Monthly Archives: February 2013

Playboy Bunny Tube Fly – Marc Procopio

Marc has supplied the recipes for for his Playboy Bunny Tube Fly. There is a video provided to show you how to tie the pattern. If you would like to see more from Marc, head over to freestoneflies.com and check out his other patterns. Not only does Marc sell custom tied flies, he has fly tying materials available too.

Playboy Bunny Tube “Burgundy”
Tube-40/40 Pro Flexi Tube Color of your choice (junction cut to 1/2-3/8″)
Thread- 6/0 Danvilles Fly Master
Tail-1/8″ Straight cut Rabbit strip
Butt-Estaz Color of choice (optional)
Body-UV Pearl Polar Chenille
collar-Black marabou Plume (One that can be used as hackle) Three turns
Flash-Purple & Chartreuse Pearl Flashabou Three strands each
Hackle Red Schlappen Three turns
Head-fish Skull size of your choice (small medium or medium)


Playboy Bunny Tube “Hot Pink”
Tube 40/40 Pro Flexi Tube Color of your choice
Thread-6/0 Danvilles Flymaster
Tail-1/8″ Hot Pink Straight cut Rabbit strip
Butt-Estaz Chartreuse (optional)
Body-UV Pearl Polar Chenille
Collar-Black Marabou Plume (One that can be used as hackle) Three turns
Flash-Chartruese Pearl Flashabou Six strands
Hackle-Hot Pink Schlappen Three turns
Head-Fish Skull size of your choice (small medium or medium)

Playboy Bunny Tube “Chartruese”
Tube 40/40 Pro Flexi Tube Color of your choice
Thread-6/0 Danvilles Flymaster
Tail-1/8″ Chartruese Straight cut Rabbit strip
Butt-Estaz Hot Pink (optional)
Body-UV Pearl Polar Chenille
Collar-Black Marabou Plume (One that can be used as hackle) Three turns
Flash-Fire Tiger Holographic Flashabou Six strands
Hackle- Chartruese Schlappen Three turns
Head-Fish Skull size of your choice (small medium or medium)

Playboy Bunny Tube “Purple”
Tube 40/40 Pro Flexi Tube Color of your choice
Thread-6/0 Danvilles Flymaster
Tail-1/8″ Purple Straight cut Rabbit strip
Butt-Estaz color of your choice (optional)
Body-UV Pearl Polar Chenille
Collar-Black Marabou Plume (One that can be used as hackle) Three turns
Flash-Purple Pearl Flashabou Six strands
Hackle- Purple Schlappen Three turns
Head-Fish Skull size of your choice (small medium or medium)

The recommended hook for this fly is a #4 Owner Mosquito hook.

 

Tying Notes– The Video Tutorial is somewhat diffrent in that I used about 15 wraps of Polar chennille for the body. Thats to much for this fly Use only 8-10 wraps for the body and select a marabou plume for the collar that dosen’t extend to far back over the tail. It should extend to approx. 1/3rd to 1/2 the tail length.

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Filed under Steelhead

Woven Danica Emerger – Terje Refsahl

Terje used his woven body technique to produce this good looking emerger. He provided the details of the recipe so you can tie your own. I bet this little darling can catch some fish!

 

Material list:

Hook: tmc 200R #8
Tail: Ostrich herl
Body: Clear small stretch tubing that is woven.
Rib: Orange Krystal Flash that is ribbed underneath the woven body (the clear stretch tubing is so transparent that the rib shines through)
Thorax: cdc dubbing mixed with some ice dubbing in a coffee blender
Wings: two cdc feathers
Legs: barred ginger hackle
Front hackle: cdc fibers spun in a tread loop.
I have colored the body underneath the clear stretch tubing with a water repellent marker pen to make small dark spots on the backside of the fly.

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Filed under Trout flies

Tie for a Cause!

steelheadalleyoutfittersGreg Senyo of Steelhead Alley Outfitters is running a special event called “Tie for a Cause!” All  you have to do is tie 3 flies and send them to one of the addresses below. This is a very worthy event and I’m all in! The official announcement and details follow.
Tie for a Cause! What is 3 flies really worth to you? Help me reach a unified goal of 3000 flies to be split up into 1000 fly packs to donate to 3 fly fishing Organizations in need of our help! You can send as many flies as you like, but three is all that is required! Asking very little for a chance to be apart of a big deal for someone else! Each person who contributes will be listed on the Thank you card submitted with the flies… Lets try to reach this goal and have all flies submitted by April 1,2013

