Thank you all, you are too kind these are bushy unruly fishing flies, but purposefully so
The magic in the Sloane’s fur fly is in how it fishes. Most people don’t give it the thought or time it deserves and dismiss it as poorly tied or designed when they cast it out and it floats!
The highland lakes in Tassie are quite shallow high altitude, it’s wade polaroiding and in the early season fishing for what we call tailers. Fish that forage in the high water shallows before the sun gets up. You’ll often be kneeling in crunchy grass or ice
This fly floats and takes quite a while to become waterlogged. If you want it to sink you can speed up the process by squeezing the fly when it’s wet or holding it under water and squeezing the trapped air bubbles out. Even once water logged the fly sinks slooooowly, if tied well it’s almost neutrally buoyant. I like to find a fish cast well ahead of it and past it’s feeding lane, give it one or two short sharp strips to get it under the surface, sometimes it rises to the surface again slowly and other times it sinks ever so slowly but it is usually suspended just right for when the trout reaches the fly. Lots of movement in this one especially with the generous hackle collar...
If the fly becomes too water logged, squeeze it out of the water or give it a few false casts and your good to go...
K