Hook: Blue Heron Spey #1 http://flyhooks.org/blue-heron/spey
Body: Orange Seals Fur
Rib: UNI Mylar #10, Veevus French tinsel (counter-rib)
Hackle: Heron
Throat: Teal
Wing: Mallard
A slight variation of The Carron: with sealsfur in the body.
Hook: Blue Heron Spey #1 http://flyhooks.org/blue-heron/spey
Body: Orange Seals Fur
Rib: UNI Mylar #10, Veevus French tinsel (counter-rib)
Hackle: Heron
Throat: Teal
Wing: Mallard
A slight variation of The Carron: with sealsfur in the body.
Last year I got a chance to fish for salmon up in northern Norway, a great place with small rivers that are perfect for single-hand fishing after atlantic salmon. This year I’ll go back up again, but during my tying sessions this winter I started to read more about other peoples experience when it comes to salmon fishing with a single-hand rod in small(er) rivers. During this process I read a article (in norwegian) on Granbo Flyfishing about nymphs and salmon fishing, and had to sit down to investigate more about fishing techniques and nymph patterns for salmon.
Tying up 9 of each pattern – here in #4, #6 and #8 is representative for what I do when I start looking into new patterns: repeat it in different sizes to get a feel for how it works and what is too little/much material and how they are when going down in size. I still have #10 and #12 (just recently got these sizes shipped) to tie up in these patterns, and then still some other patterns to complement this selection of nymphs, but I’ll leave that for another day soon.
All flies tied on Mustad R90, the pictures below are all on a #4.
https://flytyer.org/eide/pattern/red-butt-nymph
https://flytyer.org/eide/pattern/copper-nymph
https://flytyer.org/eide/pattern/highlander-nymph
https://flytyer.org/eide/pattern/grey-and-silver
If you follow this blog you will have seen that there have been a problem with some spam posts lately: this is not my doing! There is a issue with the software I’m using, and I’m looking into it (and I might just change platform, but more on that later). Deleting posts as they come in, I could shut the blog down, but I have some plans that I’ll reveal in the not-too-distant-future :)
Even though the snow is still on the ground, and the lakes around Oslo is frozen solid, it is not long until spring time and first hatches begin. The Ephemera Vulgata is one of the biggest mayflies around here and in the forest around town you can get large hatches during summer! If you ever meet a hatch you should be ready, and I’m starting my box with some emergers, here in size #8.
A pattern created by Niklas Dahlin. I learned to tie catskill from him earlier this winter and this is his tribute pattern to Mary Dette.
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