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Woodchuck, or is it Groundhog?

Lately I’ve been messing around with tying “one-animal” flies. That is, all materials come from the same beast, excepting the thread and the hooks. The post that I did a while back on the Casual Dress, got me thinking about this topic. The Casual Dress almost makes the cut – but the ostrich herl head rules it out. The first animal that I attempted is Marmota monax; the lowly groundhog – or woodchuck as some of you may say.

I’ve seen groundhog guard hair mentioned as a tailing material from time to time – so I picked up a patch of hog a few years ago, but never really used it.  The guard-hairs are great for tails, but I found that the banded coloration makes for nice looking wings as well.   The underfur is quite unruly, it is not easily dubbed – and you really need to use a dubbing loop to make it work at all.  That said, it seems to float well.  My “extensive” testing ( in a glass of water) revealed that it produces a pretty buoyant fly.

I have to admit that these are some fairly ugly flies. But there’s something buggy about them – I think I like them.  Please note that there has been no field testing of these flies.  This is merely an experiment at the vise – I’ll update you on the results if and when these make it to the stream.

woodchuck_comparadun

Woodchuck Comparadun

Woodchuck Comparadun:

Hook: Curved Shank, 3X-long hook

Body: Woodchuck underfur, tied in using a dubbing loop

Tail: Woodchuck guard hair

Wing: Woodchuck guard hair – I tied this in using a dubbing loop like a “fur-hackle”, then shaped it into the comparadun style “fan-wing”.

woodchuck emerger_01

Woodchuck Emerger

Woodchuck Emerger:

Hook: Curved Shank, 3X-long hook

Body: Woodchuck underfur, tied in using a dubbing loop

Tail: Woodchuck guard hair

Wing: Woodchuck guard hair.

Woodchuck Floating Nymph/Emerger

Woodchuck Comparadun:

Hook: Curved Shank, 3X-long hook

Body: Woodchuck underfur, tied in using a dubbing loop

Tail: Woodchuck guard hair

“Legs”: Woodchuck guard hair – tied in using a dubbing loop like a “fur-hackle”.

Midge Madness or the Tiny Terror

Midge#1 by Anthony Naples: done on iPod Touch with SketchBook Mobile

Midge #1 Sketch is based on a photo from the Winona Fly Factory Blog.

Well, I had been snowbound for almost a week.  The children didn’t have school all week – and they were getting a little stir-crazy (me too).  Normally with snow piled up outside, I’d have the vise out and be tying like mad.  Well – I was mostly otherwise occupied (see above about children not having school).

quarter midges

50 cents worth of midges: A few hours of tying (3 doz. midges)

However, I did find one afternoon to get a few flies tied.  Looking forward to some late winter and early spring fishing I find myself thinking about midges.  This probably conjures different images for different anglers.  For those of you out west, midges may make you think about the large tailwater rivers.  For those of us in Pennsylvania (think Central Pennsylvania streams) or in the midwest (think the Driftless Region), midges usually mean smallish, limestone spring creeks.  In either case, midges can be  a blessing and a curse.

A Blessing: It’s winter.  You’ve been fly fishing deprived for weeks, maybe even months.  You’ve gone through all your Gierach, you’ve read through all the latest magazine issues (maybe even ranted about all the articles about fly fishing for freshwater dorado in Bolivia – or is that just me?).  Finally a little break in the weather, corresponding with a break in your schedule, and you can finally get on the water.  For me, this usually means Spring Creek in central, PA, but for you maybe it’s the South Platte in Colorado or Waterloo Creek in Iowa.  You’ve got the heavy nymphs, maybe some buggers – but in the back of your mind you’re hoping for midges.  What joy these minutiae can bring.  It’s just such a wonderful thing to fish to actively feeding, and maybe even rising fish in the dead of winter.  A blessing and…

A Curse: Maybe you have it all figure out – me I’m still schooled sometimes.  You see the fish, actively feeding, you see the fish rising – you may not see the bugs, but you know they’re there.  Sometimes, it seems like no matter how small your fly is – the natural is half that size.  If you’re getting a little older – you may have trouble tying the thing on (I’ve given in and bought some cheater glasses this year).  If you manage to tie the fly on, and manage to get a hit, you can’t get a hook-up.  If you get a hook-up, you’re so excited (and out of practice) that you immediately break the tippet, or pull the fly out.  Maybe it’s just me – but midge fishing can be frustrating sometimes (but a good kind of frustrating).

The Patterns

There are more midge patterns than fly fisherman.  You could never tie them all (it might be fun trying though).  However, there are only a few that I fish time after time.  Maybe I could find “better” patterns – but after trying other flies and variations, I’ve settled on these as my favorites.  Of course, I always tie up some new patterns before heading out, it’s always fun to experiment.  These patterns are all pupa imitations  – I’ll need to work on another post to feature some dries.


Black_Thread_Midges

Black Thread Midges: My Favorite

Black_Thread_Midges

Black Thread Midge:

Hook: Standard dry fly hook, sizes 18-26.  You could use a curved scud-style hook, but I like to keep my hook selection to a minimum, so I just stick with standard dry fly hook.

