What Are You Tying Today?

Size 13 all poly mole fly.
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Gold Sprat #1

Body - Flat gold tinsel
Throat - Small bunch of yellow polar bear and red hackle points
Wing - Two yellow and two orange saddle hackles
Cheeks - Gold metal “Edson” cheeks

Streamer Fly Tying and Fishing - Joseph Bates
 
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King of Waters

Tail - Gray mallard
Ribbing - Gold tinsel
Body - Crimson floss
Hackle - Brown
Wing - Gray mallard

Trout - Ray Bergman
 
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creeks and rivers are gonna be blown out for the foreseeable future, tied up some nine three streamers for when they become fishable.

my version of the Kelly Galloup version

Daiichi J-141 #1
Embossed #10 Vernie Silver Tinsel
White over Yellow Bucktail beard
Black over Green Hackle Feathers w/Jungle c0ck
 
First Pat’s rubber legs, size 8. I never tie anything this big, it almost felt like spinfish lure, so I made a size 12 on a red hook with an iridescent glass bead. Not as neat, but I like the size and colors better.
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Hook - size 12 standard wet fly (2X strong would be good to as it would ride just a bit lower in the water column)
Thread - 12/0 nanosilk - brown
Underbody - any type of dubbing to create a tapered base to wrap the grouse quill over.
Body - Ruffed Grouse tail feather ( split, trimmed, soaked and stripped of its pith)
Hackle - Hen grizzley hackle tied soft hackle style.

PA has a history of many great flyfisherman and flytyers. The Breadcrust is also a part of that history as it originated in the 1940’s in the Pocono Mountains region of PA. The “In the Riffle” YouTube channel has a good video of how to tie the Breadcrust. This is exactly how I tie it with the exception that he uses partridge for the hackle and I use grizzley. Really any soft hackle could be used to collar it. Admittedly, the biggest pain with tying it is the prep work involved with the grouse feathers. However, it is an absolute fish catcher.

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Mallard

Tail - Brown mallard
Ribbing - Gold tinsel
Body - Yellow wool
Hackle - Brown
Wing - Brown mallard

Trout - Ray Bergman
 
Red phase Grouse is not easy to find. Grey phase seems more common. Grouse numbers are down in our area also. I have a grey phase tail. I am going to try spliting pheasant tail.
I have tied some in the past and like to have a little dubbing peek through the wraps. I used burnt orange dubbing. This was a good Oct Caddis imitation.
 
The original Breadcrust pattern developed decades ago by Rudy Sentiwany in the Pocono Mountains. Ed Rolka, a fellow Pennslyvanian, is credited with popularizing the Breadcrust in the west, when he moved to Colorado in 1970.

my ugly tied breadcrust

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