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Sandy's Might
I've been working hard on a Pott fly photos. So it occured to me: I
might be able to make a quick and dirty imitation (of a Pott fly) that wasn't so hard to tie. the original: http://montana-riverboats.com/Pages/...andy-Mite.html and the immitation: http://montana-riverboats.com/Pages/...dys-Might.html To make the imitation I stacked some Fox Squirrel tail, tied it on facing forward, and then pulled it back, wrapped it off and added a micro-dot of CA glue to hold it all in place. The body is two long strands of bass jig skirt material, in contrasting colors. The hackle is a bit too dense on this one. I'll keep working on it. It mite get better. |
Sandy's Might
I posted a link to this Hair Hackled wet fly a few days ago.
I've fished it twice now. It's not often a new fly idea turns out to be so successful you feel confident about the assesment after two tries. Sometimes I give up on an experimental design a season or two later. But this fly is hot. I've had two hot-as-pistol early season days since the weekend. Once on the Yellowstone and once on the Gallatin. When the fish are byting you get fast feedback on what works and what doesn't. I fished a big, heavily weighted foam stonefly nymph (it's almost Salmon Fly time) with a variety of smaller, unweighted nymph and wetfly trailers. That's how I always fish in the early season, when the water is high and still a little off color. And I have to say it: the hair hackled wet flies won the contest. Hands down. If the fishing had been typically slow it would not be so easy to jump to a conclusion. But when you get two days of red hot fishing--where you bump a fish on every 3rd or so cast--you notice the differences right away. This banded, hair hackled wet fly, in sizes 10-12, was the best of the lot. So here's my tentative assessment: soft hackled wet flies are for spring creeks and tailwater fisheries. For the bigger freestone rivers, fish with hair hackled wetflies. By the way, I did tie a handful of hair-hackled wetflies that followed the modern model: with a nymph-like wing case on top of the thorax, that split the hackles, so the leg-like hackles splayed out from the sides and bottom, but not from the top. The fishing was so good, these past two days, I think I could have caught fish on anything. And those nymph-like hair hackles worked too. But NOT AS WELL as the traditional Pott/Wombacher/Grant like wet flies that had a 360 degree hair hackle. This is a hot damn fly. |
Sandy's Might
This fly is really starting to get somewhere.
Now it's getting fast quick and easy to tie. The trick to making this (hair hackle wet fly) easy to tie, is to turn it into a beadhead: http://montana-riverboats.com/Pages/...ght/index.html -- /* Sandy Pittendrigh --O0 ** http://montana-riverboats.com */ |
Sandy's Might
Hair Hackled Wet Fly Revival?
.....the Green Rock Worm and the Lady Might: http://montana-riverboats.com/Pages/...Rock-Worm.html -- /* Sandy Pittendrigh --O0 ** http://montana-riverboats.com */ |
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