How To Tie A Deadly Trout Spey Swinging Fly - The Black Death

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  • Опубликовано: 19 окт 2024
  • A simple, effective and easy to tie swinging fly for trout. This streamer is a quick tie and is perfect for Rainbow Trout, Brown Trout and pretty much any aggressive predator that swims. www.youtube.co...
    Try this fly in a variety of colors to suit your fishing conditions.
    Materials for Dave's Black Death Trout Spey Fly:
    Umpqua Waddington 25mm Shank
    Senyo's Intruder Wire: amzn.to/2UBH8so
    Hooks: Owner Mosquito or Octopus Hook size #4
    Rear Body: Hareline UV Polar Chenile Copper amzn.to/2Y2ljUW
    Rear Hackle: Teal Flank Natural
    Wing: Hareline Extra Select Craft Fur Black
    Head: Hareline Rabbit Strips Black amzn.to/2CvHTMr
    Eyes: Hareline Bead Chain Eyes
    FLY TYING GEAR:
    Regal Medallion C-Clamp Vise: amzn.to/2Yp2MCu
    Anvil Ultimate Fly Tying Scissors: amzn.to/2HC6u6i
    OPST Dubbing Spinner
    Dubbing Brush (Golf Club Cleaning Brush): amzn.to/2OhEghP
    Rite Bobbin Standard Bobbin: amzn.to/2UWQ77m
    Dubbing Brush (Golf Club Cleaning Brush): amzn.to/2OhEghP
    Custom Gear: teespring.com/...
    Airflo Skagit F.I.S.T. Spey Line: amzn.to/2OdYRDT
    Airflo Flo Sink Tips: amzn.to/2CtlcIE
    Visit us: cooperlandingf...
    #flytying #troutspey #cooperlandingfishingguide

Комментарии • 61

  • @CooperLandingFishingGuide
    @CooperLandingFishingGuide  5 лет назад +6

    Thank you to everyone who checks this fly out! It is one of my favorites and I hope that you have a ton of success with it!

    • @src4526
      @src4526 5 лет назад +1

      it's a humdinger! i'm going to twist up a few.

    • @CooperLandingFishingGuide
      @CooperLandingFishingGuide  5 лет назад

      @@src4526 Thank you so much! Let ne know how it does for you+

  • @justinmorrall5958
    @justinmorrall5958 6 месяцев назад +1

    I was just curious if you prefer using braid or Senyo’s trailer wire on your flies? I have watched many of your videos and see you go back and forth.
    I appreciate all the information you have provided to the public. I have learned a lot from your videos.

    • @CooperLandingFishingGuide
      @CooperLandingFishingGuide  6 месяцев назад +1

      Great question! For flies that I don't want the hook to necessarily get caught up in the fly materials, I really like to use wire, but for flies where I want to incorporate the trailer hook in the fly or am not worried about the hook getting caught up in the materials, braid can be great (and cheaper lol).
      Thank you for watching and for your question!

    • @justinmorrall5958
      @justinmorrall5958 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@CooperLandingFishingGuide awesome, thank you!!

  • @vincentcoppola9832
    @vincentcoppola9832 Год назад +1

    Nice pattern - tied well with artic fox for wing.

  • @bretthumphries7911
    @bretthumphries7911 3 года назад +1

    Great fly! Nice work with the rabbit, and the scissors, for the rest of us Pettijean's Magic Tool is invaluable. Tight lines.

  • @stephencifka4629
    @stephencifka4629 6 лет назад +4

    Excellent fly, really nice, straight forward explanation. Thanks! This is my kind of fly, simple, has all the trigger components.

  • @Jesse-cy7ws
    @Jesse-cy7ws 2 года назад +1

    Thanks from Canada! I can Scandi or long belly this fly without the beads, makes a great leech.

  • @LineSpeedJediTimRawlins
    @LineSpeedJediTimRawlins 5 лет назад +3

    Cool fly and video, I learned a lot, like the sparseness of your flies, I'll bet they swim well.

    • @CooperLandingFishingGuide
      @CooperLandingFishingGuide  5 лет назад +1

      Thank you so much! I really like flies with as few materials as possible, but that still have a bigger profile, etc... thanks again!

  • @johnshand6176
    @johnshand6176 5 лет назад +1

    Very informative presentation. I will tie up a few for my first try at Spey on the Tongariro River, New Zealand. Thanks from down-under,

    • @CooperLandingFishingGuide
      @CooperLandingFishingGuide  5 лет назад +1

      Thank you so much! That really means a lot! Good luck at your first go around with spey fishing! Let me know how the fly does :)

  • @bretthumphries7911
    @bretthumphries7911 2 года назад +1

    Follow up - landed my first trout on trout spey, swinging a Black Death. I subbed buck tail for craft fur, and added a hot spot. Thanks

