Despite its name, it fits the bill when imitating hatching sedge also.
With most dry-fly patterns it’s often best fished on its own, cast upstream to rising fish.
A tapered leader is essential for this type of fishing; make a point of using them.
It can also pay to fish a nymph off the bend of this pattern, New Zealand style. This is an ideal way of searching out likely looking water.
Hook: Kamasan B100 size 14
Thread: White or primrose
Body: Tying thread
Rib: Brown or olive Flexi Floss
Thorax: Hare’s ear fur
Wing: Olive CDC
Hackle: Badger cock
How To Tie The Fly
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1. Secure the hook in the vice and take a few thread wraps behind the eye of the hook. |
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2. Tie in the Flexi Floss at this point. This will ensure an even body. |
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3. Keep tension on the Flexi Floss and wind the thread down to the bend of the hook. |
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4. Now take the tying thread back up to the thorax area in tight touching turns. |
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5. Rib the body with the Flexi Floss, keeping an even width with the thread underbody, secure at the thorax and trim the excess. |
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6. Tie in three or four CDC feathers, trim the stalks and tidy the thorax area up. |
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7. Catch in the badger hackle by the stem, trim the excess and form a dubbing rope with the Hare’s ear fur. |
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8. Create the thorax with the fur and wind the hackle around the area in open turns three times, before trimming and whip finishing the fly. |
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9. Varnish the head of the fly. With a sharp pair of scissors, trim the hackle on the underside of the fly so that it will sit in the surface film. |
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Total Fly Fisher