Here's a little dry fly that matches the hatch in both the east and west. What is it?
Geomike wrote:
Here's a little dry fly that matches the hatch in both the east and west. What is it?
Sorry Mike. I donโt know anything about flies.
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bric
Loc: Helena, MT
Geomike wrote:
Here's a little dry fly that matches the hatch in both the east and west. What is it?
Some sort of parachute Adams? Mayfly imitation.
flyguy
Loc: Lake Onalaska, Sunfish Capitol of the World!
bric wrote:
Some sort of parachute Adams? Mayfly imitation.
The footprint is the same, but I have never seen a yellow, Adams and the tail is different. My tail is not sprit.
bric
Loc: Helena, MT
flyguy wrote:
The footprint is the same, but I have never seen a yellow, Adams and the tail is different. My tail is not sprit.
Ya noticed the two tails. Hope ur tail is not split, ha.
Only where it's supposed to be.
Definitely a parachute, but not an Adam's. The colors are wrong g. I could agree with the sulfur.
I am not sure, but I am going to tie some in all white for carp when the cottonwoods start snowing their seeds.
You might even catch a catfish. I've caught channel cats that had their bellies full of cottonwood seeds.
Geomike wrote:
Here's a little dry fly that matches the hatch in both the east and west. What is it?
It's a very poorly tied Yellow Sally. It is supposed to imitate a yellow stonefly. When the little yellow stones hatch, the Yellow Sally can be deadly.
BJMintz wrote:
It's a very poorly tied Yellow Sally. It is supposed to imitate a yellow stonefly. When the little yellow stones hatch, the Yellow Sally can be deadly.
It is definitely NOT a Yellow Sally! It is a mayfly imitation.
Fish4fun wrote:
A sulfur mayfly perhaps?
Yep. It is a para-hackle sulfur dun that can also be used to imitate a western PMD (pale morning dun).
I've successfully fished this pattern on Hat Creek and the Fall River in California.
Recipe:
Thread: yellow or tan Uni-thread
Tail: white or yellow hackle barbs or micro-fibets (tied split apart)
Body: yellow fine dubbing
Wing: elk or poly fibers
Hackle: Lt. Cahill rooster hackle
Have fun!
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