Eye of the Guide

RISE ABOVE, BITE BELOW (part 2)

Satoshi Yamamoto - Dec 01, 2014

Sysadmin Note
Part 1 can be found here

 

Introduction:

Originally I meant to write one piece but I figured the following materials would be discussed better in the separate chapter.

Original Go-To Patterns:

These are two out of many "tested at the creek" and "approved by trout" flies. The midge APE is a surface dry-fly pattern and APE stands for Adults, Pupa, and Emerger. Indeed this can imitate either one or anything between of three stages at the same time. Pupaerger is the made-up term of Pupa + Emerger. I can't emphasize enough how effective this pattern is on midging trout. Sooner or later, Pupaerger will be approved as an official English word and be added to the Oxford Dictionary! I have been using both in black, as black is the most common midge color on the Livingston's spring creek and many other waters.

Hook: Emerger hook (Dai-Riki 125) #20-24

Thread: Veevus 12/0 or 16/0, black. It also forms a thread under-body.

Ribbing: Silver fine wire

Tail & Upper Body: Life Flex (or alike), black

Wing: CDC white or natural dun

Hackle: Grizzly

Hook: MFC 7048 Light Wire Scud Hook #20-24

Thread: Veevus 12/0 or 16/0, black

Ribbing: Silver fine wire

Tail & Abdomen: Life Flex (or alike), black,wrapped forward

Thorax: Black dubbing, preferably shaggy & sparkly

Midge APE – New Colors:

When my mentor and I came upon each other while fishing he offered me another bit of sage advice. He suggested that I tie and expand my go-to patterns in gray and pale olive. We do observe midges in those light colors at creeks. Though I have used cream patterns every now and then, this time I seriously considered expanding and experimenting with new colors. At my tying bench I happened to find some old Span-Flex (practically same as Life Flex used above) that someone gave to me a while ago. It was exactly the colors I needed!!


Gray

Pale olive

Hook: Emerger hook (Dai-Riki 125) #20-24

Thread: Veevus 12/0 or 16/0. Color to match the body. It also forms a thread under-body.

Ribbing: Silver fine wire

Tail & Upper Body: Life Flex (or alike), black

Wing: CDC white or natural dun

Hackle: Grizzly

Cream

Pupaerger – New Colors:

For new colors of Pupaerger, Span-Flex used for Midge APE above was easily incorporated. However, colors of dubbing for the thorax were hard to assign as every color I thought of looked good. Indeed any combination worked! Below, I will show each of gray, cream, and pale olive abdomens. Then I just list the successful colors for dubbing. Go back to the first chapter and observe color(s) of pupae I collected. So I suggest you adapt this pattern to match midges for the waters you fish.


  • Hook: MFC 7048 Light Wire Scud Hook #20-24
  • Thread: Veevus 12/0 or 16/0 gray or alike
  • Ribbing: Silver fine wire
  • Tail & Abdomen: Span Dex type material, gray or light gray,  wrapped forward
  • Thorax: Gray dubbing, preferably shaggy & sparkly.

Shown is Dave Whitlock SLF Dub Sowbug Gray.

NOTE: To simplify my own box organization, a gray version is all composed with gray materials.

Gray abdomen & gray thorax

Pale olive abdomen & thorax

Pale olive abdomen & tan thorax

Cream abdomen & dark pink thorax

Cream abdomen & gray thorax

 

  • Hook: MFC 7048 Light Wire Scud Hook #20-24
  • Thread: Veevus 12/0 or 16/0 to match your intention.
  • Ribbing: Silver fine wire
  • Tail & Abdomen: Span Dex type material: cream, pale olive, or alike,  wrapped forward
  • Thorax: Dubbing to match your intention, preferably shaggy & sparkly. Shown: Light olive Zelon Dub (top left), MFC Frog's Hair Pink Albert (bottom left) Dave Whitlock SLF Dub Scud-Shrimp Tan (top right) and Sowbug Gray (bottom right).

NOTE: During the development stage for pale olive and cream abdomens, all these four thorax colors seemed to match and were deadly. So there are 2 (colors of abdomen) x 4 (colors of thorax) = 8 color combinations. Furthermore, I tied them in sizes 20, 22, and 24. That is 24 size-color combinations!! Finally I tested them all at the creek and caught fish successfully!! Then don't forget I also had to experiment a gray-gray version in 3 hook sizes!! How many patterns I have tested would that be?

Here's gallery of iron-clad proof!! (Both patterns and all colors)

Rigging:

This two-fly rigging has been proven to work, especially when fishing with small flies (midges and Baetis mayflies). It is hard (impossible for some folks) to attach a dropper-tippet on the bend of tiny flies. Even if it's done, it seems to narrow the gap of small hooks. Don't assume the dry-fly in this rig primarily serves as an indicator for the dropper. I have had many bites on dry-flies and successfully netted trout.

If you can master the art of "subsurface match-the-hatch" successfully, you will be smirking with your catches behind the back of many other dry-fly enthusiasts who are frustrating themselves by their own limitations and unwillingness to change their views. Also I can guarantee you that, when the situation calls for you being a dry-fly fisher, will be as successful and competitive as your neighborhood dry-fly enthusiasts!!

Satoshi Yamamoto, http://leftyangler.blogspot.com, is a guide and a fly-dresser based in Livingston, MT.

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