This fly was tied by our friend Tim Didas (tjd).
Tim = If you find time, between your studying, could you tell us about this fly?
Moderators: William Anderson, letumgo
You probably called it a flymph because of the soft hackle legs, and the absence of a wing case. Maybe others like the idea of giving the flymph name to nymphs that have round hackles and no wing case. It would broaden the flymph category, but gets further away from the original concept that is described in the quote above. Interesting to think about this.FLYMPH FISHING is that technique which, by comparison to the “chuck-and-chance-it” use of the winged wet fly, or the hard-bodied or weighted nymph fished deep, strives to simulate the hatching nymphs of the mayfly, caddis fly, or other aquatic insects as they struggle up toward the surface or drift momentarily in or just under the surface film.