  • @jorgesaugar9712
    @jorgesaugar9712 2 года назад +1

    Excelente!! Desde Patagonia

  • @peterchuang6498
    @peterchuang6498 6 лет назад +2

    Thank you for this excellent video.
    Paying forward with the following recipe
    Materials:
    6/0 thread black
    Waddington Shank 25mm (or Senyo articulated shank)
    Trailer hook 4 or 6 (intruder-style trailer hook. i.e. opst, Gamakatsu Octopus, Partridge Z4)
    Braid line (i.e. Fireline) 50-lb
    UV Polar Chenille-copper
    Hareline bead chain eye (small)-gold
    Hareline Teal flank feathers-natural
    Hareline Extra select Craft Fur-black
    loon UV clear fly fish-flow
    Special tools:
    Golf club cleaning brush
    Dubbing spinner (i.e. opst, hareline or loon)
    UV flashlight

  • @roymay9758
    @roymay9758 5 лет назад +1

    Almost a Greg Senyo fly minus all the flash. I'll be tying a couple of those. Thanks

    • @CooperLandingFishingGuide
      @CooperLandingFishingGuide  5 лет назад +2

      Thank you so much for watching Roy! Indeed, very inspired by Greg Senyo for sure! Definitely let me know how they do for you :)

    • @roymay9758
      @roymay9758 5 лет назад +1

      will do ...thanks again

  • @mikekuczynski1552
    @mikekuczynski1552 2 года назад +1

    Nice

  • @mikekuczynski1552
    @mikekuczynski1552 3 года назад +1

    Nice !

  • @richardbrasington6494
    @richardbrasington6494 3 года назад +2

    What is the advantage of using a Waddington shank as opposed to a long streamer hook as the shank?

    • @CooperLandingFishingGuide
      @CooperLandingFishingGuide  3 года назад +3

      Hey Richard! Thank you for asking! I think a couple of benefits: you don't have to cut a donor hook, you can use the flat surface of the shank to keep lead eyes from rolling, you can also place the wire on top or below and keep it flat and from rolling. I'm sure there are other benefits, but I think for me, those are a few for sure :)

    • @ricksmith3571
      @ricksmith3571 Год назад

      The fly is more stable while swimming if tied on a shank. The double bead chain contributes to this as well. You can cause a more jumpy movement to one side by clipping one of the bead chain eyes. The fly tilts and jerks in that dirrection which has its benefits.

  • @stephencifka4629
    @stephencifka4629 5 лет назад +4

    size hook? what pound firewire?

  • @joshmocny5375
    @joshmocny5375 2 года назад +1

    If you wanted to change the hook, why wouldn't you be able to slide off the tube piece? Loop a new hook then slide the tube section back on? Am I missing something?

    • @CooperLandingFishingGuide
      @CooperLandingFishingGuide  2 года назад +1

      Usually the tube is longer and designed to "stiffen" the connection between the fly and hook, but this way doesn't help all that much. I mainly experimented with the tube in this fly fpr more of a color change or hot spot if that makes sense

  • @TheSilver9r
    @TheSilver9r 5 лет назад +3

    What's the overall length?

  • @lornegiles8863
    @lornegiles8863 5 лет назад +2

    I use super glue after the trailer wire or fireline is tied in, also on the bead chains...maybe overkill but they never fall apart

    • @CooperLandingFishingGuide
      @CooperLandingFishingGuide  5 лет назад

      I definitely like to do this a lot! The main reason I started tying flies is because I was so tired of them always falling apart :) Thank you for your continued support Lorne!

    • @lornegiles8863
      @lornegiles8863 5 лет назад +1

      I tie a lot of flies very similar to this but add some grizzly hackles for a wing on top...my weakness, they always have to have them!

    • @CooperLandingFishingGuide
      @CooperLandingFishingGuide  5 лет назад +1

      @@lornegiles8863 Same here! My original patterns like these started out with Grizzly Hackle and I sort of replaced them with rubber legs, but something about those darn grizzly hackles, they just make a pattern look amazing! Maybe I'll do a video of some of the older versions of some of these flies :)

    • @lornegiles8863
      @lornegiles8863 5 лет назад +1

      @@CooperLandingFishingGuide Yeah and change up the whole look of the fly different colored hackles...plus they swim so nice!

    • @CooperLandingFishingGuide
      @CooperLandingFishingGuide  5 лет назад

      @@lornegiles8863 Now you've got me wanting to go tie some flies! lol

  • @osamabinfaqn6726
    @osamabinfaqn6726 4 года назад +1

    I tie almost the exact same thing. Except mine’s on a tube.

    • @CooperLandingFishingGuide
      @CooperLandingFishingGuide  4 года назад +1

      That's awesome! I definitely tie these on tubes quite a bit :)

    • @osamabinfaqn6726
      @osamabinfaqn6726 4 года назад +1

      Cooper Landing Fishing Guide I also like your “trout intruder”. That thing is sexy. Thanks for the great content.

  • @randallbarton1585
    @randallbarton1585 4 года назад

    I don't understand tying fly's on a tube. Where's the hook? What's the setup?

    • @CooperLandingFishingGuide
      @CooperLandingFishingGuide  4 года назад

      Hey Randall! Thank you for the question and for watching! Essentially, you tie a fly on a tube instead of a hook - think of the tube as something like a coffee stirring straw. You then run the leader through the tube and attach a hook to the other end and pull it into the tube. The advantage is that you can use a shorter shank hook that the fish can not gain leverage over and also the fly sometimes separates from the hook, keeping it away from the fish as well. You can also use the fly over and over and switch the hook as it dulls or as you need to change it. I hope this helps and thank you again!
      Dave