A Variant of Variant's seal spider
Posted: Sun Sep 27, 2020 10:13 pm
Recently, Variant shared one of his patterns with me that he calls a black seal spider. He mentioned that he thought it would do well on the Crooked River here in Central Oregon. For those of you unfamiliar, the Crooked is a small tailwater, heavily fished, but home to healthy populations of wild Oregon redside trout and mountain whitefish. The trout average about 10" but there are larger fish up to about 18" or so.
Lou's flies are always well thought out and he strives for translucence and livliness in his patterns. This fly doesn't look like the classic spiders and utilizes only a thread body and seal fur or substitute.
I've tried to be true to his intent with this fly and have managed to produce a variant that has proven to be a great fish catcher. I've had two great days, a week apart, in basically the same stretch of this river the last two times out. I used my variant as a point fly and after catching everything on this fly, cut off my dropper and this fly accounted for the three largest trout I've caught on the river this year. All were solid 15-17" fish which are really nice for the Crooked. Both days were solid 20+ fish days in the same 75 yard stretch of water. I'd say the fish liked the fly.
Lou's version that he shared with me, was a dark body and basically a black hackle. I've tied some with a black body and dark olive hackle, black and black, and purple body with a dun hackle of Angora Goat.
I've used split thread to wind the hackle up the body, in the traditional spider method. It creates a wild looking fly, that looks like I stuck my finger in an electric socket while holding the hook...
This isn't the first fly that Variant has shared with me and I hope not the last. They have all been winners.My photography won't do justice to how buggy these flies are, but you'll get the idea.
Lou's flies are always well thought out and he strives for translucence and livliness in his patterns. This fly doesn't look like the classic spiders and utilizes only a thread body and seal fur or substitute.
I've tried to be true to his intent with this fly and have managed to produce a variant that has proven to be a great fish catcher. I've had two great days, a week apart, in basically the same stretch of this river the last two times out. I used my variant as a point fly and after catching everything on this fly, cut off my dropper and this fly accounted for the three largest trout I've caught on the river this year. All were solid 15-17" fish which are really nice for the Crooked. Both days were solid 20+ fish days in the same 75 yard stretch of water. I'd say the fish liked the fly.
Lou's version that he shared with me, was a dark body and basically a black hackle. I've tied some with a black body and dark olive hackle, black and black, and purple body with a dun hackle of Angora Goat.
I've used split thread to wind the hackle up the body, in the traditional spider method. It creates a wild looking fly, that looks like I stuck my finger in an electric socket while holding the hook...
This isn't the first fly that Variant has shared with me and I hope not the last. They have all been winners.My photography won't do justice to how buggy these flies are, but you'll get the idea.