Any soft-hacklle patterns to imitate clinger mayflies?
Posted: Fri Jun 12, 2009 11:14 am
Hello all . . .
. . . with all this discussion of big heads vs. little heads, and wings in the round, and whatnot . . . combined with my recent on-stream experience of needing a pattern to imitate the Epeorus (I think that's what they were) mayflies that were emerging at the top of a turbulent pool, I realized that I didn't really have a soft-hackle / wingless-wet pattern that would do justice to a Clinger Mayfly rising up in the water. I guess I hold to the belief that one of the triggers for a "clinger hatch" is the big, bulky head on the nymph (how the silhouette is very different from other more streamlined swimmer mayflies). I reached for the only pheasant tail nymph I had in my box that had a very bulky head . . . in despair that I had no soft-hackles that would fit the bill. The PT nymph worked great, fished with sort of a Leisenring Lift after it had traveled thru the chop at the top of the pool . . . but man oh man, did I wish I had a soft-hackle!
And of course now I want to tie some . . . but I can't think of any models/predecessors to run on, of patterns where the taper builds up gradually to a very bulky (and flat!?!?!) head . . . and, to add complexity, where the hackle/legs are a bit back from the front, rather than right at the front.
I know many writers say that these are not mayflies to worry about imitating, because they seldom drift. But here I am proposing the need for one emerging/floating-up toward the surface.
I wonder if I'm opening a big can of worms here?
Thanls--Ted
. . . with all this discussion of big heads vs. little heads, and wings in the round, and whatnot . . . combined with my recent on-stream experience of needing a pattern to imitate the Epeorus (I think that's what they were) mayflies that were emerging at the top of a turbulent pool, I realized that I didn't really have a soft-hackle / wingless-wet pattern that would do justice to a Clinger Mayfly rising up in the water. I guess I hold to the belief that one of the triggers for a "clinger hatch" is the big, bulky head on the nymph (how the silhouette is very different from other more streamlined swimmer mayflies). I reached for the only pheasant tail nymph I had in my box that had a very bulky head . . . in despair that I had no soft-hackles that would fit the bill. The PT nymph worked great, fished with sort of a Leisenring Lift after it had traveled thru the chop at the top of the pool . . . but man oh man, did I wish I had a soft-hackle!
And of course now I want to tie some . . . but I can't think of any models/predecessors to run on, of patterns where the taper builds up gradually to a very bulky (and flat!?!?!) head . . . and, to add complexity, where the hackle/legs are a bit back from the front, rather than right at the front.
I know many writers say that these are not mayflies to worry about imitating, because they seldom drift. But here I am proposing the need for one emerging/floating-up toward the surface.
I wonder if I'm opening a big can of worms here?
Thanls--Ted