Send flies to:
USA
Greg Senyo
7363 Crosscut Rd
Holland Ohio 43528

Canada
Braden Kemp
472 Masson St
Oshawa, ON, Canada L1G 4Z9

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Filed under Uncategorized

2013 Midwest Fly Fishing Expo

To my knowledge, this is the largest fly fishing show in the Midwest. It’s held in Warren, Michigan right outside of Detroit. They have a lot of big name fly tyers on hand and it promises to be a great show! Even better, it looks like I will be able to make it to the show this year! So I will do my best to take plenty of photos and share my experience here on FrankenFly. Todd Schotts of Grizzly Flies by Schottsie provided me with a list of some of the guest tyers and a synopsis of each. You can also visit the website for more information.

 

Alan “Al” Ritt

grew up here in Michigan where his passion for fishing was born. In the early 80’s while living in Northern California, just after he started tying flies, he started fly fishing. In 1989 he moved to Northern Front Range of Colorado (Longmont) where he and his wife Diana reside.  He is currently on the Pro-staff of Whiting Farms, PEAK Fishing, Flymen Fishing Company, Performance Flies, Tubeology, Diiachi Hooks, and a fly designer for Montana Fly Company. Al is also a guide on Colorado and Sylvan Dale Ranch just outside of Loveland. Alan’s web site is: www.alrittflies.com  Alan will be demonstrating various Western Trout Flies.

Dennis Potter

started tying over 30 years ago before fishing on the Ausable River in Northern Michigan. After landing the first Trout on his Parachute Hendrickson, his passion and addiction for chasing Trout and Tying Flies took off.  In 1987 Dennis and his wife Karen purchased the Riverhouse on the banks of the Holy Waters of the Ausable.  He spent 4 seasons at the Gates Ausable Lodge as a Fly Fishing Instructor and he still enjoys teaching fly tying instruction. His fly designs are fished extensively and with great success throughout the U.S. Dennis does have various Fly Tying Videos on the market and he is the owner of Riverhouse Fly Company.  You will be able to find him tying at the show, with his well known high resolution video tying Demo show. Dennis’s web site is: www.riverhouseflyco.com  Dennis will be demonstrating various well known Trout Patterns and Fly Tying Techniques.

Jerry Regan

a 3rd generation fly tyer; is one of the true keepers of Michigan’s Fly Fishing History; along with being one of the best commercial fly tiers in the business. Just like Trout Unlimited, Jerry was born along the fabled Trout Waters of the Au Sable River near Grayling. As a kid he learned fly tying and fishing from Michigan’s Genuine Legends like Earl Madsen and Ernie Borcher. One thing unique for the patterns Jerry ties, he has never went with synthetics that have flooded the market place, but have stuck with the original materials that were used. Jerry will be demonstrating the flies of the Classic Au Sable fly patterns.

Pat Cohen

lives in upstate New York where enjoys chasing after anything that has gills. He began his fly fishing in 2008 and started tying flies in January of 2009. Being relatively new to the sport, don’t let that make you wonder. He specializes in Deer Hair Flies and he has proven his tying talents with many distinct honors; he also ties everything from streamers to nymphs. The artistic freedoms that fly tying offers is what drew him to fly tying. He is a member of Pro Team for Peak Vises as well as Clear Cure Goo and you can follow him on his blog “Warm Water Journal” or at his sitewww.rusperfly.comPat will be demonstrating his specialized Deer Hair Flies.

Mike Schmidt

is owner & Fly Tyer for Angler’s Choice Flies, based out of Dublin, Ohio for more than a decade now; which started out from encouragement and influence from his dad. His fly tying consists of Winged Wet, Warmwater, Coldwater, and Saltwater patterns. Some of the accomplishment’s of Mike, would consist of Orvis Fly Designer, Contract and Fly Tying Instructor for Mad River Outfitters, Signature Tyer for JagFly Company/Steelhead Alley, and has articles published in Hatches on line magazine. Mike’s web site is:www.anglerschoiceflies.com  Mike will be demonstrating abundance of patterns along with his famed Winged Wet Flies.

Todd A. Schotts

is a member of the Michigan Fly Fishing Club & has been Fly Tying before he even started fly fishing. He enjoys teaching fly tying at the clubs various schools, along with helping out at various outings and events; and is a past & current board member. His custom fly company “Grizzly Flies by Schottsie” was started 10 years ago, and along with tying the standard fly patterns, he has about 20 + of his own design of flies. His passion is for chasing Smallmouth’s but he also enjoys chasing Trout, and Steelhead His website is: www.grizzlyfliesbyschottsie.com Todd will be demonstrating tying various Warmwater Fly Patterns.

