|
Parachute
Floating Nymph
Hook: Tiemco
TMC 100 # 16 - 18
Thread: Dark
brown 8/0
Tail:
Brown Hackle Fibres
Body:
Brown Antron
Ball:
Dubbing tied in ball on top of fly
Hackle
: Brown Cock
Thorax:
Brown Antron
| 1/ Tie
in your thread behind the hook eye and wind back
towards the rear of the hook laying a nice even
base. Wind to a point just above the hook barb as
shown in the photo.
|
 |
| 2/ Get
a small bunch of fibres from a hackle feather
and cut them off. Even them out by stacking them.
Gently hold the butt or think ends and loosely
let the fibre tips fall through your grasp until
they touch the bench top, aligning them in the
process. Tie them in as shown so that the tail
is equal in length to the hook shank. Trim the
excess. |
 |
| 3/ Take
a small pinch of dubbing from the packet. This fly
can be tied in a variety of colours and shades thereof
to match your local bugs but in this case we are
using a nice brown which is the standard. Apply
a small amount of dubbing to the thread and keep
it roughly the same length/thickness along its entire
length. |
 |
| 4/ Wind
your rope of dubbed thread forward to a point
approximately one third of the hank shank's length
behind the hook eye. This is where we will tie
in the wing and hackle as in most parachute ties.
When you have done this remove any excess dubbing
and give a couple of wraps around the hook shank
to tie off and secure. |
 |
| 5/ Next
up take a pinch of dubbing and instead of applying
it to the thread in a nice even rope try and make
a ball as shown. Roll the dubbing between thumb
and forefingers gently until you get the desired
look. This will take a few minutes to get to learn
or get the feel of but is quite easy with the
coarser dubbings. |
 |
| 6/ Using
the thumb and forefingers of the left hand hold
this ball on top of the hook shank and get the
position right. When it is where you want it add
a couple of turns in front of the ball around
the hook shank in preparation for the next step.
|
 |
| 7/ Continuing
to pinch this ball securely in place on top of the
fly as shown tie it off as we do any parachute tie.
For more info click
here. Once this is secure add a couple of turns
around the hook shank for strength and to secure.
You can clearly see the horizontal wraps of thread
here in this photo. This now firmly holds the ball
in place and gives a solid base to tie the hackle
around. |
 |
| 8/ Tie
in a hackle. In this case I have tied it on the
far side of the wing, shiny side facing us and
will wrap counter-clockwise. Secure the hackle
with several wraps of thread winding towards the
eye. Then trim the excess hackle stem and move
on.
|
 |
| 9/ Pinch
off some more dubbing and apply it to the thread
as shown. This will be used to complete the body
of the fly, the thorax. Use only a small amount
of dubbing if you are new to this. Those of you
familiar with tying will pretty much grab the correct
amount through experience but it is always less
than you think when you are beginning. |
 |
| 10/ Wind
this dubbed rope back towards the ball to complete
the body as shown. Wind a little towards the hook
eye, trying to get slightly more bulk as you reach
the ball. Once complete remove any excess dubbing
and leave the thread hanging ready to tie off the
hackle in the next step. |
 |
| 11/ Wind
the hackle counter clockwise around the ball of
dubbing. We would suggest only a couple of turns
of hackle, a maximum of three with each successive
turn beneath the previous one. Tie off as we have
learnt in previous fly patterns. For more info
click
here. Trim the excess hackle when secure,
pull the thread down along the top of the thorax
to the eye and half hitch and trim to finish.
|
 |
| 12/ The
finished fly as seen from above. It sits low in
the water and is very effective. This photo should
give you some idea of proportions.
|
 |
| |
|
| |
|
The
Pattern
I cannot recall where I
first saw this pattern but I can remember that it was
Gary Borger who designed and popularised it. It is a
fairly good representation of a hatching mayfly dun
and can be taken for an emerger or cripple or even a
hatched dun. It is, as a result extremely effective.
On the Goulburn we are
very fortunate to have large hatches of smaller mayflies,
especially the smaller rust coloured ones that are so
prolific at the moment (February 2002 with low water).
These insects are emerging in their thousands every
evening and the rise is solid for the better part of
an hour in places. A Rusty Tailrace Dun fished in conjunction
with this emerger pattern works very well indeed. Fish
the emerger as the point fly.
This pattern is especially
effective when fish are bulging just beneath the surface,
that is when their backs break the surface during a
rise but not their noses. When this is occurring tying
on one of these flies in a size 16 is very effective
on our local rivers. Fish the fly dead drift to working
fish on a short line and fine tippet. To do this you
must get reasonably close to the feeding trout but this
is par for the course as accuracy and subtlety are key
requirements when fishing these hatch situations. This
is not a fly for general blind fishing.
While this fly is effective
it is not the be all and end all of emerger fishing.
You should always have some klinkhammers and unweighted
pheasant tail nymphs on hand when venturing onto local
waters. Working out what stage the fish are most actively
targeting will pay off and a selection of other emerger
possibilities should be carried at all times. Sometimes
fish are taking the emergers a foot or so below the
surface on their way up and in this case a small unweighted
nymph will work well. Look for swirls on the surface
rather than an actual fish. Try to read the riseform
and react accordingly.
So tie a few of these up
in a couple of shades of brown and even a few smaller
olive ones and try them out next time you are out fishing
the hatch. You may well find that the PFN becomes one
of your favourites too.
|