Here are a few of my initial lash-ups starting with none of the above - plans gone awry already! The Usk Naylor is a bit of a mysetery to me. I don't know what it's supposed to imitate and I've never fished it before, but having read a few articles and been lured by its mystique I've tied a few to experiment with. I guess there's as much entemological reasoning to the success of this fly as there is to the Snipe & Purple (a classic pattern of northern origin). It just works....apparently. Here's my own Usk Naylor tied to the original recipe. I hope to write about my success using it in the near future.
Usk Naylor |
Next is the Grannom, the hatches of which have brought the Usk a certain notoriety. The larvae of this species are "cased" and may not be accessible to trout, but the pupae, emergers and adults are most definitley of interest. I can speak with a small degree of authority here as I fished a Grannom hatch last April and the feeding activity was prolific. I've tied three patterns here to cover most of the key stages of the hatch.
1. An early pupa pattern - tied on a heavy buzzer hook, this is essentially a spider pattern but I wanted the buzzer curve to imitate the natural's wriggling-swimming motion after it has emerged from its case and started to make its way to the surface. I'll fish this at a variety of depths to coincide with pre-emerger activity of the hatch
Grannom Pupa |
2. An emerger patter - this is a CDC shuttlecock pattern aimed at representing the emerging Grannom at a stage where it is most vulnerable to predation
Grannom Emerger |
3. A newly emerged adult - a dry fly pattern kept afloat with CDC and Elk hair winging. I took fish on a very similar pattern during last year's Grannom hatch, but it also makes a great fly as part of a duo-rig and should carry a 2mm tungsten bead pattern on the point with relative ease.
Grannom Adult dry-fly |
So that's part 1 of the "Countdown". A few more nights of tying should see enough material for a follow up post covering LDOs, midge and March Brown.
2 comments:
Great ties Simon! I'll be following your blog from now on, so I'm looking forward to your future posts!
Keep up the great work :)
G
Thanks Gareth, very much appreciated
Cheers
Simon
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