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Gettin' buggy with it

Posted: Mon May 20, 2013 12:54 am
by Old Hat
A slight variation of a pattern I found in Charles Jardine's Flies, Ties and Techniques. Originally a river pattern which he favors using on still water. Meant to be fished in the surface film. Dry?... maybe ?, wet?... maybe? Either way, I say drowned buggy insect that has all the keys of fish catcher. The pattern is simply called the Hopper. He concludes that he doesn't know why really as it doesn't resemble much of anything.

Hook: Klinkhammer #16 ( I used this as I just like the shape and open hook point, Jardine uses a wide gape dry hook)
Thread: black
Tag: gold tinsel (original uses pearl mylar tag)
Body: red Davy's Bug Dub SLF (original uses red seal)
Legs: 6 (3 each side) single pheasant tail fibers with a knot near the ends of each
Hackle: brown genetic hen (original uses a softer cock hackle)
Hopper.jpg
Hopper.jpg (232.76 KiB) Viewed 6118 times

Re: Gettin' buggy with it

Posted: Tue May 21, 2013 9:27 am
by Kelly L.
I like this one very much. The color is gorgeous too.

Re: Gettin' buggy with it

Posted: Tue May 21, 2013 9:53 am
by Ron Eagle Elk
Very nice, Carl. The legs add a certain something to this fly. I hate making them, even with the little knit-picking tool. I like your hook choice as well. Well done.

Re: Gettin' buggy with it

Posted: Tue May 21, 2013 10:05 am
by hankaye
Old hat, Howdy;

Nicely tyed....

I've got a fair amount of patience, however, don't think I'd
handle the tedious bit of tying each (X6), for every fly ...
then placing each one 'just so..... :twisted:
:lol:

hank

Re: Gettin' buggy with it

Posted: Tue May 21, 2013 10:13 am
by Hans Weilenmann
Perhaps as a clarification - what the UK folks refer to as a Hopper would be a Crane Fly, a.k.a. Daddy Long Legs.

It is not referencing a Grasshopper.

Cheers,
Hans W

Re: Gettin' buggy with it

Posted: Tue May 21, 2013 10:22 am
by hankaye
Hans, Howdy;

Once again you helped to prove the old saying about the UK
and the USA. "Two Great Countries separated by a common language."
I think that's how it goes...

hank

Re: Gettin' buggy with it

Posted: Tue May 21, 2013 11:50 am
by Old Hat
Hans Weilenmann wrote:Perhaps as a clarification - what the UK folks refer to as a Hopper would be a Crane Fly, a.k.a. Daddy Long Legs.

It is not referencing a Grasshopper.

Cheers,
Hans W
He does mention that in the book Hans. Hopper/Crane fly. But again, this really doesn't match either one. The name doesn't reference a grasshopper in the UK but once brought to the states that is how the fly was fished normally, as a grasshopper pattern. Grasshopper/Cranefly the fish don't care as long as it looks like food.

Those UK folks are always messing things up. Hopper is grasshopper, Crane fly is a crane fly, and a Daddy Long Legs is an arachnid. :D

Re: Gettin' buggy with it

Posted: Tue May 21, 2013 11:56 am
by Hans Weilenmann
Carl,

I was not presuming to educate you on the matter 8-)

My post was meant as general info to correct any confusion on the "hopper" description.

Cheers,
Hans W

Re: Gettin' buggy with it

Posted: Tue May 21, 2013 11:58 am
by Old Hat
No correction presumed. Took it completely as sharing information.

Re: Gettin' buggy with it

Posted: Mon May 27, 2013 11:36 am
by michaelgmcgraw
In the U.K that would be referred to as a "Daddy" or "Hopper" as used mostly on still waters.