Orange is a colour that that seems to be quite attractive to trout and hot spots of orange are used very successfully in quite a few flies.
This fly came about as an extension of the idea of using very popular carrot dry fly and has turned out to be a great weighted attractor fly to use on the top or middle dropper when fishing a representation fly on the point to river fish.
Materials
Hook |
TBH |
Thread |
Weight |
Tail |
Rib |
Body |
Emerging wing |
Thorax |
Hanak grub #10 to #14 |
Orange |
Orange 6/0 |
Lead wire |
Orange hackle fibres |
Fine copper wire |
Orange seals fur |
Siman black peacock dubbing |
Hends Nc 35 Spectra dubbing |
Process
A |
- Most beads have a large opening at one end and a smaller opening at the other. Slide a tungsten bead over the point of the hook small opening first and position it behind the eye of the hook.
- Wind the thread in touching turns to directly above the point of the hook.
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- Tie your wire in along the top of the hook shank and then add desired number or wraps of lead wire. On this size #12 fly I have used a 3.0 mm bead and 10 wraps of 0.015 lead wire.
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- Tie in a tail equal 1/2 to 2/3 the length of the hook shank. Resist the temptation to make the tail too bulky and too long.
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B |
- Tie in a length of copper wire.
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C |
- Dub on a slim tapered body along the length of the fly.
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D |
- Wind the wire ribbing along the body of the fly forming 5 or 6 segments.
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- Take several touching turns of the copper wire behind the bead head before worrying off the excess wire.
- Take a small bunch of peacock dupping and tie it in just a little behind the bead. This is only a subtle hot spot so resist the temptation to tie in too much.
- Pinch the excess dubbing off leaving just a small tuft to represent an emerging wing bud.
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E |
- Roll a small amount of spectre dubbing onto the thread and dub on a collar between where the wing bud is tied in and the back of the bead.
- Take several tight wraps of thread directly behind the bead.
- Whip finish behind the bead, trim the thread and varnish the thread behind the bead and the bead itself.
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