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Thread: wasps/bees

  1. #1

    Default wasps/bees

    im already dreaming of summer. but its time too fill the boxes. i was wondering if anyone uses wasp or bee patterns in the summer. this year on the bow i saw many float by me while i nymphed and was wonderin if there any good at a searching/attractor patterns. theres always the odd fish rolling or splashing around in a run 12 months of the year. but in the summer there wasnt many hoppers around.stimmulators and other attractors did work. i found a great foam one in the latest fly tyer magazine and was gonna tye a few dozen up and give it a shot regardless, im just curious as too how many people actually use em ot have tried em.

  2. #2

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    sunskyhooksnwater:

    After hearing about the bee exploits of one of my fishing buddies; I whipped up a bunch of bees & hornets this year and they were a smashing success!!

    In my neck of the woods a beetle is my go-to fly for most of the summer and early fall. I use it mostly as a searching pattern and I do extremely well with it. This year I added bees to the arsenal and had a blast with them in the same way.

    I liked the fancy bee pattern in the most recent issue of Fly Tyer but I just tie a simple bee using pre-formed yellow jacket bodies from Bill Skilton:
    [url=http://www.billskilton.com/products.php?cat=17&pg=2&PHPSESSID=60e849c5746b3cb 97c097e75ad3ffce8:e70e2]http://www.billskilton.com/products.php?cat=17&pg=2&PHPSESSID=60e849c5746b3cb 97c 097e75ad3ffce8[/url:e70e2]

    I just tie them down in the middle of the hook shank and add some hackle in the center; fast, easy, effective. Like beetles I only tie them in one size and the fish take them readily.


    [This message has been edited by Bamboozle (edited 06 December 2005).]

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2003
    Location
    Hillbilly Hollow,North Carolina.USA
    Posts
    34

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    Fish love bees, yellow jackets, and wasp. I also use the Skilton foam cylinders that Bamboozle mentioned. I use Skilton's leg material for the leggs and antenna. I make the wings out of packing foam colored with waterproof markers. Simple fly to tie and it floats great.
    [url=http://www.myfishingpictures.com/showphoto.php?photo=32468&sort=7&thecat=500&passwo rd=:ee124]http://www.myfishingpictures.com/showphoto.php?photo=32468&sort=7&thecat=500&passwo rd=[/url:ee124]

    [This message has been edited by Taz (edited 06 December 2005).]

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    Roscoe, NY, USA
    Posts
    226

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    I am a huge fun of McMurry Ants, one of them is a wasp. I use black hackle most of the time, sometimes grizzly and is loads of fun because it is so easy to see.

    Joe Fox

  5. #5
    Guest

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    Wasps and Bee to fish, are what Jelly Beans are to people. They just love them, and we love our Jelly Beans.

    McGinty is a good fly pattern, Roger Stouff talks alot about a "Jitterbee" fly.
    here is the url for the McGinty...
    [url=http://www.flyanglersonline.com/flytying/fotw/060500fotw.html:a2b8b]http://www.flyanglersonline.com/flytying/fotw/060500fotw.html[/url:a2b8b]

    here is a url that demonstrates how to tie the "Jitterbee"
    [url=http://www.loup-garou.net/jitterbee.html:a2b8b]http://www.loup-garou.net/jitterbee.html[/url:a2b8b]

    I always have some Wasp/Bee pattern flies in my vest pocket when fishing.

    ~Parnelli




    [This message has been edited by Steven H. McGarthwaite (edited 06 December 2005).]

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    Deep Southern Illinois
    Posts
    486

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    Also, Don't forget the Classic McGinty Wet fly. A good imitaion of a bummble bee.
    [url=http://www.flyanglersonline.com/flytying/fotw/060500fotw.html:86d85]http://www.flyanglersonline.com/flytying/fotw/060500fotw.html[/url:86d85]

    I don't tie mine exactly like the picture. I tie in the red tail,then black and yellow chennile. Over wrap the black, then the yellow. Then just a black or red hackle head.
    Kahuna

  7. #7

    Default

    There is a pattern called the 'Ke-He' over here that was invented in the thirties
    by two gentlemen in the Orkney Islands called Kemp and Heddle - thus the name.
    They saw some small black bees being taken by the trout.
    It is a simple pattern:-

    Hook - 8 to 14
    Tail - Golden Pheasant tippets
    Tag - Red Wool try Fluo Red
    Body - Green or Bronze peacock herl tied fat
    Rib - Gold wire
    Hackle - Medium red brown


    There are variations in the hackle colour -
    White or Benbecula Ke-He
    Black Ke-He
    Orange Ke-he

    It is really a stillwater pattern but the larger sizes do well with Sea-trout (Sea run browns).
    It is fished successfully throughout the UK and Ireland.
    I was thinking of posting this in the stillwater board, but it looks like it has withered through lack of use.


    ------------------
    Donald/Scotland




    [This message has been edited by Donald Nicolson (edited 06 December 2005).]
    Donald Nicolson (Scotland)

    http://donaldnicolson.webplus.net/

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    Deep Southern Illinois
    Posts
    486

    Default

    Jitterbee, That has been a GO-TO pattern for me for several years, It is an easy tie. Also while you are at the Jitterbee WWW site , check out the "VOSI" (Vertically Orientated Stike Indicator) It is good to use it with the Jitterbee or anyother weighted fly. They are easy and cheap to make. Kurt Loup who runs the site got me started several years ago on the Jitterbee. Here is the VOSI. [url=http://laflyfish.com/flies/vosi.php:80361]http://laflyfish.com/flies/vosi.php[/url:80361]
    Kahuna

  9. #9
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    McMinnville, OR, USA
    Posts
    853

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    For a cool wasp pattern, have a look at this thread: [url=http://www.flyanglersonline.com/bb/Forum5/HTML/003907.html:9d3c2]http://www.flyanglersonline.com/bb/Forum5/HTML/003907.html[/url:9d3c2]

    Jay

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Sep 2001
    Location
    Out on the prairie -- USA
    Posts
    730

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    I tied up some of those hornets for a swap a while back, and some for me. They are grabbed quite quickly by the gills here.

    Don
    Don Rolfson

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