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Thread: La Fontaine Deep Sparkle Pupa and Emerger Patterns/Colors

  1. #1
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    Default La Fontaine Deep Sparkle Pupa and Emerger Patterns/Colors

    Caddis are confusing to me an many others. Here are the questions:

    Would the bodies of the La Fontaine Deep Sparkle Pupa be the color of the larva, and;

    the body color for the Caddis Emerger be the color of the dun or adult?

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by lastchance View Post
    Caddis are confusing to me an many others. Here are the questions:

    Would the bodies of the La Fontaine Deep Sparkle Pupa be the color of the larva, and;

    the body color for the Caddis Emerger be the color of the dun or adult?
    Yes, it can be confusing. I believe that one has to focus on the particular species of Caddis being imitated. For example, this is the color variation on the Grannom or Brachycentrus from larva to adult:

    http://www.west-fly-fishing.com/ento.../grannom.shtml

    When I tie the deep sparkle pupa or emerging sparkle pupa (both of which are emergers) the color schemes I use are here:

    https://planettrout.wordpress.com/20...ion-completed/

    When tying larva (for free living or cased Caddis), I use different patterns from those above. They are simpler and reflect the nature of the larva...like this:

    http://midcurrent.com/videos/how-to-...-caddis-larva/

    Adults are different and are not called duns (May flies have a dun stage). I tie patterns to imitate cripples, the actual adult,ovipositing, diving adult, spent adult and drowned adult. Again, focus on the species in your area, take samples while on the water, identify them and proceed from there to tie representations of all the stages...both of these will help:

    http://www.amazon.com/Caddisflies-Gary-LaFontaine/dp/0941130983

    http://www.amazon.com/Caddisflies-Ea.../dp/0811704564


    PT/TB
    Last edited by planettrout; 10-29-2015 at 04:02 PM.
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    Seems to me:

    The body should be the color of the abdomen color of the caddis being imitated.....often a shade of green.

    The veil is primarily intended to capture air bubbles to imitate the gas bubble used by the insect to assist it in rising to the surface during emergence. The veil, I believe, should be a very light color (opaque) in order that the body color shows through.

    When I watched LaFontaine tie the fly, in person, he touch - dubbed a bright, near - neon green body which was thin. The veil was a light colored antron, and very sparse in order that the body would show through.

    There is a pretty close representation by Frank Thompson on Hans Weilenmann's website. The fly is third from the left on the top row of this page linked below.
    The only difference is that the body, while green, is not quite as bright as I recall LaFontaine showing:

    http://www.flytierspage.com/fthompson/fthompson.htm
    Last edited by Byron haugh; 10-29-2015 at 10:41 PM.

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    In CADDISFLIES he identified four major color combinations and several minor ones. If you know what species are common in your river you should carry pupa imitations to match them. My favorite for a searching pattern in this area is a brown and yellow pupa which has a body of golden antron blended 50/50 with brown fur, a gold or amber yellow overbody and a brown head. I'm not sure what colors would match the most common caddis near you.
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