I'm tying to work out a good representational pattern for the Eastern MB. There are dozens of exceptional patterns shown on this site and dozens elsewhere. Bill Shuck seems to have spent the past couple years nailing down beautiful Leisenring and Hidy variations and recently Wayne and Paul just posted some wonderful examples. A search on the forum offers a very wide variety and I see that I've posted a number of March Brown patterns that are contradictory and complimentary to each other. The standard soft-hackle or flymph is medium hare's ear on orange or yellow silk, and partridge hackle, partridge tails, etc. but honestly, the adult bodies are creamier/yellow as in the nice Catskill dry patterns and wings more amber or yellow although the brown partridge hackles are near perfect. Nymph bodies are more mottled amber and brighter than the pheasant tail usually sited. The Western US species is smaller and has more orange to it but in the East it's a much lighter fly. I don't usually get all worked up about matchy matchy representations but I'm giving it some thought. The fly below seems to represent more of a nymph body with adult wings. Honestly, finding a pattern that works isn't so much the issue, as these are not hard to find, but I'm trying to resolve some of the ambiguity. Any help would be much appreciated.
So a couple of issues:
1. an adult stage flymph
2. an emerging nymph stage flymph
Hook: #14 dry
Thread: Uni Rusty Orange
Hackle: Speckled hen
Tail: Wood duck dyed yellow
Rib: Gold Tinsel
Body: 50/50 Brown-natural seal and hare blend pre-spun on primrose silk. (Clark's Block)