Body: Black Thread.  I use Uni-Thread, 8/O.  This is a bonded thread.  Others prefer a flat thread that you can un-twist, to make a smoother body.  I like the texture of the Uni-Thread better, it is not so smooth and has a little “bite” to it.  It’s what I’m used to.  But use any black thread you like.

Rib: Small Diameter Silver Wire

The black thread midge is my go to pattern for midges.  Is it the best? Who knows, all that I know is that I use it and I catch fish on it.  I like the simplicity of the pattern.  I feel like the silver wire rib makes a nice contrast with the black thread.  In short I feel confident fishing it.  It may seem like a cliche but, you’ll catch more fish if you have confidence in the pattern you’re fishing.  You can vary the color of the thread and wire rib of this fly.  You’ll find a million variations on this basic pattern – but this is the one I’ve settled on for now.   I like to site fish it underneath to actively nymphing fish, or fish it in or near the film to risers.

als_rat

Al's Rat: Created by Pennsylvania Fly Tyer Al Miller

Al’s Rat:

Hook: Standard Dry fly hook.  Size 18 – 26 or so.

Body: Originally Brown mono-cord.  I used brown Coats & Clark sewing thread.  I like to twist the thread to form segmented body (like the Yong Special shown below).

Head: Sparsely dubbed Muskrat underfur.

The Al’s Rat was developed by Pennsylvania Fly Tyer Al Miller.  Read more about it on the Little Lehigh Fly Shop Website.  Being a Pennsylvania Fly Fisher I always have a special place in my fly box for PA patterns.  Again, this is a nice simple pattern, tied with two materials. Thread and muskrat fur.  I imagine you could change up the color scheme – but I usually tie it just as shown.

yong_special

Yong Special (size 18 and 24): Created by Andy Kim of New Mexico

Yong Special:

Hook: Standard Dry fly hook, size 18-26.  (Although a look at Andy Kim’s web page shows an improved Yong Special tied on what looks like a 3x-long curved shank nymph hook)

Body: Coats & Clark sewing thread. Summer Brown shown, also cream, olive. etc.  The thread is twisted to form a segmented body.

Head: Black Tying Thread.

Another nice simple pattern.  Although magnifying those size 24 flies shows how they are not as neat as I thought – oh well they’ll still catch fish.  Andy Kim is now selling his flies.  Check out Andy’s Website.

Diamond Midges: Pattern created by Pennsylvania fly fisher Don Holbrook

Diamond Midge:

Hook: Standard dry fly hook or any hook of your choice. Size 18 to 24.

Body: Underbody of flat silver tinsel, ribbed with a single strand of DMC Embroidery Floss.  The floss is made up of six strands – use one strand.  I tie them mostly in black, white, red, brown and shades of cream, tan and olive.

Head: DMC Embroidery floss.  Create head with multiple half-hitches of the embroidery floss rib.

This pattern comes from a book called Midge Magic by PA fly fishers Don Holbrook and Ed Koch.  This is a nice little book, it presents several new midge patterns and features some nice photos of naturals compared to the patterns.  The focus is definitely on the subsurface imitations.  Many of the patterns are tied with DMC Embroidery floss and Coats & Clark sewing thread.  So you’ll need to make a trip to the craft store or sewing store.  The nice thing about this pattern is that the DMC floss comes in dozens (maybe hundreds) of colors, so you can tie these flies in many subtle variations.

Dino Flies?

In the past I’ve tried to stick closely to fly fishing and related topics.  This post is a little bit of a stretch.  As a father of two young children I still get to think about dinosaurs , and share the enthusiasm that my kids have for them.

So my interest was peaked when I saw the news story that says scientists have solved the age old mystery of  What Color Were Dinosaurs? Well – solved for at least one species, the tiny feathered-dinosaur, Anchiornis huxleyi. Check out the story: Prehistoric patterns: A dinosaur gets color from head to feathery tail, in Scientific American Online.  Researchers were able to examine fossilized feathers and determine what color they were.  And so create a fully-colorized rendering of this 150-million year old creature.  It’s pretty cool.

Well, I need to try to make some tie-in to fly fishing so here’s a quote from the article:

“This was no crow or sparrow, but a creature with a very notable plumage,” Richard Prum, a professor of ornithology, ecology and evolutionary biology at Yale University, said in a prepared statement. Nevertheless, the coloring isn’t fully unfamiliar. Quite to the contrary, as the authors noted in the study, it is “strikingly similar to various living birds including domesticated fowl.”

This of course makes the fly tyer think “I wonder what dino hackle is like?” I know this fly fishing tie-in is a little weak, but I just thought it was a cool story.

Another Sketch and Another Question: Trout #2

trout_no_2

Trout #2 by Anthony Naples, done on iPod Touch, post-processing in Photoscape

This spring I took a trip to Yellow Creek in Bedford County, PA.  I caught this one particular brown trout that had spectacular blue spots.  I had never really noticed these before on brown trout.  Since then, I notice this feature all the time – it seems relatively commonplace.  Why did I notice these blue spots on that fish, when I’d probably seen them a hundred times before, on a hundred other fish?  I don’t have the answer.  I don’t know if it reflects only on me or on human nature in general.  But, apparently my power to ignore what’s right in front of me can be impressive.  What else haven’t I noticed?

