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Posts tagged "rainys flies"

Autumn Offender Streamer Pattern

Posted by Ted Kraimer - December 16, 2013
Autumn Offender Streamer Pattern

Autumn Offender Streamer – Fish it year round

While the name of this trout streamer pattern suggests it’s only effective in the fall, it catches fish all year -round and not just here in northern Michigan. While imitating nothing in particular, it suggests a number of common food sources including sculpins, creek chubs, and juvenile trout  – staples to most trout’s diet.

This easy to tie fly incorporates colors and materials which often work when proven patterns in the fly box aren’t — making it a go-to pattern when fishing is tough. The long rabbit strip combined with the marabou and cone-head provides nice movement on the pause after a strip. With a bit of flash and a number of natural colors also incorporated, this pattern has just enough attention-getting characteristics and “bling” when the water is stained. But since the colors are relatively muted, it fishes well in clear water, too – which is often the water’s condition come fall.

Autumn Offender - Brown TroutFish the Autumn Offender on a sink-tip or floating line depending on the water and time of year,  and strip it back with a rod twitch and a pause. This streamer pattern has also caught steelhead when swung with a two handed rod and heavy sink-tip.  To learn more about streamer fishing techniques read my article, “Tips for better streamer fishing“.

Not into tying streamers? This pattern is available from Rainy’s Flies and can be bought in stocking fly shops.

Recipe:

Hook:
Thread:
Tail:
Weight:
Body:
Wing:
Over Wing:
Collar:
Head:

Gamakatsu S11-4L2H #4
Uni 6/0 – Camel
Rabbit Strip – Black Barred Sand Variant or Brown Barred Tan
Large Cone – Copper
Krystal Hackle – Olive Brown, Large & UV Polar Chenille Rusty Copper
Marabou Blood Quill – Golden Brown & Yellow
Flashabou – Kelly Green and Holographic Copper
Mallard Dyed Wood Duck Flank feather
Ice Dub – Golden Brown


Tying Instructions

Autumn Offender - Step 1Step 1. Slide cone onto hook by inserting small end through point first. Put hook in vise.

Autumn Offender - Step 2Step 2. Wrap a base layer of thread to above barb.

Autumn Offender - Step 3Step 3. Tie in a section of rabbit that is a little longer than hook’s length.

Autumn Offender - Step 4Autumn Offender - Step 4.5

Step 4. Tie in Krystal Hackle and Polar Chenille and at the same time, palmer towards cone
while stroking fibers backwards and stopping 3/8” behind eye.

Autumn Offender - Step 5Autumn Offender - Step 5.5

 

Step 5. Tie in a yellow marabou feather by its tip and wrap two to three times.
Too much feather results in bulk which has less motion so fewer can be better.

Autumn Offender - Step 6Autumn Offender - Step 6.5

 

Step 6. Repeat Step 5 but with a golden brown marabou feather.
Tip : A little saliva on your fingers stroked through the marabou
helps manage the materials, making the following steps easier.

Autumn Offender - Step 7Step 7. Tie in two strands of each color flashabou and tie on top as a wing, not extending
beyond the rabbit strip. Also, keep the ends staggered rather than trimmed to one length.

 

Autumn Offender - Step 8Autumn Offender - Step 8.5

Step 8. Take the Mallard flank and tie in by the tip. “Fold” the half of the feather on the other side of the
step from you by using your scissor’s edge to crease the fibers. Holding the feather taught, run your
scissors in your other along the feather to “break” the fibers allowing them to flow backwards.

Autumn Offender - Step 9
Step 9.
Wrap the flank collar two or three times depending on coverage, tie down and trim.

Autumn Offender - Step 10

Step 10. Dub a loose “trigger” ball of ice dub between flank and cone and the whip finish.

Autumn Offender Streamer Pattern - FinalFinished Fly – The Autumn Offender

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autumn offender streamer, fly-fishing guide, how to tie streamers, manistee, michigan trout fishing, Northern Michigan, rainys flies, sculpin, sink-tip, streamer pattern

Fonzi Fry

Posted by Ted Kraimer - April 5, 2012
Fonzi Fry

Fonzi Fry

Each year as millions of salmon eggs turn into salmon, both steelhead and trout take notice and advantage of these naive, freshly hatched “minnows.” I originally developed this fry pattern for steelhead, but it didn’t take long for the trout to convince me they like it too, making it a staple in my fly box from March through June.

In rivers like the Manistee, Betsie, Bear Creek and the Pere Marquette, where natural reproduction of salmon is prolific, have some fry patterns with you. After the salmon eggs develop into alevins in February and March, the egg sack disappears and small fish/fry swim in much of the same gravel section of water that steelhead have recently migrated to.

Fonzi - Steelhead

Fry Eating Steelhead

While these small fish are a protein source, they are also future competition for the steelheads’ offspring. As nature and instinct takes over, the salmon fry is eaten. Trout recognize these naive fish as a food source, too, and are often the reason you see trout breaking the surface when no hatch seems to be taking place — they are chasing these fry to the surface to eat them.

When fishing for steelhead, I fish this fly like any other nymph — typically below an egg pattern — and I tend to swing the fly at the end of the drift, even as it rises off the bottom. These slack-less drifts/presentations are unrecognizable as you feel the tug from a fish immediately. Look for the take to be anywhere through the drift with this pattern.

Fonzi - Brown Trout

Brown Trout Love “Minnows”

Both fry and trout tend to move to the edges of the river— especially in higher water — which makes it a great place to target trout. Fishing the Fonzi Fry on a floating line with either a mono leader or sinking leader with a down-and-across swing (think soft-hackle fishing) works well. At the end of your drift (the “hang-down”), twitch the fly and strip it back in to add movement and possibly elicit a fish.  This pattern can also be fished on a smaller sink-tip line to get a little deeper or it can be fished as a tandem rig behind a much larger streamer pattern.

