I was using one of these today that I tied with a mix of olive caddis rabbit fur and a green synthetic dubbing, with a bit of lead free wire weight and I caught the biggest brown of my life- a 21.5”ish hog caught in the heart of the driftless. Thanks for this pattern! I love it.
It is my absolute pleasure to use it as well as the dubbing needle. Thank you so much for them. Knowing the wood came from your family farm makes them even more special. All the best. Tim
Greetings 🎉 from NW Michigan Tim ! Still moving Snow ❄️ here, but the end of April brings the New 2023 Season. I enjoy Your tutelage and will twist many of these up for the Trout this Year !!!! Thank You, Brian ✨🎣💫
Nice! Really appreciate the dual color dubbing loop technique. I’ll be using this for other flies also. Makes great natural camouflage color. Thanks a lot! 👍👍👌🎣
Really like the way you did that dual dubbing technique Tim. Thank you for that. A great looking caddis! I've done the brown marker on chartreuse before for a molting Dragon and it works good. Cheers.
ED........ don't get mad, but its a "caddis larva" . They are "worm like" insects, not nymphs. They are one of my favorite patterns, because most streams have an abundance of caddis hatches.
@@edwardmlotkiewicz2343 OK..... glad you didn't take it the wrong way. I know a lot of new "Fly-tyers" don't take the time to learn about the "lifecycle" of the insects they tye. I just wanted to make a point to the newer tyers.
@@johnkosick1464 I've been Flyfishing for almost 40 years and tying ( In earnest for a few years) and DO know the difference. It's just the tyers vernacular for subsurface flies.
Good Morning Tim. With a change of Color You could Tie a close imitation of The Frank Sawyer Killer Bug. It's getting harder and Harder to find That Specific Yarn. Well Done as Usual.
Being the Master of RandomObservation, that i am....😎 Does that Walnut Dub Tool match the Walnut Tool Caddy seen with some of your other vids? Cheers to all involved.🍻
A beautiful and very fishy Caddis Larva. Just to comment that it may not have enough weight to make it go deeper faster, although the hook is a 3XH. Have you tried this same tying with some weight? Thanks and congratulations on the tying.
Its always a good day when it's tightline day
Very nice! I'll add some of these in my spring box :) Thanks for sharing!
I was using one of these today that I tied with a mix of olive caddis rabbit fur and a green synthetic dubbing, with a bit of lead free wire weight and I caught the biggest brown of my life- a 21.5”ish hog caught in the heart of the driftless. Thanks for this pattern! I love it.
Nice see you using the dubbing teaser I made out of the the walnut from the family farm. You made my day.
It is my absolute pleasure to use it as well as the dubbing needle. Thank you so much for them. Knowing the wood came from your family farm makes them even more special. All the best. Tim
Greetings 🎉 from NW Michigan Tim !
Still moving Snow ❄️ here, but the end of April brings the New 2023 Season.
I enjoy Your tutelage and will twist many of these up for the Trout this Year !!!!
Thank You,
Brian
✨🎣💫
really nice effect!
Thanks Tim another awesome video. Appreciate all of it over the years.
Tied it on a jig hook and it looks amazing. Thanks for the simple yet realistic caddis fly pattern
Nice! Really appreciate the dual color dubbing loop technique. I’ll be using this for other flies also. Makes great natural camouflage color. Thanks a lot! 👍👍👌🎣
Beautiful fly
Really like the way you did that dual dubbing technique Tim. Thank you for that. A great looking caddis! I've done the brown marker on chartreuse before for a molting Dragon and it works good. Cheers.
Thank you for that was an amazing video !
Tim, this is a very nice pattern and it seems that it could be used to tie some scud variations as well!
Awesome
Recipe:
Hook: Hemingways H122 size 16.
Thread: UTC 70 Denier, rusty brown.
Body: Rabbit fur dubbing, olive & yellow-olive.
Back: I use cuts from a Pheasant tail (before twitching the body)
Nice, simple nymph. Probably very effective on Lockwood Gorge and the Pequest.
ED........ don't get mad, but its a "caddis larva" . They are "worm like" insects, not nymphs. They are one of my favorite patterns, because most streams have an abundance of caddis hatches.
@@johnkosick1464 I stand corrected. I called it a nymph as a generic fly type, but, it IS a larva.
@@edwardmlotkiewicz2343 OK..... glad you didn't take it the wrong way. I know a lot of new "Fly-tyers" don't take the time to learn about the "lifecycle" of the insects they tye. I just wanted to make a point to the newer tyers.
@@johnkosick1464 I've been Flyfishing for almost 40 years and tying ( In earnest for a few years) and DO know the difference. It's just the tyers vernacular for subsurface flies.
Good Morning Tim. With a change of Color You could Tie a close imitation of The Frank Sawyer Killer Bug. It's getting harder and Harder to find That Specific Yarn. Well Done as Usual.
Joli 👏
Being the Master of RandomObservation, that i am....😎
Does that Walnut Dub Tool match the Walnut Tool Caddy seen with some of your other vids?
Cheers to all involved.🍻
A beautiful and very fishy Caddis Larva. Just to comment that it may not have enough weight to make it go deeper faster, although the hook is a 3XH. Have you tried this same tying with some weight? Thanks and congratulations on the tying.
Это реально рабочая муха!!!
So simple, but I'm betting it's deadly!
What is this witchcraft. So simple and beautiful