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But save it for something other than winter yellow perch.
I tossed a similarly colored Clouser Minnow for quite a while today. I used an intermediate line and had the fly in the strike zone. I used a very slow retrieve to keep the fly down. I subtly twitched it. It wasn't until I switched to spinning rod with a jig and Mister Twister and used a creeping retrieve that I got a bite.
Some days the fish simply will not honor our efforts to create the perfect fly!
Good luck with yours. It will definitely work but maybe not precisely when you want it to work.
Mark
Pasadena, MD
Slate Hobie Revolution 13 Hidden Oak Native Ultimate 12 Lizard Lick Native Ultimate FX Pro
I like it! Nice going. What materials are you using?
Thanks.
The tail is marabou, deer hair top and bottom and some dubbing on the hook shank
I tried drawing perch stripes on the top but I did them to close to eachother.
Check this out. I tied my first crease fly last night.
I found a material to use instead of epoxy when you use soft fly bodies. It is the same stuff that I use on the front of my Shannon's minnows. It is cheap, you get a lot of it for the price, and it dries clear and has some flexibility.
But over the years, I wanted uniformity in shape. I had thought many times of making a jig to hold the foam cylinder as I cut it but I never got around to doing it. My dad was a toolmaker and all I had to do was to ask him to build one. Then I found this product on-line:
The Krebs Popper Jig allows me to make various sized poppers and to cut each size uniformly.
After cutting the size you want, you simply slit the popper along the belly, insert and glue the hook in place. Then you add a tail. You can get as fancy with the tail as you like. Here's one where I added hackle:
But I've learned over the years that hackle on the tail is unnecessary. Fish bite them freely without the hackle and frankly, my goal in making flies is to make them quickly. If one takes more than 5 minutes or so to tie, it's not worth my effort because I know many simple fast ties work just fine.
You can also buy foam popper heads already formed at Bass Pro and on-line fly shops. I use them but not as much now that I have the Krebbs jig. Here are examples of those flies:
For all my foam flies I add eyes using two different diameter nail heads and dipping them into acrylic hobby paint and then dabbing it onto the popper. I paint the eyes for me. The fish don't care.
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