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Chernobyl
Ant
Hook:
Mustad 9672 or Tiemco 2312 # 6-8
Thread:
Black 6/0 or 3/0 or stronger
Body:
Closed Cell Foam Black and Beige
Legs:
Rubber Black
Dubbing:
Peacock Coloured Synthetic
Indicator:
Yellow Closed Cell Foam
The
Pattern
" There is a giant
cricket in Eastern Utah affectionately called the Mormon
Cricket which migrates in very thick hordes. This huge
cricket tries to cross rivers such as the Green, but
in doing so becomes dormant due to the temperature change
created by the cold water, and floats helplessly down
river. It doesn't take too many of these to fill even
a large trout's gullet, so you must hit it at the upstream
end of the migration. Downstream, there will be no fish
moving at all unless a Rolaid drifts past. The Chernobyl
Ant's silhouette imitates this Stone Age looking cricket
very nicely.
Much like the Mutant Ninja
Cicada, the Chernobyl Ant makes a very good attractor.
An advantage of this pattern to a guide fly tier is
that the synthetic materials used to tie this fly make
it durable, very buoyant, inexpensive and quick to tie.
When a guide gets off the water, he doesn't have a lot
of time to devote to fly tying. He must tie his stack
of of flies for the next morning as quickly and as easily
as possible. Quick and easy doesn't detract from the
effectiveness of this pattern. During the late 1991
season on the Green River, the Chernobyl Ant was far
and away the number one pattern for pulling fish.
I attribute the invention
of this pattern to two Green River guides. First, Mark
Forslund came up with the design. His pattern was called
the Black Mamba. It was a very good fly in it's own
right, but it was hackled. Next, Allan Woolley took
Mark's pattern and replaced the hackle with rubber legs
to create a lifelike wiggle. The finished Chernobyl
Ant isn't pretty, but it is a real winner when it comes
to catching trout." (Emmett
Heath)
When we first saw this
fly in it's current form we couldn't believe they were
serious. Visiting angler Jeff Currier from Jack Dennis's
store in Jackson Hole fished it from our rafts many
years ago and to our amazement, brought fish up to it.
He left several for us to copy, as well as sending the
basic materials over to us after he had returned to
the 'states'. This fly has earned a spot in our guides
selection. As the quoted passage above suggested it
is easy to tie, durable (read indestructible) and floats
all day. When quizzed as to why the name, Jeff replied
with "take a look at it! It's a total 'effing'
disaster!" Since then we have recounted this story
to hundreds of anglers who stare in disbelief at them
in our fly cabinet. Suffice to say it works from our
drift boats, it works extremely well in rivers such
as the Big where those in the know have been catching
30 fish a day on the one fly and believe it or not has
taken a number of large fish from our private stillwaters.
And it doesn't look a thing like the Caenis and Midge
that are so prolific on our lakes.
Regards
Antony,
David and Geoff |