Fly Tying

Fly Tying: Sculpinno

Spey casting and swinging big flies is my favorite method of taking fish on a fly rod. Although the number of fish I land while swinging is low, the takes are absolutely heart-stopping. There are thousands of streamer patterns that have been designed to catch fish on the swing but with so many on the market it can be difficult to find “the one”.

I wanted a swinging streamer pattern that had a little flash but not too much, good movement underwater, some weight but not too heavy, a good big profile but not too overwhelming, something familiar that I know works, and simple to tie. My Hero Sculpin was great for stripping however it was a bit too heavy for swinging. The Sculpinno was an amalgamation of these ideas.

I was a bit hesitant about this pattern as I don’t have a lot of confidence in swinging big streamer patterns. After a few successful trial runs on different rivers I’m more than happy to announce… it works!

Sculpinno

Material List:
Owner – Red SSW 5311 – size 4
Umpqua – U502 – size 4
Danville’s 70 Denier Thread – Red
Pseudo Eyes – Medium – Red
Senyo Intruder Trailer Hook Wire – Standard Black
Black Barred Rabbit Strip – Olive
Marabou Plume – Olive
Marabou Blood Quill – Sculpin Olive
Guinea Feather – Red
Ice Dub – White
Ice Dub – Olive Brown

Fly Tying Instructions

Step 1 – Start with the trailer hook. Pull both ends of the intruder wire through the top of the eye. As the wire forms a loop, pull the hook through the loop and pull the wire tight. The wire should be pointing down not up.

Step 2 – Start your thread and make a few wraps around the wire so that it stays in place. Tie in your rabbit strip in the middle of the shank. Be sure to split the hairs before securing the rabbit strip. Wetting the fibers helps make splitting the hair easier. Whip finish near the eye of the hook.

Take a bodkin and dap a bit of Zap-A-Gap to the bottom where all the thread is to make sure everything stays in place.

Step 3 – Take off the trailer hook and begin the body hook. Any straight eye short shank hook will do. In this tutorial I am using an Umpqua U502 size 4.

Step 4 – Before wrapping in the wire, make sure that both ends of the wire are parallel to each other and not twisted. Cut off any excess rabbit strip that exceeds beyond the middle shank of the hook and tie in the rabbit strip.

Step 5 – Dub in a good amount of white ice dub and be sure to leave at least an inch of bare shank. Take a dubbing brush or a piece of velro and brush out the fibers from the dubbing.

Step 6 – Tie in the olive marabou by the top stem. Spin the marabou. Be sure to pull back the feathers as you spin to avoid fibers getting caught. After a few turns, secure the wrap, pull back the feathers, and secure again.

Step 7 – Tie in the red guinea feather by the stem. Spin the guinea feather. I like to use hackle piers to pinch the top of the feather. After a few turns, secure the wrap, pull back the feathers, and secure again.

Step 8 – Tie in a sculpin olive marabou feather by the stem. Spin the marabou. Be sure to pull back the feathers as you spin to avoid fibers getting caught. After a few turns, secure the wrap, pull back the feathers, and secure again.

Step 10 – Tie in the pseudo eyes on the bottom of the hook. Figure eight the thread to secure. Dub some olive brown ice dubbing around the pseudo eyes. Be sure there is some dubbing underneath the eyes as I often miss dubbing this spot. End your thread at the eye of the hook and double whip-finish. Use a pair of metal cutters and clip off the body hook. Done!

Feather River, Yuba River

First Rainfall Of Autumn

Yuba River

I can’t remember the last time it rained… maybe in April or perhaps as far back as March? Fortunately Northern California got a lot of water during the last El Nino storm in March that filed many of the local reservoirs. It’s been a long hot summer but thankfully fall is starting to show its colors.

The first rainfall of autumn usually signals the opening of the fall steelhead season. Fall is infamous for the “egg hatch” that happens on rivers where salmon are present. Both resident trout and anadramous steelhead key in on these nutritious red eggs that are dislodged below the salmon and their redds.
After fishing the egg bite for several years I’ve simply grown out of the hype. It can get crowded with anglers camping at the most productive holes both nymphing and swinging in addition to boats drifting through them. Early bird gets the fish I suppose.

Yuba River
The Yuba is flowing at about 1,500 CFS right now with the 500 CFS coming from Deer Creek. The last storm really brought up the creek and added some good tint to the usually gin-clear water.
I spent a few hours nymphing below the bridge and didn’t do too well until I fished the opposite side. I had one little fish take an egg but the other three ate nymphs. Exciting jumpy fights.

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Feather River
I started at the low-flow section looking forward to swing the Feather but upon arrival I found a ton of salmon. A lot of salmon have made their way up to the low flow section with many of them in the process of pairing up. There was no way I could swing through them without snagging them.
Not only were there a lot of salmon but also a bunch of anglers. I wasn’t expecting so much company on a Tuesday. Instead of waiting for my turn to fish the run, I hiked to another run further downstream that I had all to myself for a moment. As I swung through the riffles I was expecting my first grab of the day but it never came. After switching my pattern I covered the riffle/run one more time but was left fishless.

I gave up on the low-flow section and decided to try the high flow since the outlet was still flowing high. Despite the high-flow section having better riffles and runs for swinging, I’ve only caught a few steelhead in this section. It’s a bit of a long shot but it beats fishing around the crowds. The end of salmon season in this section also makes it much more enjoyable to fish on a fly.

High-Flow With Some Steelhead Green

In the first riffle I swung through I finally got my grab. Not a very big fish but a steelhead on a swung fly nevertheless. I felt pretty confident that I was going to land it but after a few seconds of tiring it down it threw the hook. That’s steelhead swinging for you.

I got a few nibbles throughout the rest of day but no grabs.

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