kip tail

Cane Pole

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Feb 29, 2012
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Location
Rutherfordton NC.
Tied my first jigs with kip tail. It was harder for me to tie with because it was fuzzier but I like the way it still stays fuzzy when it gets wet. I wish I had bought more colors. Black buck tail with purple kip tail belly, I will try to get some pictures tomorrow.
 

redman

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Sep 4, 2011
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Humboldt, Iowa
Use a lot of kiptail in the cold weather months. After it starts to warm up I am back to Marabou and Hackle. Just a hint but sometimes I will use size A thread when tying with kip tail. Some tails are more slick and kinky that other that is why I use the size A thread I can be a little rougher with it. Pull down on it and keep it tighter.

Redman
 

LedHed

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Mar 23, 2010
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So Cal I.E.
Welcome aboard CP
Waiting to see some tyes... I usually tye ultra lite hardbody jigs with "kip" tail & 3/0 flat.
 

jiggerjohn

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Mar 23, 2010
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547
Cane Pole, I had an old buddy, Jack Murtha from NC, who specialized in lightweight kip tail jigs -beautiful ties & skillfully crafted jigheads,from his own handmade silicone molds, and he caught everything with them ,freshwater and salt! He often told me it was the only tie you really needed & that a slow hop with his plain white & yellow models (with a strand of flash on the sides) ,would get him bluegills, crappies, bass, flounder, and many other varieties. Later on, famed fly tier Bob Clouser produced his "Darter" series -really just his "deep Minnow" fly with kip instead of bucktail, and long flashabou out the back -for me, these small dumbbell headed "jigs" were what really opened my eyes to the productivity of the kiptail. But, as Bob warned "kiptail is very slippy,so layer small bundles & secure it with a few loose ties at first before wrapping tightly!" Clouser loves the way kip maintains its shape in water,and I know I sure caught a ton of fish on his darters!
 

SaltyBuckster

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Aug 16, 2010
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Pennsylvania
I like to grab the amount of kip that I want and twist it half a time,lots of the short underfur comes out that way before I cut it.If you have some really curly long tails you can tie them,then wet it and stretch it out and hold it tight with your hands and use a hair blow dryer and it will straighten out a bit.
 

Fatman

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May 1, 2011
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10,525
Location
Northfield, Vermont
Kip can be a pain to tie with but makes good patterns. It's one of the tails that has an underfur that I prefer to cut then use and old comb and get the underfur out - keep it for flies it makes a really spikey dubbing. If you really hate to tie with kip get the calf body hair lots easier to tie with and can be dyed very well - course if you're brave enough to do it. LOL
 

Cane Pole

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Joined
Feb 29, 2012
Messages
34
Location
Rutherfordton NC.
Here are a few that I've tied the black and blue ones are the ones with kip tail. The black part is buck tail and the blue is kip tail but in real life the blue is more purple. Thanks for the tips on using the kip.
 

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Pup

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Mar 24, 2010
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Indianapolis, IN
If you like kip, then you might like streamer hair (Icelandic sheep wool) for bass jigs. Has greater fiber length and breathes well in the water. It absorbs water which adds a little casting weight to a light jig.

Nice ties. :icon14:
 

Cane Pole

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Joined
Feb 29, 2012
Messages
34
Location
Rutherfordton NC.
Pup said:
If you like kip, then you might like streamer hair (Icelandic sheep wool) for bass jigs. Has greater fiber length and breathes well in the water. It absorbs water which adds a little casting weight to a light jig.

Nice ties. :icon14:

Thanks. I'll try some. The short length af the kip is hard when you'r all thumbs
 
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