certainly unlike any rig I have seen to date. I hope it catches on as there are many soft hackle (spider) enthusiasts here in America. Thanks for sharing. All the best, Sean
I find the most frustrating part of fishing any team is having to haul in and unwind the droppers every few casts. I'm sure that I'm effectively only fishing the point half the time as a result. I shall certainly give this technique a try. Thanks for posting this vey clear and informative video.
Thanks for the video Stephen, am sure a lot of the anglers up here on the River Clyde will find this helpful. I will pop it onto our forum for our members to view.
Thanks to Stephen for this innovative idea. However I don't think I'm tying the knot correctly. I make the loop and run the tag end through twice, then pass the fly through and tighten, but when I tug on my fly, it opens the loop and runs back up the line toward the fly line. Any ideas? Thanks!
Ok this has been around for a few years now. I fish fast, gin clear water here in West Virginia, USA. Love my NC Spiders and want to try this. My question is how much does it weaken the tippet and does it cause any missed takes. Love the idea. And for added info I generally fishing 6x or smaller tippet. I tie a killer 28 Stewarts black spider.
Tie your dropper to your leader with a knot that will present the dropper 90 degrees off the leader, and use 12lb test flourocarbon for the dropper line. Keep the dropper line short, maybe 8 inches. Short, stiff, and 90 degrees will keep the droppers from twisting up on the leader. This fixed it for me.
certainly unlike any rig I have seen to date. I hope it catches on as there are many soft hackle (spider) enthusiasts here in America. Thanks for sharing. All the best, Sean
Pleasant surprise coming across this piece. Great tip.
Hi its oliver from your fly tieng class I can't believe I just found this channel!
I find the most frustrating part of fishing any team is having to haul in and unwind the droppers every few casts. I'm sure that I'm effectively only fishing the point half the time as a result. I shall certainly give this technique a try. Thanks for posting this vey clear and informative video.
Thanks for the video Stephen, am sure a lot of the anglers up here on the River Clyde will find this helpful.
I will pop it onto our forum for our members to view.
Thank you for this information it seems like a very effective method-:)
Amazing video, have seen this method done on my local rivers by older anglers in highland perthshire for grayling very effective
Basically a barrel stopper knot with an up line slipping bite holding the fly, hard to the barrel when tightened. I like it.
Stephen,
very interesting! I'll give it a try next month on my trip to Lapland.
Jan
Nicely done, got a few of your spiders in my box;-)
Very interesting thanks. Ive already made some leaders up and will try them on the hodder if this bloody virus ever goes away.
Thanks to Stephen for this innovative idea. However I don't think I'm tying the knot correctly. I make the loop and run the tag end through twice, then pass the fly through and tighten, but when I tug on my fly, it opens the loop and runs back up the line toward the fly line. Any ideas? Thanks!
Do you cast up or downstream
Up and across is best. It's more work but I believe it's responsible for the better quality fish.
Ok this has been around for a few years now. I fish fast, gin clear water here in West Virginia, USA. Love my NC Spiders and want to try this. My question is how much does it weaken the tippet and does it cause any missed takes. Love the idea. And for added info I generally fishing 6x or smaller tippet. I tie a killer 28 Stewarts black spider.
Hello Stephen, will this setup work using nymph flies?
Thank you
This looks useful, I would like to try it out on the upper reaches of Wharfe, do you have any thoughts about line strength?
Tie your dropper to your leader with a knot that will present the dropper 90 degrees off the leader, and use 12lb test flourocarbon for the dropper line. Keep the dropper line short, maybe 8 inches. Short, stiff, and 90 degrees will keep the droppers from twisting up on the leader. This fixed it for me.
I'll try it
Cant wait to try this. The hours I will save (attempting to) detangling droppers. Might give it a go on my sea rigs also
doesnt that lead to the fly not looking so natural wiithout a dropper
Yall need to come to TN and noodle. Catch a 60 lber with your bare hands.
Cheat 'em hahaha