Pink & Partridge Flymph
Posted: Sat Jul 05, 2014 10:40 am
While I finish editing my photographs from the two weeks in Montana, I thought I'd post a subtopic concerning a fly that caught fish for me there. I had tied them a long time ago, I don't remember when, and they were still in my fly wallet, never used. There was a lot of talk about fishing white flies, millers—plus I saw a lot of pale yellow Epeorus mayflies hatching. I tied pale yellow flymphs with honey dun hackles that matched the hatch, but didn't interest the trout. Then I tried these pale pink babies with partridge, and the fun started.
This scan shows three of these flymphs that survived, and were still in my wallet when I returned home. You can see that the first one was bent during battle.
Here is one of the lean Madison rainbows caught on a pink flymph. What these mountain trout lacked in weight, they made up for in strength.
Here is the essential fly, on a #14 hook, with gold rib.
The dubbing is plain embroidery yarn, pale pink, snipped with scissors to different lengths from 1/8 to 3/8"—a new technique that I've started using recently, instead of cutting everything to the same length. Easier to work with, and looks more natural.
John Shaner had me fishing a classic Partridge and Orange with fine gold rib on the Firehole with mind-bending success. These are two of the survivors.
That was the only time I caught trout on consecutive casts, as John witnessed. This got me thinking about what would make a good flymph variation. So this pink flymph is essentially the traditional gold-ribbed Partridge and Orange with the addition of pale pink dubbing. Based on this experiment, the inexpensive embroidery wool may be enough, without resorting to hare's cheek, seal, etc.
This scan shows three of these flymphs that survived, and were still in my wallet when I returned home. You can see that the first one was bent during battle.
Here is one of the lean Madison rainbows caught on a pink flymph. What these mountain trout lacked in weight, they made up for in strength.
Here is the essential fly, on a #14 hook, with gold rib.
The dubbing is plain embroidery yarn, pale pink, snipped with scissors to different lengths from 1/8 to 3/8"—a new technique that I've started using recently, instead of cutting everything to the same length. Easier to work with, and looks more natural.
John Shaner had me fishing a classic Partridge and Orange with fine gold rib on the Firehole with mind-bending success. These are two of the survivors.
That was the only time I caught trout on consecutive casts, as John witnessed. This got me thinking about what would make a good flymph variation. So this pink flymph is essentially the traditional gold-ribbed Partridge and Orange with the addition of pale pink dubbing. Based on this experiment, the inexpensive embroidery wool may be enough, without resorting to hare's cheek, seal, etc.