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Sulphur Nymph Experiment

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I’m never one to tout flies that I haven’t tried, so let me make it perfectly clear that this fly is still in development. Hopefully it will get field tested very soon (rain, rain stay away…). The driving force for this nymph is to get a natural mottled effect for my sulphur nymphs. I’ve tried hand blending dubbing, but I just don’t like doing it that way, it doesn’t feel elegant enough. Some shades of pheasant tail provide a very nice effect for sure – but I didn’t happen to have any of that on hand, so I dug into what I had and this is what I came up with – mallard dyed wood duck, mixed with turkey tail. I think it gives a nice looking mottled body. Is there a need for a new sulphur nymph? Probably not. But as you fly tyers know there doesn’t have to be a practical reason to try new things at the tying bench. Coming up with new combinations of materials to tie on a hook is it’s own reward, and if it actually catches fish, well that is bonus.

Turkey Mallard Sulphur Nymph:
Hook: Size 14 to 18
Thread: Rusty Brown Uni-thread
Tail: Mallard dyed wood duck flank feather fibers
Abdomen: Fibers from a turkey tail and mallard dyed wood duck flank feather twisted to form a “rope” and then wrapped onto hook.
Wing Case: Turkey tail
Abdomen: Amber dubbing
Legs: Grouse feather (partridge would work) – try to find nicely mottled feathers.

Woodchuck, or is it Groundhog?

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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”.