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Re: Grounds for Expulsion

Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 12:57 pm
by William Anderson
Pack your bags, renegade. :D

This could save the day...on the right day. Is the foam a "fly-tying" sanctioned (overpriced) material, or did you find it someone crafty?

w

Re: Grounds for Expulsion

Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 2:20 pm
by tie2fish
But shouldn't a Japanese beetle be tied tenkara style ... ;) ?

Re: Grounds for Expulsion

Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 2:41 pm
by chase creek
DEFINITE fish getter! That metallic foam does the trick. That's one to go in the terrestial box for sure.

Re: Grounds for Expulsion

Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 6:54 pm
by letumgo
Bill - That's funny! :lol: Tenkara style Japanese beetle. I love that idea. ;)

William - I am a big fan of Harrison Steeves's foam patterns. I have had some amazing 30+ fish days using his terrestrial (and extra-terrestrial) style patterns. I did a tying demonstration last weekend and was showing some of his patterns. They are super fun flies and they catch fish like crazy. Have you ever fished his Los Alamos Ant pattern? I highly recommend it for trout and bass.

Thanks Roger.

Re: Grounds for Expulsion

Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 7:26 pm
by Kelly L.
The pattern looks like a good one. I have actually started trying a UK Buzzer...I have lost my mind, I know it. So you aren't alone in straying off course. I seem to do it all the time.

Re: Grounds for Expulsion

Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 7:46 pm
by wayneb
Being surrounded on three sides by excellent warmwater fishing opportunities that are 15 minutes or less from my door, I find a yellow size 10 gurglepop to be my most deadly pattern.

Last year I had several 100 fish or better days and only used that pattern.

Wayneb

Re: Grounds for Expulsion

Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 7:57 pm
by letumgo
Thanks Wayne. I was not familiar with that pattern, but I just looked it up. Nice and simple. I will give them a try, based on your recommendation. Thanks mate.

Re: Grounds for Expulsion

Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 9:15 pm
by Mataura mayfly
letumgo wrote:Thanks Wayne. I was not familiar with that pattern, but I just looked it up. Nice and simple. I will give them a try, based on your recommendation. Thanks mate.
Ray, as stated above somewhere beetle patterns are widly used here for trout...... big trout. That photo where you liked my old Fenwick rod, the trout on the end of the line (was also in the photo :) ) was a victim of a simple brown beetle.

Re: Grounds for Expulsion

Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 9:32 pm
by RnF
Awesome tie. Them trout in the mountains could not resist that! Very buggy.

Re: Grounds for Expulsion

Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 10:14 pm
by letumgo
I just tyed a version with a black CDC body. Out of curiosity, I got a dish of water to see how the pattern looked floating on the surface. Interestingly, the CDC version kept flipping over when it hit the surface of the water (foam side down/CDC belly side up/hook point above the surface of the water). I dropped the fly into the water multiple times and each time it flipped upside down. The twisted CDC body seems to repel the a water. When I pushed the pattern below the surface, the belly of the fly was surrounded by a silvery air bubble. As soon as I lifted it back out, the belly looked dry and fluffy again.

I then tried the version tyed with the peacock herl body and the first couple times it flipped over, but once the herl got wet it tended to land on the water belly side down. The herl version rides low in the water, roughly 2/3rds submerged. Pretty interesting.

I'd love to try fishing both versions in tandem, to see if the fish have a preference. I kind of like the idea of the beetle floating on it's back. It may look more vulnerable that way, plus the hook point is obstructed by the surface film. It might be just enough of a different to prevent a refusal from a fussy trout.

I live for this kind of unexpected result. All part of the fun...