The best mop fly video that I have found. Late to reply but glad I got to you finally. Tying some up in your unique way to fish here in Scotland. Tight lines. Derick.
Thank you! It seems the "mop" material in fly tying has become quite the thing in the past few years. I am glad you like this version and am curious as to how it fishes for you. - Ian Anderson
Can I add a thinner to my head cement? It seems super thick compared to yours and others I've seen. Same dispenser bottle, probably same product. I've got some lacquer thinner - I've thought about putting that in there! Any thoughts? Advice? Thanks!!
Yes, you can. You will need to find the correct thinner for your particular cement. The cement I use is called Fly-Tite and it is an alcohol based cement. It is pretty thin straight out of the bottle but easy to thin if using the applicator bottle that I use. - Ian Anderson
Enjoyed your video and nice looking fly. With the tungsten bead half way down the shank will the fly come through the water with the hook up or down? Seems like it would be less likely to snag if swam with the hook up. I would think panfish would be all over this when they are shallow on their beds.
Thank you for the compliment and I am glad you like the video. The placement of the bead along the shank will still flip the hook over so the fly rides hook point up. By having it further back on the shank the fly will not "jig" quite as much when fished. It will sink more horizontal and a little slower. Panfish love this fly almost year round. It does well in shallow water with a plastic or glass bead so it lands softer and sinks even slower. However, later in the year when the fish tend to be lower in the water column and along structure the tungsten bead helps get the fly down into the zone for deeper fish. - Ian Anderson
Funny you should mention that.... I had thought about a bright bead as kind of an egg and the mop could be like a short leech. Like a small egg sucking leech patterns. Thanks for the suggestion. - Ian Anderson
@@MrSurfangler Also got me to thinking.... instead of a hackle you could you some egg yarn. Kind of like a Nuke Egg Sucking Leech? A thought. - Ian Anderson
@@DressedIrons , Ian, That sounds promising, I think even just the mop will catch some fish :) . As far as egg sucking leeches go I don't think the Salmon really think its a leech attached to an egg. I would tie this with a 5-6mm tungsten bead in the front the hackle, the hackle adds movement and I think the colour contrast + the movement of the fly encourage strikes. You could also have reverse hackles like a Japanese style Kebari! Kebari's are deadly the current closes the hackle at the same time when you pull a fly towads you the hackle opens up like opening and closing an umbrella. While euro-nymphing this can be achieved by going from a slack sighter to a tight one and slack again. Its a subtler form of jiggy bugger retrieve
@@MrSurfangler All those options sound good and would be fun to investigate. Interesting that you mention a leech attached to an egg... all the fisherman, guides and shops I have talked to around the Midwest that fish for the Kings and Cohos out of the Great lakes love the Egg Sucking Leech but all of them will tell you they have never seen or even heard of an an actual leech attached to an egg! But the fish love 'em. - Ian Anderson
Glad you like the video. Thanks for commenting. The applicator bottle is sold by Wapsi (amzn.to/3EMxUzy). There are a number of different ones sold on Amazon. - Ian Anderson
Looks great! All dressed up for a day on the river to meet new trout.
Thank you, it's a fun fly. - Ian Anderson
The best mop fly video that I have found. Late to reply but glad I got to you finally. Tying some up in your unique way to fish here in Scotland. Tight lines. Derick.
Thank you! It seems the "mop" material in fly tying has become quite the thing in the past few years. I am glad you like this version and am curious as to how it fishes for you. - Ian Anderson
@@DressedIronsI will let you know how it fishes. Derick.
@@derickhannant9253 Thanks, look forward to hearing about it. - Ian Anderson
Great explanation and tutorial.
Thank you.
Nick in Redfield Arkansas
You are welcome, I am glad you found the video informative. Thanks for the feedback. - Ian Anderson
Thanks...going to tie some of these up! Love the way you set the bead!
You are welcome! It is a fun fly to tie and fish. I like the bead in the middle as it helps the presentation of the fly. - Ian Anderson
Interesting pattern….I will whip some up to try! Thanks!
I have not fished it for trout but it has been a wonderful panfish fly. Glad you like the video. - Ian Anderson
Thanks. I tied several last night for a spring trip to the Adirondacks.
Glad you liked the video and the fly. Would love to hear how they do on your spring trip. - Ian Anderson
Can I add a thinner to my head cement?
It seems super thick compared to yours and others I've seen.
Same dispenser bottle, probably same product. I've got some lacquer thinner - I've thought about putting that in there!
Any thoughts? Advice? Thanks!!
Yes, you can. You will need to find the correct thinner for your particular cement. The cement I use is called Fly-Tite and it is an alcohol based cement. It is pretty thin straight out of the bottle but easy to thin if using the applicator bottle that I use. - Ian Anderson
A work of Art! Nice job.
Thank you for the compliment. The great thing is they catch fish too! - Ian Anderson
Enjoyed your video and nice looking fly. With the tungsten bead half way down the shank will the fly come through the water with the hook up or down? Seems like it would be less likely to snag if swam with the hook up. I would think panfish would be all over this when they are shallow on their beds.
Thank you for the compliment and I am glad you like the video. The placement of the bead along the shank will still flip the hook over so the fly rides hook point up. By having it further back on the shank the fly will not "jig" quite as much when fished. It will sink more horizontal and a little slower. Panfish love this fly almost year round. It does well in shallow water with a plastic or glass bead so it lands softer and sinks even slower. However, later in the year when the fish tend to be lower in the water column and along structure the tungsten bead helps get the fly down into the zone for deeper fish. - Ian Anderson
I would place a chartuse bead with orange mop and vice the versa. The contrast would get any fish's attention and has been great for big King salmons
Funny you should mention that.... I had thought about a bright bead as kind of an egg and the mop could be like a short leech. Like a small egg sucking leech patterns. Thanks for the suggestion. - Ian Anderson
@@DressedIrons glad you liked it
@@MrSurfangler Also got me to thinking.... instead of a hackle you could you some egg yarn. Kind of like a Nuke Egg Sucking Leech? A thought. - Ian Anderson
@@DressedIrons ,
Ian,
That sounds promising, I think even just the mop will catch some fish :) .
As far as egg sucking leeches go I don't think the Salmon really think its a leech attached to an egg.
I would tie this with a 5-6mm tungsten bead in the front the hackle, the hackle adds movement and I think the colour contrast + the movement of the fly encourage strikes.
You could also have reverse hackles like a Japanese style Kebari! Kebari's are deadly
the current closes the hackle at the same time when you pull a fly towads you the hackle opens up like opening and closing an umbrella.
While euro-nymphing this can be achieved by going from a slack sighter to a tight one and slack again.
Its a subtler form of jiggy bugger retrieve
@@MrSurfangler All those options sound good and would be fun to investigate. Interesting that you mention a leech attached to an egg... all the fisherman, guides and shops I have talked to around the Midwest that fish for the Kings and Cohos out of the Great lakes love the Egg Sucking Leech but all of them will tell you they have never seen or even heard of an an actual leech attached to an egg! But the fish love 'em. - Ian Anderson
Thanks for sharing, may I know where you get the glue applicator ?
Glad you like the video. Thanks for commenting. The applicator bottle is sold by Wapsi (amzn.to/3EMxUzy). There are a number of different ones sold on Amazon. - Ian Anderson
Dog toys have smaller mop pieces
Interesting... I have not seen any on dog toys but will now look. I wonder if there are bigger ones? Thanks for sharing. - Ian Anderson