The Fonzi Fry is available from Rainy’s Flies and can be bought in stocking fly shops. Below are tying instructions for you fly tiers.

Fonzi - Wet

Wet Fonzi Fly

 

Recipe

Hook:           TMC 2457 #8
Thread:         Gray Uni 6/0
Tail:              Grizzly Marabou
Body:            Ice Dub – UV pearl
Thorax:        Ice Dub- UV pearl
Collar:           Teal Feather
Eyes:              Bead Chain – Black, Small
Back:            Ice Dub – peacock

Tying Instructions

Fonzi - Step 1Step 1. Wrap base layer of thread to above hook barb.

Fonzi - Step 2Step 2. Tie in tail – length to be as long as hook itself. Tie off

Fonzi - Step 3Step 3. Dub ice dub body, loosely, 2/3rds up shank towards hook eye.

Fonzi - Step 4Step 4. Tie in Eyes just behind hook eye on underside of the hook

Fonzi - Step 5Fonzi - Step 5.5

Step 5. Tie in teal collar by the tip and fold, wrapping at least once just in front of the dubbed body.

Fonzi - Step 6Step 6. Dub in front of the teal and around the hook eye (figure-8)

Fonzi - Step 7Fonzi - Step 7.5

 

Step 7. Prepare some peacock ice dub and tie in so it extends forward,
over eye, wrap down behind hook eye, then move thread behind eyes.

Fonzi - Step 8Step 8. Pull Ice Dub back towards hook bend and tie down. Whip Finish.

Notes:

Pick out some of the body dubbing to give the fly a minnow like appearance but be careful it doesn’t extend beyond the marabou tail.

Be sure to use water-based head cement on this fly as other types will ruin the synthetic ice dub back. I have found Fish Pimp – Hard Headed head cement to be a very good product.

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alevin, Bear Creek, Betsie, fonzi fry, fry pattern, manistee, Pere Marquette, rainys flies, steelhead, trout

Swimming Hex

Posted by Jeanne Kraimer - March 13, 2012
Swimming Hex, Ted's - Fly Pattern

Ted’s Swimming Hex

A number of people have inquired about how to tie my Swimming Hex nymph pattern featured in Fly Tyer Magazine- Spring 2010 as a part of “Rainy’s Newest Flies for 2010.” I know what you are thinking – not another hex nymph pattern? Yep, but this one is a little different than the others out there.

Originally I designed this pattern for carp fishing – weighted eyes tied on the topside of the hook keep the point up and sharp, while a rabbit strip tail creates lots of motion when striped or from wave action. Fished slowly with short strips or “bumps” on the retrieve, this nymph fly does a great job of imitating the burrowing mayflies found in the silt of my favorite carp waters. But there are times when a fast-paced strip to emulate a swimming hex drives both carp and smallmouth bass nuts.

I think “swimming” this pattern does a good job of imitating juvenile gobies which are so prevalent in the Great Lakes. Steelhead anglers will find fishing this pattern under a float to be effective since it has lots of motion due to the rabbit strip tail and looks like the hex nymphs/wigglers swimming in the same waters.

I like to tie this pattern in a variety of different weights (Bead-chain eyes and various lead dumb-bell weights) to get down in a variety of depths and conditions – sometimes when fishing to moving or cruising carp and smallmouth bass, you want to fly to get down quick as you try to intercept them. After you tie this fly on be sure to massage some water into it to help sink it; rabbit hair inherently has lots of air trapped within causing it to float or suspend at first.

Not a fly tier? You can buy these from your local fly shop that sells Rainy’s flies.

Swimming Hex Recipe

Hook:           Mustad C49S #6 or TFS 2500
Thread:        Uni 6/0 Camel
Body:           McLean’s tan/brown barred rabbit strip
Thorax:        Wapsi’s Golden Stone Lifecycle dubbing
Eyes:           Bead chain – med or lead dumbbell eyes – extra small, or small
Hackle:         Pheasant Rump Feather
Legs:           Sili-Legs – pumpkin/black
Wing Case:   Peacock Herl
Gills:            Gray fibers from the base of pheasant feather

Tying Instructions

Swimming Hex - Step 1Step 1. Wrap thread base layer and tie in eyes on top of hook using figure-8 wraps.

Swimming Hex - Step 2

 

Step 2. Cut a piece of rabbit strip about three times the length of hook shank. Remove hook
from vise and poke the hook point through it so that the eyes are down and the fur is up.
Tie it down so it’s slightly on the curved part of the shank encouraging an upright position.

Swimming Hex 3 - StepStep 3. Tie in gills – taken from the bottom part of a pheasant rump feather.
Tie them so they flare on both sides of the rabbit strip.

Swimming Hex 4 - StepStep 4. Take a clump of peacock herl and tie in by the tips.

Swimming Hex 5 - StepStep 5. Tie in Pheasant feather by the tip and Dub a thorax that is just thicker than the rabbit strip.

Swimming Hex 6 - StepStep 6. Palmer hackle and tie off behind eyes.

Swimming Hex - Step 7Step 7. Figure-8 some Sili-Legs.

Swimming Hex - Step 8Step 8. Sparsely dub around eyes to cover thread wraps.

Swimming Hex - Step 9Step 9. Pull peacock herl over the back dividing the pheasant fibers
evenly and tie off just behind the hook eye. Whip finish.

 

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carp fly, grand traverse bay, mayfly, pattern, rabbit strip hex, rainys flies, teds swimming hex, tying instructions, weighted hex nymph
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