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La Fontaine's Emerging Sparkle Pupa

Hook:
Tiemco TMC 100 # 14-16
Thread:
Brown 8/0
Body:
Green Antron Dubbing
Bubble:
Antron Yarn Green
Wing:
Deer Hair Natural
Head:
BuggyDub Dark Brown
The Pattern
We have already featured a version of this fly previously (Fly 27 Emerging
Sparkle Pupa) and thought we had better do the original as well as it
is a terrific fly. The material used in this pattern has been widely used
in the USA when tying caddis and midge patterns and its sparkle and sheen
is quite unique. The main difference to the version we personally tie
is that we use a curved hook, darker deer hair for the wing and slightly
different material for the halo/bubble. However this is the original tie.
Popular right across the world you just have to type in sparkle pupa in
your favourite search engine to see for yourself.
Fishing it!
Simply put, when
caddis are hatching in the Goulburn this fly takes some very large bags
of fish (of course all are released and we recommend removing the barb
too!). Some the of the better afternoons saw up to 25 fish caught with
some being very large. However the real highlights were in the evenings
when some other local fishers were managing 1-2 fish a night and we were
getting upwards on 10. While it isn't about numbers it is about matching
the hatch and this fly really does that well.
It can be fished
on it's own or with perhaps an elk hair caddis above it. The most important
thing is that it is fished dead drift to working fish. Rises can be rather
subtle with a small push the only evidence that the thing has been taken.
Extensive fishing over the previous seasons with this fly and it's prototypes
really have proven that this is one of the deadly dozen that all fly fishers
should carry in a couple of sizes at all times.
So take a moment
to tie a few and be ready for those times when the fish just won't touch
your emerging mayfly patterns. While we all look forward to fishing those
much heralded dun hatches as much as anyone it is more often the case
that fish in the cold water of the Goulburn are gorging on these helpless
'bugs' trapped just below the surface. Let us know how you go!
Tight Threads
Antony, David and
Geoff
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