he had tried. More recently I have bought it from an eBay seller making it kind of hard to get.

Dilly Wax works almost as well as the DIY Bergman's Forumla; a paraffin dissolved in naptha-white gas mixture I was using previously. That stuff makes a fly float like a cork for a very long time over repeated casts and eats. But I couldn't find containers for field use or home storage that would prevent the naptha from evaporating and it was annoying to have to keep refilling the containers.

I would put the fly into the bottle close the lid and shake. Remove the fly and it was plastered with excess wax. I would slip the hook of the fly through an elastic hair band or rubber band girth hitched to my pack or vest, pull on the tippet to stretch the rubber band taut. Then I would give the rubber band a couple of "flicks". It instantly removed all the excess wax and completely dried the fly; with no "oil slick" on the water after treatment. I would only have to use it 2-3 times over several hours of fishing if I wasn't changing flies. @J Watrous too clumpy for CDC though.

Oh, and not recommended use if you like smoking a cigar while you treat your fly.

Best floatant I've ever used (because it works, is easy to apply, and it's so dang cheap): Rain-X spray. It's silicone-based, like Loon Aquel, so less toxic than some others, but far easier to apply and won't leave you covered in shit and doesn't gum up fine fibers like CDC and dubbing. It seems to last a LOT longer, is a hell of a lot cheaper than Loon, gink, etc., and you can use it for other things.

To apply, maybe once or twice a season, I just open up my dry fly boxes, spritz them a few times and leave them to dry for a bit.



EDIT: Forgot an apostrophe, or, as Evan calls it, "God's Comma".
Rain-X spray... back in the day Tom and Ray aka "Click and Clack, the Tappet Brothers" on "Car Talk" strongly recommended against using it on car windows. but using as fly floatant... :unsure:
 
Gink and Frog's Fanny for me. I bought some Loon Lochsa 'CDC safe' alternative to Gink which seems to work about as well, but I like and trust Gink.

One thing I noticed with the Frog's Fanny is it makes a slick of powder on still water. It's not pleasing aesthetically but I'm not sure if it does any harm.
 
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Not a floatant but helpful.....when I'm dry fly fishing (seldom, unfortunately) I pin one of those tiny microfiber pads that come with all new glasses and sunglasses to my vest. They seem to absorb moisture immediately by just gently squeezing the fly with the pad. For some reason I have been saving those things for years and must have about 20 by now. At last I have a use for them.

In a similar vein, linen or terry cloth dishtowels have always been used in the kitchen until just recently. Then with many being ready for garage duty I ordered a package of 10 microfiber dishtowels to replace the old veterans. Voila! The future is here! Just point the towel at water and it seems to suck it up instantly. They not only absorb water more quickly but dry faster as well, a small but welcome improvement to daily life.
 
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Gink and Frog's Fanny for me. I bought some Loon 'CDC safe' alternative to Gink which seems to work about as well, but I like and trust Gink.

One thing I noticed with the Frag's Fanny is it makes a slick of powder on still water. It's not pleasing aesthetically but I'm not sure if it does any harm.
I recently had a bottle of Frog's Fanny's lid come off in the pocket of my vest. Now my fingers come out coated every time I fish something out of it. Gonna have to shake it out real good and run it through the washer.
 
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All the floatants mentioned in prior posts are probably as good as any one, but I read somewhere, can't remember where, that an angler was using a Bounty paper towel to dry his fly. It had to be a "Bounty" paper towel and the results were apparently very good. I haven't tried it yet but as much as I like fishing dries I'm gonna give a try next time out. Unfortunately that may be awhile yet as still recovering from a fractured femur.
 
Bounty paper towels ....lmao
 
All the floatants mentioned in prior posts are probably as good as any one, but I read somewhere, can't remember where, that an angler was using a Bounty paper towel to dry his fly. It had to be a "Bounty" paper towel and the results were apparently very good. I haven't tried it yet but as much as I like fishing dries I'm gonna give a try next time out. Unfortunately that may be awhile yet as still recovering from a fractured femur.
Wishing you a speedy and complete recovery!
 
All the floatants mentioned in prior posts are probably as good as any one, but I read somewhere, can't remember where, that an angler was using a Bounty paper towel to dry his fly. It had to be a "Bounty" paper towel and the results were apparently very good. I haven't tried it yet but as much as I like fishing dries I'm gonna give a try next time out. Unfortunately that may be awhile yet as still recovering from a fractured femur.
So...Bounty, the quicker floater upper.:giggle:
 
Not a floatant but helpful.....when I'm dry fly fishing (seldom, unfortunately) I pin one of those tiny microfiber pads that come with all new glasses and sunglasses to my vest. They seem to absorb moisture immediately by just gently squeezing the fly with the pad. For some reason I have been saving those things for years and must have about 20 by now. At last I have a use for them.

In a similar vein, linen or terry cloth dishtowels have always been used in the kitchen until just recently. Then with many being ready for garage duty I ordered a package of 10 microfiber dishtowels to replace the old veterans. Voila! The future is here! Just point the towel at water and it seems to suck it up instantly. They not only absorb water more quickly but dry faster as well, a small but welcome improvement to daily life.

A small piece of shammy works great for dabbing 'em dry as well.
 
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DIY Bergman's Forumla; a paraffin dissolved in naptha-white gas mixture I was using previously. That stuff makes a fly float like a cork for a very long time over repeated casts and eats. But I couldn't find containers for field use or home storage that would prevent the naptha from evaporating and it was annoying to have to keep refilling the containers.

I would put the fly into the bottle close the lid and shake.

Oh man, this brings me back- that's the formula my dad used. We had these cool little hourglass shaped bottles with a doughnut shaped cork in the neck and the lower section of the bottle filled with the paraffin mix. Pop a soggy, slimy fly in, shake, remove and false cast off the excess; it worked like a charm. Nothing else gets fish slime off a dry fly as quickly and effectively. I wonder what ever happened to those bottles?
 
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