Is that a foam body?
Maybe more of a Blue Gill thought, but these look interesting to me especially you guys up North with Trout water. I found this on Pinterest so hope you can see these simple Inchworms Flies!
Skip
Didn't work so let me just post a picture I got from it!
Last edited by skiptomylu; 08-20-2018 at 10:17 AM.
Peak Vise Dealer
Tying Materials, Chenille and Hackle
For Pictures of my Crystal, Nylon/Rayon or
New Age Chenille Please PM Me! Also I
have the Saltwater Neck Hackle and some
colors of Marabou plus other things!KyTyer thanked you for this post
Is that a foam body?
2018 G3 Sportsman 17
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Livescope Terrova 24v Ionic lithium batteries
Yes, let me post he whole recipe!
Skip
Here is his recipe....Story below recipe if you want to read it, interesting stuff!
MATERIALSHook: size #12 to #14, dry fly hook (TMC 100 or similar).Thread: 8/0, green.Body: foam strip. Cut with scissors. Tips should be rounded with a lighter.
Step 1
Tie the foam rubber strip with several thread turns at the same spot.
Step 2
Keep doing turns until you reach the hook eye, these should be separated evenly.
Step 3
Tie the foam strip once again with several turns at the same spot. The section between the two points should be let loose, so that it describes a curve.Tie off and cement the thread so that it remains firm.
Story.......
Mario Capovía Del Cet Argentina Mario Capovía Del Cet
Step by Step
Inchworm
About twenty years ago, I traveled with a friend to Junín de los Andes in the month of January and had some great fishing moments, but one of them really stuck in my mind. We got to the Aluminé river late and decided to spend the night there. The following morning I was just about to have some mate (classic Argentine infusion) as I watched some green stuff over some willow logs. I thought it was just some mate herbs people had left behind, but later on I realized that this green stuff were thousands of inchworms (the larva of many species of moths) that had fallen from the willow trees.I then took a handful of these worms and began dropping them on the water. I saw that some sank pretty fast and others remained at the surface, floating in the current. This depended on how they fell on the water, breaking surface tension or not.These certainly were prime trout food in that month, and though we had seen many flies tied to resemble these beings and heard stories about how effective they were, we had no imitations in our boxes or tying materials to make some of them.Many years passed from that day, but in the meantime I had hundreds of requests to tie these little worms, and using all kinds of materials: vernille, foam, dubbing, swannundaze, larva lace, vinyl rib, and more. But it was in the summer of 2006 that I got back to Patagonia, in the warm months of January and February. Then I got to know that these were really effective flies. I made a badly crafted imitation, a chartreuse EVA rubber strip tied at only one point on the hook, which looked like a V. Still, I had great results with it. Then, back in 2007, I was fishing with another friend at the Malleo river, where we caught 10 rainbows and a perch just by letting some of these flies sink between two willow trees. Small trout rose to take the fly, big ones just ate the ones that sank when these drifted close to them. We set a small weight on the leader about 40 cm away from the fly, and let it sink to the bottom, where the big trout were holding. These would cruise to take the fly as it drifted by them.These spots, at the edge of the willow trees, had rising trout most of the time because the wind made worms fall off them. Then one should place the fly close to the tree base and try to make the fly drift with no drag. Many times the response was immediate.Although there are many patterns that imitate inch worms, I will describe the one we used in this case. Some may say it´s too simple but I´d say it´s a must when fishing in January and February in waters with willow trees in its shores.
Peak Vise Dealer
Tying Materials, Chenille and Hackle
For Pictures of my Crystal, Nylon/Rayon or
New Age Chenille Please PM Me! Also I
have the Saltwater Neck Hackle and some
colors of Marabou plus other things!Bigbeeslab, snake River LIKED above postKyTyer thanked you for this post
Those are pretty neat skip.I tried something similar with large chenille but the foam looks way better and wont collapse like the chenille.Thanks for the recipe.
skiptomylu LIKED above post
That’s a cool idea, thanks Skip!!
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Proud Member of Team Geezer!skiptomylu thanked you for this post
Those are neat Skip. I see the gills tearing them up. Now I gotta look for someplace to scrounge some material for my try at them.
Creativity is just intelligence fooling aroundskiptomylu LIKED above post
Here is something that may give you some ideas or put you on the path to some good ideas.
4 Worm Patterns I Always Carry In My Fly Box | Fly Fishing | Gink and Gasoline | How to Fly Fish | Trout Fishing | Fly Tying | Fly Fishing Blog
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