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Thread: Crackleback Fly

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
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    kansas city,mo.
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    the crackleback is a great fly. the variations are limitless. i fish them dry, wet and stripped like a streamer. as small as 16 if i am fishing dry and as big as an 8 if i am fishing wet and i want to strip it. alot of times i plan only fishing wet, so i tie several of them with lead tape on the shank to weight them a bit or i fish them on a sink tip line. i have fished the original version, but the most productive for me is a green flashabou body with furnace hackle. badger, grizzly and dun hackle are great alternatives as well. blue flashabou, red flashabou and orange holographic tinsel bodies are some others that have worked for me, but the green has been far and away the best in the waters i fish. have also thought of, but not tried yet, using wire for the body to eliminate the lead tape for fishing them wet. let us know what you come up with and post a pic or two of anything you think is particularly innovative.

  2. #2

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    The crackleback was invented by Ed Story of Feather-Craft back in the 1950's.
    The original color was a light olive color.
    Yellow of course has been very popular as well.

    Dpenrod gives a lot of good advice about colors. The green flashabou body can work very well.
    A white body has worked well for me at times. Try various colors and various hackle until you find what works best for your home water.

  3. #3
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    Jul 2004
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    Ashburn, Virginia
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    A great bluegill fly. I've been tying mine with Uni-stretch bodies in yellow, orange, red and chartreuse with peacock shellback. May give some of the spandex products a try, too; great color selection.

    Regards
    Scott

  4. #4
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    Feb 2008
    Location
    Middle Tennessee
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    A green body and red thread head works really good for trout also, been using this fly for some time now.

    Popperfly>-<(((((*>
    Born to Fish...Forced to Work !

  5. #5

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    It's a Woolly Worm. Call it what you want, in whatever colors and materials you want, but it's a Woolly Worm or simply a "Hackle" fly as they were called long ago. Possibly one of the very first styles of flies made in antiquity. No offense to Feather Craft but it's just a variation of a fly which has been around ever since there have been flies.

  6. #6
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    Aug 2002
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    Ames, Iowa, USA
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    Quote Originally Posted by jszymczyk View Post
    It's a Woolly Worm. Call it what you want, in whatever colors and materials you want, but it's a Woolly Worm or simply a "Hackle" fly as they were called long ago. Possibly one of the very first styles of flies made in antiquity. No offense to Feather Craft but it's just a variation of a fly which has been around ever since there have been flies.
    I have often thought that same thing (of course most flies are simple variations on others). It will be interesting to see how folks repond to your opinion.
    David

  7. #7
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    Jan 2005
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    Quote Originally Posted by djo View Post
    I have often thought that same thing (of course most flies are simple variations on others). It will be interesting to see how folks repond to your opinion.
    David
    tomato, tomatoe. who cares really? i have always thought of the crackleback as a dry fly that can be fished a variety of ways and the woolly worm as a nymph. have never fished the woolly worm as a dry and never intend to. i am sure you could fish it as a dry if you wanted. for that matter, how different is a woolly worm from a woolly bugger? i always tie my woolly worms with a red yarn tail. is a woolly worm without a tail a griffith's gnat?
    Last edited by dpenrod; 03-14-2013 at 08:51 PM.

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