Hoy Matk:
Don't get jealous that he is an expert. Anyone who ties that many flies
must be good....or extremely bored, or living in Nigeria.
How about we get one of those Nigerians who tie 10,000 flies a year to
writ a book.......or to atleast offer to share with us a US$72 billion
inheritance from his great- uncle if we just deposit US$2000 for the
paperwork to go through.
Mark Romero wrote:
> funny how production tyers always wanna boast bout how many flies they
> tye a year...........wass up with that??????? does anybody really
> care...............? lmao................thass like some guy on an
> assembly line talkin' **** bout how many tires he makes a
> year...............lmao.............or cookies..........or stuffed
> animals.................who gives a flyin' crap? lmao..........
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Date: Sat, 14 Nov 2009 09:29:28 -1000
> Subject: [VFB] Re: Production Fly Tying Book came
> From:
flyfi...@gmail.com
> To:
vfb-...@googlegroups.com
>
> The average work year for a person is 2080 hours. So he is a part
> time worker ;>)
>
> Mike
>
> On Sat, Nov 14, 2009 at 7:00 AM, Jimmy D. Moore <
ray...@earthlink.net
> <mailto:
ray...@earthlink.net>> wrote:
>
> Wow, that's 36,000 flies a year! He tie them all himself? If so,
> at my tying average speed of 2 minutes per fly, that translates
> into 2 X 36,000 = 72,000 minutes % 60 minutes / hr = 1,200 hours
> at the bench. 1,200 % 24 (hours in a day) = 50 days, if I tied 24
> hours a day. Now, considering that I "run out of gas" after about
> 4 hours at the bench, this would mean that it'd take me 1,200
> hours % 4 hours = 300 days to tie the 36,000. DUH! Ain't gonna
> happen !! :-P :-( :-D
>
> JIMMY D
>