What Are You Tying Today?

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RP Emerger


Roy Palm

Tail - Partridge
Body - Olive biot
Thorax - Olive dubbing
Hackle- Partridge

 
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Fletcher

Tip - Silver tinsel
Tail - Scarlet, yellow, and guinea fowl married
Hackle - Grizzly tied palmer *
Body - Black floss
Wing - Light brown mottled turkey

Don Bastion Note

* The hackle recipe in Trout calls for gray but the painting is clearly grizzly.

I really like the Fletcher; it is an unremarkable fly except for the three-part married tail, which makes this pattern extremely attractive and fun to tie.

The Fletcher is a good pattern for tiers in the early stages of learning to tie married tails to practice and work on. My reasoning is that once the tail is done, the rest of the fly is relatively easy.

Trout - Ray Bergman
 
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My new favorite local creek SMB fly

Hook - Mustad C49S curved caddis size 8
.015 lead under wrap
Thread - UTC 70 burnt orange
Tail - Chartreuse mop
Body - Golden olive crystal chenille, medium
Legs - Chartreuse/black med round rubber
Collar - Green organza ribbon

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Smallies love chartreuse! Good looking fly!
Thank you. I’ve been on a mop fly tear lately. I can tell you my local SMB preferred the all Chartreuse and green mop flies over yellow ones. I want to experiment with some white and chartreuse.
 
Thank you. I’ve been on a mop fly tear lately. I can tell you my local SMB preferred the all Chartreuse and green mop flies over yellow ones. I want to experiment with some white and chartreuse.
I like using the mop chenille to tie a slightly longer tail than you get from the actual mop material. I have found creek smallies hit chartreuse, pink, and white mop flies well. They also work great tied on a beaded jig hook fished in the current.
 
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