Julie Nielson

is another one of Michigan’s well known commercial fly tyers with Trout patterns that will bring the weariest trout to the fly. Her patterns can be seen in many northern Michigan fly fishing establishments. Her post pattern flies are so durable and so well sought after, and we are glad to have her back for another year. You can contact Julie at: Julie will be demonstrating different parachute fly patterns such as “The Patriot”, and many others.

Steve Wascher

caught his first Trout at the age of 3 ½, on a DRY FLY!! Steve is a third generation tier from Greenhurst, NY; and received basic instructions and guidance from his father; along with his grandmother in regards to tying. Steve is a well rounded tier, and enjoys all aspects of the art of fly tying; from creating a unique nymph, wet flies for steelhead, or his famed deer hair bugs for those warmwater surprises. Besides tying Steve guides during the summer months for a wide range of warmwater species and he enjoys writing articles as well; which have appeared along with his flies in Hatches Magazine, American Angler, and Mid-Atlantic Fly Fishing Guide. Steve will be tying his famed deer hair bugs and tube flies.

Corey Thelen

is a member of the Michigan Fly Fishing Club and is a very talented tyer at the young age of 17. He got started about 5 years ago tying flies after he took a class at Great Lakes & Natural Resources Camp in Presque Isle, MI. After a few Woolly Buggers he was hooked! That weekend on the way home, he got his first tying vise & materials. And like a few of us tyers, he started tying before he started fly fishing. Even though he does fish for Warmwater fish; fishing for Trout & tying Trout flies are his main choice. Corey’ will be tying various trout flies and demonstrating his unique deer hair flies.

Eli Berant

grew up and lives in Michigan, so he has been surrounded by big water all his life. After getting his first fly tying kit at the age of 15,  fly fishing and fly tying has been a passion of his ever since. Even though he really likes the “traditional” fly fishing experience; he has taken the concepts of the huge saltwater flies and began to apply them to his exploits here back in the big waters in Michigan. If you are interested in “Big Flies” for Lake Trout, Musky, Bass, or whatever will consume them, you can order these flies at Great Lakes Fly www.greatlakesfly.comEli will be tying his monster big flies.

Eric Austin

grew up tying and fishing Catskill dry flies in the Adirondack Mountain region of New York State. Even in his youth Eric loved the old fly fishing books at the library, by the likes of Preston Jennings, Ray Bergman, Al McLane, J.Edson Leonard and George La Branche. Later, this love of history led to his reviving a column on the flyanglersonline.com website called “Just Old Flies”. Each week Eric would tie and photograph a fly and recount the history of it. The Just Old Flies column spurred Eric’s historical flies by American classic tiers and the old masters of the U.K., including salmon flies found in Kelson, Francis Francis, and Pryce Tannatt. Eric has been featured in the series of books published in London, “Fly Tiers of the World”. His Red Quill was recently selected to be on the cover of the re-release of Earnest Schwiebert’s classic “Matching the Hatch”. His influences include the Irish wet flies of Alice Conba, Rene Harrop’s flies for the Henry’s Fork, Carrie Stevens’ streamers, the quill body flies of A.K.Best, and the dry flies of Francis Betters. His website is www.tradtionalflies.com . Eric will be tying Classic Atlantic Salmon and New England Streamer flies.

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Filed under Fly fishing show

Mercer’s Missing Link

 

The Lower Sac was in rare form. All day long we’d been nymphing 16-20 inch fatty rainbows from her wide riffles and endless current seams, sweating like Arizona roofers in the 100-degree July heat and hardly believing the numbers we were hooking. It’s not always like that, but it sure is memorable when it is. Then, as the sun dipped low on the mountainous horizon, the fish began to porpoise on the surface, inhaling dry caddis…and I groaned in dismay. For the 3 decades I’ve thrown dry caddis at these summertime risers, my success rate has been wildly erratic, causing my confidence level to follow suite. This twilight surface “grab” is pretty dependable – there are almost always reaches of the river where the big trout come up for 30-60 minutes; targeting trout to throw to has rarely been a problem. But unlike other fisheries, including some pretty darned technical ones, the Lower Sac has always toyed with me. One night I’ll land half a dozen fish, and be on top of the world, certain I’ve finally figured out the fly mystery; two nights later, same number of fish working, same pattern, and I can’t touch a fish. What is the deal??!!

