Fly Tying

Fly Tying: Dancing Damsel

Damselflies will often make their first appearance when the water temperatures rise in the late spring and early summer. Although they can be found in virtually every body of water they are particularly abundant in weedy shallow lakes. The great damsel migration begins when large numbers of damsel nymphs begin to wiggle away from their underwater homes to try and reach the shore where they climb to the surface to molt into adults. Aquatic predators will often key in on the migration and gorge themselves until the migration ends.

The Dancing Damsel is a pattern that I came up with to try and match the naturals that I observed. During the migration the fish aren’t too particular about what patterns you use however they soon wise up as the fishing pressure increases and they are continuously fooled.

I believe that most commercially available damsel nymph patterns are either too big or too long. The majority of the nymphs I’ve observed here in California are a little bit over an inch long with slim bodies. Tie this fly in light olive, olive, and brown to match the naturals. Fish hunting damsel nymphs are usually cruising near the surface therefore a floating line with a 4x leader will get the job done. Use slow short strips and make three to five second pauses in-between each strip. Strikes can be subtle so be prepared.

Dancing Damsel

Material List
TMC – 2457 – Size 14
Uni-Thread – 8/0 – Olive
Mono Eyes – 10# 0.012′ test
UTC Ultra Wire – Olive
Mercer’s Buggy Dubbing – Olive
Peacock Herl
Marabou Plume – Light Olive
Pheasant Tail – Olive

Fly Tying Instructions

Step 1 – Set up your hook

Step 2 – Start your thread and tie in about ten strands of marabou fibers.

Step 3 – Tie in your wire

Step 4 – Wrap the excess marabou fiber butts to about 2/3rds the eye of the hook and cut off the remaining excess.

Step 5 – Wrap the wire to form the ribbing.

Step 6 – Tie in about five strands of peacock herl. Pull them back for now so that they are out of the way.

Step 7 – Dub in some dubbing halfway up the bare shank.

Step 8 – Tie in three pheasant tails fibers on each side to represent the legs.

Step 9 – To make the mono eyes cut off a bit of 10# monofilament and burn off the ends until you get the shape you want. Tie in the mono eyes using a few figure-eight wraps.

Step 10 – Add in a bit more dubbing to hide the legs.

Step 11 – Pull the peacock herl fibers over the mono eyes and cut the excess.

Step 12 – Secure and whip finish twice. Pinch off a bit of the marabou fibers and finished!

Ellis Lake

Get Ready For A Blowout

An atmospheric river is suppose to roll in within the next couple of hours and increase local river flows by a significant amount tomorrow. Not only will we see high amounts of rain but also lots extra run-off as it melts the snow up in the Sierras. This means that all the rivers will be blown out for at least a few weeks. And things were just about to get good…

Crappie Grab

I’ve been chasing warm-water species for the past few days and it’s been great. Bass are starting to show up near the banks at Ellis Lake making them fun targets to sight cast to. Most of the fish I find aren’t willing to play so I tend cover the entire lake casting to fish that will follow my fly rather spook at first sight. Some days are better than others but watching a few fish swallow your offering is amazing fun nonetheless.

Poppin For Bass

I also tied on a few poppers for the first time this year hoping to find some explosive topwater grabs. It was either going to be a hit or a miss due to the time of year, overcast, and slightly windy conditions. Luckily the fish did not disappoint. Running my popper through mats with holes in them and watching a bass hidden underneath smash my popper is, to me, the epitome of largemouth bass fishing. It looks like it’ll be a stillwater game until the rivers clear and the flows recede. Spring is here.

Bullgill
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