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Showing posts with label soft hackle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label soft hackle. Show all posts

Friday, January 2, 2015

Purple Haze Flashback Soft Hackle

The Flashback Purple Haze Soft Hackle


























Hook: Size 22-12 (18 is my favorite for the BWO) scud or nymph hook
Thread: Purple 8/0
Ribbing:  Black small dia. wire
Flashback: Pearl tinsel
Body:  Purple thread for small sizes; floss, dubbing, or 1x 370 Uni Stretch for larger sizes
Thorax:  I actually use a purplish colored yarn that I shred up but any rabbit dubbing in purple or black will be great
Hackle: Partridge soft hackle
Head: The thread your using

If you haven't yet discovered the magic of fishing and tying soft hackle flies, 2015 is the year!  In many ways, soft hackles are more traditional than dry flies.  Learning how to fish them in the traditional way is a whole new adventure and there are tons of non-traditional ways to experiment with as well.  Soft hackles are incredibly effective, especially on waters that see lots of pressure.  Chances are, no one else is fishing them.  They are also the bees knees for those porpoising trout that are eating emergers.  Lastly, they can be greased and fished like floating nymphs.  The possibilities are endless.

Make 2015 the year you go back in time and rediscover the most effective fly patterns ever created!

   

Friday, June 20, 2014

Wire body soft hackle

Wire body soft hackle
























Hook:  Any size nymph hook
Thread:  Brown 6/0
Body:  2 different color medium sized wire
Thorax:  Pear ice dubbing
Wing:  Partridge soft hackle

These flies are freaking awesome and fun to tie and fish.  Floatfisher has been posting wire body flies all winter and spring and I caught the bug, no pun intended.

Monday, May 5, 2014

5 sure bet flies for the Missouri River for the next week or so

Heavily used Firebead Soft Hackle Ray Charles
























The Ray Charles is the perfect top fly for the double nymph rig.   It was extremely effective yesterday in the wind and sun.  Your nymph rig will need to be deep and have split on it.  6-8 feet from bobber to splitshot.  I used 1 or 2 BBs for weight.  Fish the slow inside curves and pocket water at the tail-outs of the swirlies. The big swirly just downstream from Craig is fishing great, just be careful in those hydraulics; it would not be the best place to fall out of the boat or drop an anchor.



Rainbow Czech Nymph
























The Rainbow Czech was the perfect bottom fly in tandem with the Ray Charles when the baetis stuff wasn't working so much



Beerhead nymph/emerger
























Although there were no massive baetis hatches over the past couple of days, the trout were onto the nymphs during certain times of the day.  Sometimes they would eat the baetis nymph, almost exclusively, over the others.  In the current conditions on the Missouri R., you'll want to have this as your bottom fly in a double nymph rig.  Sometimes I'll have a size 18 as a lead and a size 20 as a dropper.  The Beerhead is super versatile though and its specialty is as an emerger on a short leash or in the film with a greased leader.  It is one of my favorite flies of all time.  I'm a BWO guy through and through.




Firebead Soft Hackle Sow Bug
























This egg pattern also worked as bottom fly.




Black Conehead Bugger

























The Mo is one of my favorite places to fish with streamers.  I love slow swinging a bugger through the runs and feeling it get whacked a couple times as it glides through the zone and finally gets grabbed by a mean old brown.  You can get as technical with streamers as you want but a green, black, or white weighted bugger will fish as good, if not better, than anything else.


I have got a couple good stories and pictures of my Missouri trip to come soon.

Friday, April 18, 2014

The Flashback Purple Haze Soft Hackle

The Flashback Purple Haze Soft Hackle is a great fly pattern and is effective in all sizes but works best in sizes 22-16.
FB Purple Haze SH
























HOOK: Size 22-6 (best in 22-16) - scud or nymph
THREAD: Purple 6/0
RIBBING: Black small diameter wire
FLASHBACK: Medium pearl tinsel
BODY: Thread in small sizes, purple dubbing for larger sizes
THORAX: Hand blend dubbing mix in natural or bright colors with some rabbit fur for texture
SOFT HACKLE: Partridge hackle tips for small sizes, palmered partridge for larger sizes

This fly (in the appropriate sizes) works great for midge, baetis, and caddis hatches. I love to fish soft hackles. When you are doing it right, it is as much fun and requires as much, if not more, skill than dry fly fishing.

Making something look alive with respect to its natural movements can be more challenging than making something look dead or still.    


Friday, March 21, 2014

Is the most effective egg pattern not even an egg pattern?

The pink "soft hackle" sow bug


  • Size 18-14 scud or 0XL nymph hook
  • Pink UV shrimp dubbing mixed with a little white rabbit dubbing
  • Soft chicken hackle tips
  • painted orange fire-bead
  • pink or orange thread (I use 8/0 because thread buildup behind the bead grosses me out) 

It is no secret that Montana trout eat this tailwater fly in the winter.  Some agree that the fish are probably taking it for roe because generally, anything small and pink works especially well during this time of year. You will see this fly used in almost every tailwater however, I think that this fly has yet to see its day in the sun as a staple freestone fly!  

Over the past couple of winter/springs, I have tested this fly out on Western Montana's freestone streams and not only does it work, it out-fishes flies like the worm, rubber-legs stones, and even pink glo-bugs in the same size!  This really gives weight to the argument that trout are taking these for eggs because although sow bugs do live in freestones, they are in too low of numbers to attain this type of a response from the fish.  Also, they would be in a dormant stage in the winter.

The most damning evidence that this fly is being taken for an egg is that the soft hackle sow bug doesn't look like, or resemble anything close to, what a natural sow bug looks like.  Sow bugs look like potato bugs (otherwise known as rolly-pollies) and have flat bodies.  They are never pink in nature (that I know of).  Another strange thing is that the fly is called a soft hackle and is tied like one, but you don't fish it that way.  Tying a soft hackle sow bug doesn't make sense anyway as they don't really swim around that much and they definitely don't emerge to the surface to hatch.  Lastly, there is something odd about adding an orange bead to this already strange pattern.

My theory: 
The soft hackle sow bug was intentionally designed as a roe fly.  Its name is simply an attempt to clear the consciences of the people who use them.  For instance, it is looked at as "hacking" for a guide to put a client on fish with glo-bugs but it is highly commendable to fish a "soft hackle."

An actual sow bug fly














The dirty glo-bug in pink


































So, if you don't have a problem fishing eggs, tie up as many of these as you possibly can.  I bet they work on every trout stream in America.  I've even used them ice fishing.

If you are the kind of person to give someone shit for fishing eggs, yet you fish these on your local tailwater -well, looks like you have egg on your face!