One night in early spring 2007, I off-handedly whipped up a couple “new” dries to try the following evening…it had occurred to me the one life stage of caddis I’d rarely even considered before had nothing to do with a nuance of emergence, but was rather at the reverse end of the cycle -a dead or dying insect. I figured the body needed to emulate a “wasted” natural’s abdomen – wispy, yet with a touch of sparkle for what little trapped air might still be left. A thread body ribbed with a strand of Flashabou, all coated in a coat of Softex. I wanted an abdomen that hung down in the surface film, rather than float high and dry on top. I really felt a down-wing profile could be a key, and from “retired” caddis I’d collected, I wanted those wings to be extremely frail and somewhat translucent, not opaque or with a pronounced profile. I used Z-Lon yarn, each sparse wing tied tight against a peacock dubbing lump to make sure the yarn didn’t simply collapse against the hook shank when wet. I wanted the wings to be in, or even just below the water’s surface, the same as with my mayfly Profile Spinners. Finally, I wanted a parachute hackle, and a visible backwing silhouette – so I borrowed Ralph Cutter’s ingenious idea from his wonderful E/C Caddis, and parachuted an elk hair wing.

I looked at the finished product – frankly without a lot of enthusiasm, due to it’s unremarkable appearance – and threw them into the box, in case I wanted to try something new. The next evening, I started with my standard favorites, but to little avail – the fish were crashing the surface pretty aggressively, but not to what I was offering. More out of defeat than hope I reached in and plucked one of the new little”cadaver caddis” from the box, and knotted it on. First cast – slurp, and hookup! My friend watched mutely from upstream, slightly surprised. Convinced it was a fluke, that I must simply have just made the ten thousandth cast necessary to get my token “lucky” grab, I dried the bug on my shirt, picked a new target, and cast again. Slurp – I came tight again!!  Now my heart-rate started to elevate slightly, and I noticed my fishing partner begin to edge slowly down towards me. Still not convinced (30 years!!), I threw to yet another boil 20 feet from my rod tip, and slurp, it happened again – 3 fish in 3 casts!! Long story short, I hooked 10 fish in one hour that night and missed several other takes, literally rising every single trout I had to cast to. Amazing. Even more astounding, the fly continued to produce at this torrid pace for the rest of the summer – evening after evening my confidence soared as I knew I had a good chance of hooking nearly every trout I put a good cast on…it was like a dream. Then, in October, another friend and I spent our annual 2 weeks in Montana; each cloudy afternoon on the Firehole swarms of baetis would float lightly down the gentle flats of Biscuit Basin, the noses of pods of rainbows and browns interrupting their journey. It was demanding to the max, with the fish immediately going down at the merest hint of drag, or a missed strike. We felt fortunate to take one fish out of each pod before they wised up to our flies, and we’d have to go find more fish. Just on a fluke one morning, as the trout were confidently sucking in baetis spinners (but completely ignoring my imitations), I took off my #22 paradun and tied on the new caddis…don’t ask, it was just one of those strange decisions based on very little coherent thought. I proceeded to not only catch a fish on the #16 dry, I literally hooked all 8 fish in the pod, one after another!!  Totally blown away – could this be a magic fly? – I moved down to the next pod, and stuck over half of them…unbelievable! I realized then that this pattern was not only something REALLY special as a caddis imitation, it had something which attracted fish even in situations where I wouldn’t have imagined.

Bottom line, my flies are usually highly designed, with lots of thought-out triggers, and I try hard to make them look really nice, as well. This pattern was barely more than an afterthought, admittedly with a specific design trigger, but simply put, it’s nothing special to look at!!  Don’t let that fool you, like it normally would have me – this bug truly is something special, in my experience. If you have a good caddis hatch (or dying egg-layer swarms) on a stream near you, give this a shot…shoot, if you just have FISH in a local river, tie one of these on and dead-drift it down, I think you may be pleasantly surprised!

Mike Mercer

 

Mercer’s Missing Link (Tied by Umpqua Feather Merchants)

Hook: TMC 102Y, sizes #12-18
Thread: UNI 8/0 camel
Abdomen: UNI 8/0 camel thread, ribbed with strand of pearl Flashabou, coated with Softex
Thorax/Wing Splitter: small clump of Ice Dub, UV Brown
Down Wings: Z-Lon, dark dun
Up Wing: Elk body hair
Hackle: dark dun dry fly hackle, parachute-style

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Filed under Trout flies

Koz’s Para-Hex

Kozs-para-hex-a

 

Brian Kozminski ties his Para-Hex in this video. Koz says this is a great night pattern when the big hogs are out and that this mega parachute always lands feet first and has a killer footprint on the water. In smaller sizes it can be used as a searching pattern before a hatch.

