OK, so how sparse is too sparse?
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- CM_Stewart
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OK, so how sparse is too sparse?
After catching many bluegills with this fly, I finally retired it. It was still catching fish, though, so I could have kept fishing it.
So when do you retire a fly, or do you keep fishing it until there's nothing left but the hook and a bit of tattered thread?
When you tie, how sparse? Insects only have six legs after all.
So when do you retire a fly, or do you keep fishing it until there's nothing left but the hook and a bit of tattered thread?
When you tie, how sparse? Insects only have six legs after all.
- chase creek
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Re: OK, so how sparse is too sparse?
I think if a fly has moving parts (hackle, rubber legs, etc.) - as long as it has something left to wave around, it's still in working order. I think movement is probably the strongest trigger.
"A thing is right when it tends to preserve the integrity, stability, and
beauty of the biotic community. It is wrong when it tends otherwise"
Aldo Leopold
beauty of the biotic community. It is wrong when it tends otherwise"
Aldo Leopold
Re: OK, so how sparse is too sparse?
Dearest CM,
I like this post! You mentioned Bluegill and that's pretty cool! Do not retire the fly esp. if it's still working for you. Of course, who knows what the next outing will bring? They may refuse it all together but more likely they will come to it again. I think Chase Creek is right on! Movement is the biggest trigger, next comes color, and then size!
Good one! Please keep them coming!
Rather hot in this house,
Dougsden
I like this post! You mentioned Bluegill and that's pretty cool! Do not retire the fly esp. if it's still working for you. Of course, who knows what the next outing will bring? They may refuse it all together but more likely they will come to it again. I think Chase Creek is right on! Movement is the biggest trigger, next comes color, and then size!
Good one! Please keep them coming!
Rather hot in this house,
Dougsden
Fish when you can, not when you should! Anything short of this is just a disaster.
- William Anderson
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Re: OK, so how sparse is too sparse?
Great post. Another testimony to the durably of these bodies. Would you share how the body was tied and the material?
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- CM_Stewart
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Re: OK, so how sparse is too sparse?
The body is three layers of Pearsall's Hot Orange. There is a 5 turn whip finish at the bend, but no head cement. I am a bit surprised the body held up so well. Bluegill teeth are so sharp that they would reduce it to a bare hook eventually.
Re: OK, so how sparse is too sparse?
Yes, but they also have wings and tails. The hackle fibers have to represent those, too.CM_Stewart wrote: So when do you retire a fly, or do you keep fishing it until there's nothing left but the hook and a bit of tattered thread?
When you tie, how sparse? Insects only have six legs after all.
I've left a bare hook on after a trout's teeth completely unraveled the fly previously tied on the hook, not wanting to take the time to re-tie the whole team. Guess which fly caught the next fish?
My general rule of thumb is that I tie a fly with about 20 hackle fibers (I strip the stem so that there's about 10 on each side, and wrap the whole thing -- I don't actually count) expecting that a few will pull out just putting it into the fly box and taking it back out again. I usually think about retiring the fly when it's down to about the same amount of hackle you show in the photo -- if it had even two more fibers I would definitely keep fishing it.
Bob
Re: OK, so how sparse is too sparse?
Kinda over dressed for a midge larva, isn't it?
- letumgo
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Re: OK, so how sparse is too sparse?
(chuckle)
Ray (letumgo)----<°))))))><
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- CM_Stewart
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Re: OK, so how sparse is too sparse?
Better?
Daiichi Bloodworm
Hook: Daiichi 1153, size 12
Thread: none
Hackle: none
Body: none
Daiichi Bloodworm
Hook: Daiichi 1153, size 12
Thread: none
Hackle: none
Body: none
Re: OK, so how sparse is too sparse?
Very good sir. The lines are perfect as they blend from the abdomen to the thorax. The no see'um tie off at the head is a classic!