Casual Dress: Some Variations on a Theme

casual_dress

Variations on the Casual Dress

The Casual Dress may not be a pretty fly, but its creator Polly Rosborough knew what he was up to when he first tied up this ugly beauty.  When I first started to tie flies, about 15 years ago, I was given Randall Kaufmann’s book The Fly Tyers Nymph Manual.  Mr. Kaufmann includes tying instructions for this fly in his excellent book.   He quotes Polly as saying that the Casual Dress was created to “simulate nothing more than just food”.

I must admit that, at that time, I wasn’t impressed.  I think that I wanted to tie flies that looked like something specific.  Flies that at least had all the “right” parts.  So I overlooked this fly for many years.   However, in the intervening years my attitude has changed quite a bit.  I have come to understand the appeal of flies like the Casual Dress.  But the Casual Dress was off of my radar until recently.

When the SwittersB & Fly Fishing blog featured the Casual Dress a little while back, it made me think “Oh yeah – I should tie some of these”.  Well It took me some time to get around to it but I finally did.   The Casual Dress is traditionally tied with just two materials; muskrat fur and black ostrich herl. It utilizes the noodle-dubbing technique for the body and a “fur-hackle” collar.  In this age of post-modern fly tying where anything goes and nothing is off-limits for consideration as fly tying material, the spare economy of this materials list is refreshing.

casual_dress_original_style

Casual Dress Original Style

The Casual Dress:

Hook: Tiemco 300, size 4-10.  This is a heavy wire, 6x long streamer hook.  I didn’t tie all of mine on a 6x long hook, but the longer hook makes it easier to create a nicely proportioned fly.

Tail: Bunch of muskrat with both the guard hairs and underfur.  This needs to be cut directly from the pelt.

Body: Muskrat fur, tied-in noodle style using a dubbing loop.

Collar: Muskrat fur with both guard hairs and underfur, same as for tail.

Head: Black ostrich herl.

Well, as many of you can probably attest, fly tyers have trouble sticking to the recipe.  We feel the urge to add a little bit of this, a little dash of that – it’s part of the fun.  So I was bold enough to riff on the theme a little.  I wouldn’t dare to make “improvements” on the original, merely variations.  In the picture below I present a few of these variations.  I stuck pretty closely to the original plan, but changed the body dubbing material and color, and in some cases the fur-hackle.

A few variations on the Casual Dress. Clockwise from top - Rust Rabbit Dubbing for body; All black bunny, bright-green rabbit dubbing body, all hare's-mask, all dark-olive hare's-mask

The possible variations are endless.  Are they necessary?  Probably not.  The original will catch lots of fish for you.  But fly-tying is a a lot like the blues, and rock-and-roll.  It’s the same three chords, endlessly tinkered with.  And every once in a while a classic is born.  So get the fingers loosened, practice some scales, learn a couple of chords and create your own classic.

Inspired by Others #1: Winona Fly Factory

There are numerous Fly Fishing related blogs that I enjoy visiting.   Many of them have  inspiring photos of trout and flies, and fishing destinations.  These images can be a nice escape from the suburbs, a brief journey to another locale, a small trip to Montana, Utah, Wales, Wisconsin or elsewhere.  So I thought it would be fun to use some of these photos as a jumping-off point for some sketches.

The first in this series, was inspired by a nice photo of some  Soft-Hackle Brassies from the Winona Fly Factory blog.  As a fly-tyer there is something so satisfying about looking at a neat row of newly tied flies, so full of hope and promise.  Just what you need in the dead of winter.

soft_hackle_brassie

Soft Hackle Brassies by Anthony Naples, inspired by photo from Winona Fly Factory

Note: Sketch done with Sketchbook Mobile on an iPod touch, with some post-processing in Photoscape

Thinking of Summer

panfish_01

Panfish #1 by Anthony Naples

In the bleak midwinter with thoughts of more coming snow, I was inspired by a photo from this past summer.   Many of us start our fishing lives with sunfish.  Some of us never leave that warm and comfortable place – watching and waiting for a red and white bobber to momentarily disappear.   My childhood is filled with sunfish.  As a fisherman the small pond filled with willing sunfish is my spiritual home.  I picture my grandfather, a WWII veteran sitting in a lawn chair catching sunnies.  What did the Italian winters of  1943 and 1944 feel like to that young kid from Pittsburgh?  Rain and mud, crossing mountains, the disaster of Anzio, the despair and loss, the uncertainty of life.  Did he think of youthful,  warm summers back home? How far away did they seem? He made it through the war, made it home to his local ponds.  Made it home to pass it all on to my father and on to me and so then  on to my children.

The cycle continues.   Days are getting longer, the sun is gradually getting higher in the sky and we are not forsaken.