Materials:
Hook: Mustad 3906 #6
Tail: Moose Mane
Post and extended body: Needleloft poly yarn yellow
Wing: Grizzly Bugger hackle Olive & Natural
Thorax: Hare-tron golden Stone Dubbin

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Filed under Michigan, Trout flies

Mayfly nymph pattern advice – Hogan Brown

HogansSMnymph

Hogan’s S&M Nymph

The best advice I ever got as a fly tier was to look at what you are going to imitate. Nail the profile and movement of a fly by watching and observing the natural…then work from there by adding attractor elements, flash, beads, and other things that trout like. This advice led me on one of those life long quests that in fly tying circles makes me interesting, but in many other social circles just weird…I collect and watch bugs.  This created some tough moments during my adolescent years, but I feel I am stronger and more secure in my own skin now because of it.

One of the first things I began to notice when I began putting caddis pupa, mayfly nymphs, and stonefly nymphs in vials, instead of the things that normal people do for fun, was how trim they were.  I began to realize how many of the PMD’s, Baetis, PED’s, and smaller caddis were no fatter then a hook shank and definitely were not as big as the flies that were being sold in my local fly shop, or any fly shop that I had been to for that matter. I realized that many of the flies I was tying, and were being sold, were way over dressed to imitate the silhouette of these bugs I was seeing. This lead me to really begin thinking about how I dress my flies and the materials I was using.

This is what I call the less is more approach. One less pinch of dubbing, one less wrap of thread, one less clump of pheasant tail, I always force myself to be conscious now of how much material I am putting into my fly and how it will affect the end result and silhouette of that pattern.

Here are a few tips to trim up your nymphs…

  • Use thread for the abdomen on mayfly nymphs very similar to a thread midge
  • Switch to dry fly antron dubbing for the thorax.
  • ALWAYS use 8/0 thread for anything that isn’t a stone fly nymph
  • For your Pheasant tails only use 3 fibers. This gives you 3 tails and will keep the abdomen of that fly TRIM.
  • DO not use commercial ties as the model for your flies. Get the real bug and use it.
  • Get the silhouette down and then add all the rubber legs, flash, and complexity.

To find out more about Hogan Brown please visit his main website and blog.
www.hgbflyfishing.com
www.hgbflyfishing.blogspot.com

Hogan is a contract tyer for Idylwilde Fly Co. and has over 24 patterns available through them.

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Filed under nymphs

Parks Salmonfly

After World War II Merton Parks taught himself how to tie flies. There were not many commercial companies churning out flies, so Merton started a small tying business out of his basement. He was unhappy with his job at Northwest Paper Company in Cloquet, Minnesota and was much more happy tying flies. So in 1953 he moved his family from Minnesota to Gardner, Montana where he opened Parks’ Fly Shop. The shop is still there today and owned by Merton’s son Richard. They still specialize in custom flies and have some terrific tyers filling the bins. Check out their fly selection on their website.

Merton created Parks Salmonfly in 1954. The fly is a Sofa Pillow alternative and definitely one of the best. Dan Bailey called this pattern one of the best adult stonefly imitations, according to the book Trout Country Flies. One of the custom tyers at Parks’ Fly Shop and one of my favorite fly tyers, Doug Korn, says, “Fish it damp as often as floating high, especially at the tail end of the salmonfly hatch.” Richard Parks shows us how to tie this classic pattern in the video below.

Hook: Mustad 9671 2xl nymph, #2-8 with 6 most common
Thread: Heavy and black: Gudebrod G, flat waxed mono, Kevlar or 3/0 Uni
Tail: natural brown bucktail, long length of body
Body: tangerine orange Red Heart Acrylic yarn wound over Duco cement for durability
Palmer hackle: Brown or furnace saddle, clipped even with the gape on sides and bottom, basically flat on top.
Wing: Natural brown bucktail, slightly longer than the tail, full.
Hackle: 3-4 strung dark brown or furnace saddles (or mix).  Choose hackle with little web.  If you have a high-grade neck or saddle with web-less feathers in sufficient size, use two feathers.  Wrap each feather individually, filling in gaps left by the previous hackle(s).

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Filed under Classic