Smelts
Posted: Sat Aug 12, 2023 5:33 am
Champlain Jane
Charlie Mann
Hook - Mustad 94720
Thread - Red
Underbody - Red body braid
Body - Pearl braided mylar tubing
Tail - Pearl braided mylar tubing tag picked out
Throat - Pearl braided mylar tubing picked out
Wing - Purple or violet bucktail
Topping - Peacock herl
Head - Red
Years ago while tying flies at a trade show Charlie was approached by a Vermont guide who took clients fishing on Lake Champlain. He gave Charlie a pinkish colored streamer pattern he had called a Booker Special. Charlie modified the pattern and christened it the Champlain Jane in recognition of the Vermont guide. The streamer has been quite a fish getter over the years and has found more than a few kypes on the Miramichi River when tied on a salmon hook
Memphremagog Smelt
Henry McGowan
Hook - Mustad 94720
Thread - White
Ribbing - Flat silver tinsel
Body - Orange silk floss
Belly - White bucktail
Throat - Red hackle fibers
Wing - Yellow bucktail under purple bucktail
Topping - 3-4 peacock herl
Cheek - Patridge back feather
Head - Black
Straddling the boarder of Quebec and Vermont, Lake Memphremagog has a healthy population of smelts which are preyed upon by landlocked salmon, bass, trout and other apex predators. Trolling the streamer is a common method of fishing the deeper waters. McGowan declared that “Any damn fool can do … dragging a sliver of tin through deep water on a metal line for rainbows, lakers and such”. McGowan was a Memphremagog guide and developed the streamer around 1930.
Tebby Smelt
Robert Tebby
Hook - Mustad 94720
Thread - Black
Tip - Embossed silver tinsel
Ribbing - Embossed silver tinsel
Body - Orange wool
Belly - White bucktail
Throat - Red hackle fibers
Wing - Yellow, pink, purple bucktail layered or mixed
Cheek - Jungle cock
Topping - Peacock herl
Eyes - Painted black over white
It was in 1965 that Robert Tebby, from Omerville in the suburbs of Magog, created this artificial to lure landlocked salmon and brook trout at the entrance to one of the tributaries of Lake Memphremagog. Even today, this imitation of a smelt is most productive in this body of water as well as in many others in the province, even if this forage fish does not live there. The almost irresistible appeal of this streamer would be explained by its aspect both imitative and attractive.