What I’m aiming for here is a good footprint on the water and a fly thats hard to sink. CDC tied in like a Sedgehog keeps the profile narrow and the scrunched up Caribou holds its shape well and looks quite “leggy”.
Been working well so far.
The Fox ‘n’ a Box has been tied more for a private joke than to fish with but I have fished with one similar, but made entirely with Fox, which was a fly a friend of mine picked up from Branco Gasparin when on holiday in Slovenia. That fly worked very well as I remember and floated like a cork, I should really tie more.
This fly should be fished dry as an emerger or egg laying Caddis and the fox fur used for the wing will float well for a while even without adding floatant, but as it eventually becomes waterlogged it actually works equally well as a drowned or post ovi-positing adult.
Recipe Hook: Partridge of Redditch K4AY #12. Thread: Semperfli Nano Silk 12/0 Brown. Abdomen: Underfur from a Boxer Dog named Milla. Wing, Head & Antennae: Slovenian Fox.
Hook: Partridge Universal Predator CS86 #6 Weight: None (Fish on a short leader with fast sinking line) Thread: Semperfli Nano Silk 12/0 Brown Tail: Mix Brown & Cream Marabou Flash: Root Beer Midge Flash (2 strands each side at tail, 1 strand each side at head) Body “hackle”/Rib: Copper Organza Ribbon Body: Cookshill Seals Fur Fiery Brown Head: Large Partridge Body Hackle
Hook: Partridge of Redditch Universal Predator CS86 #6 and Flymen Fishing Company fish spine 20mm Thread: Semperfli Nano Silk 12/0 Brown Tail: Brown Olive Marabou Underbody: Olive dubbing Body Hackles: Olive and Copper Organza Ribbons wound together Head: Ice Dubbing, top Olive Brown and bottom mix of UV Pearl and Light Yellow Eyes: Clear Cure Eyes, secured with Clear Cure Goo Hydro
Hook: Partridge Dry Fly Supreme L5A #12 Thread: Semperfli Nano Silk 12/0 (50D) Brown Body: Brown/Olive CDC Wing: Two Coq De Leon Saddle feathers Hackles: CDC fibres in a split thread followed by a hen Coq De Leon Hackle trimmed to a V underneath.
Heavily based on a fly I saw tied at the Dutch Fly Fair a few years ago, my sincere apologies to the originator but for the life of me I can’t remember who tied it to credit him properly.
Tied to be as visible as possible and to float in the roughest water to work well as an indicator trailing one or two nymphs while still offering a good silhouette that can be a decent representation of Sedges and Stoneflies. Late into the evenings I use it with Fluoro green sighter wings to let me see the fly in near dark conditions and add a half hour or so onto my fishing where the fly is still visible. Even after dark or at a longer distance the high floating properties of the fly mean it is an effective pattern to use twitched or skated on the surface where you can feel the takes rather than see them.
I like to carry different versions of the fly with Fluoro Pink, Fluoro Green and Black sighter wings as this gives me the highest visibility in all types of water however some people see colours in different ways so it’s worth experimenting with Yellow and Orange as options. br>
br> Hook: Partridge Dry Fly Supreme L5A #10 Thread: Semperfli Nanosilk 12/0 Olive Body Hackle: Cree saddle trimmed short Overbody: Olive Razor Foam Underbody: Olive Kapok dubbing Wing: Yearling Elk Sighter Wings: Aero Dry Wing, Fluoro Pink, Green or Black. Two sections tied in as a wide V.
Hook: Partridge Universal Predator CS86 #2 Thread: Semperfli Nanosilk 12/0 Brown Tail: Mix of Brown & Cream Marabou Body: Mix of Semperfli Ice Dub Yellow & a little Gold Holographic Dubbing Wing: Magnum Rabbit Zonker tied in near the head only with skin shorter than hook length Collar: Small/short bunch of tail Marabou on top with bunches of Magnum Rabbit on each side. Nothing on underside. Head: Fish Skull Sculpin Helmet Brown br> br/>
Plenty movement and the Rabbit near the head keeps a good wide shape.
My preferred way of tying Sparkle Gnats and Griffiths Gnats has long been to wrap the body herl and hackle around the thread before winding the whole lot up the shank to form the body. There are a few advantages to doing it this way 1. It makes a stronger body. 2. If you use a good genetic hackle and just palmer it up the body it can act like a propeller and impart a lot of spin to the fly…. not good…. wrapping the hackle around the thread prevents this. and 3. The hackle footprint is a good bit more messy, like the fly in general, I like the slightly more chaotic look of the fly. Continue reading Sparkle Gnat Step by Step→