Fly Tying

Fly Tying: San Juan Worm

The San Juan Worm is a classic fly pattern that imitates the greatest fish catching bait of all time, the mighty earthworm. The San Juan worm is a fantastic pattern that has caught many fish. It is a bright go-to attractor pattern that seems to work best after a rain spell when the water is off color. The wire helps weigh down the fly and imitates a worm’s clitellum which is their reproductive organ. The San Juan worm is a simple and great pattern that everyone should have in their fly box.

This is a simple pattern that tends to produce fish after a fresh rain spell or when fishing discolored water. During or after a rain event worms will often come out of the ground in efforts to find a new home however more often than not many don’t survive and end up becoming food. Aquatic worms that fish feed on are also perfectly imitated through this pattern. Many anglers will tell you that a San Juan Worm isn’t a fly but to me if it’s tied onto a hook I consider it a fly.

San Juan Worm

Material List:
TMC – 2457 – Size 16
Uni-Thread – 8/0 – Red
UTC Wire – Brassie – Red
Vernille – Red

Fly Tying Instructions

Step 1: Set your hook up and begin making wraps with your thread.

Step 2: Near the bend of the hook tie in about three inches of vernille leaving about an inch for the tail.

Step 3: Tie in the wire where you began your initial first wraps.

Step 4: Wrap the wire tightly together around the hook.

Step 5: Wrap the remaining vernille over the wire.

Step 6: Make wraps underneath the vernille near the eye of the hook and whip finish.

Step 7: Take the fly off the vise and with a lighter burn a bit of the ends off to create a the classic tapered look. Finished.

Fishing Tips, Pyramid Lake

Pyramid Lake Fishing Access Map

Pyramid Lake is a remnant of an ancient lake that covered the majority of northwest Nevada during the Pleistocene/ice age era. Pyramid Lake covers over 120,340 acres and is one the largest natural bodies of water in Nevada. The lake is home to the world’s largest cutthroat trout the Lahontan Cutthroat Trout. This particular species of cutthroat trout spent thousands of years evolving into the most dominant predator of the Pyramid-Tahoe-Truckee River system. Unfortunately due to over fishing, damming, and the introduction of other species, the original strain of these fish were nearly declared extinct until recent rediscovery of the strain near the Utah-Nevada border. This strain of Lahontan’s that evolved in the lake today are called the Pilot Peak strain. The Pilot Peak cutthroats grow at an astonishing rate and reached over 20 pounds putting this fishery on the map as one of the greatest in the world.

Pyramid Lake is a large lake that is has many beaches and points where anglers gamble to try and catch the fish-of-a-lifetime.

I’ve created a Google map to show different beaches and points of interest. I used GPSnauticalcharts to mark the depths on beaches. I self calculated the distance between the shore and 4′ of depth (average water an angler would fish in with a ladder) to identify a rough average fishing depth. The longer the distance to get to 4′ the shallower, the shorter the distance to get to 4′ the deeper. Clicking on the marked colored areas will show the fishing depth.

Light Blue = Shallow with an average fishing depth of 6-9′.
Dark Blue = Moderate with an average fishing depth of 6-12′.
Purple = Deep with an average fishing depth of +15′.

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