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Because the nymphs of many mayflies and caddis spend a good part of their life cycle living under rocks in both still and running water its not surprising that many have taken on a relatively flat form.
This knitted grub has a relatively flat body mimicking many of the naturals and also has plenty of structure on the body suggesting the various body segments.
Materials
Hook |
Thread |
Tail |
Body |
Thorax |
Knapek grub #8 to #12 |
Olive |
Pheasant tail |
Hands body glass |
Seals fur |
Process
A |
- Wind the thread from the 95% position to half way round the bend of the hook.
- Tie in a short tail of 4 o5 pheasant tail fibres.
- Return the thread 3/4 of the way up the hook shank.
|
 |
B |
- Tie a length of body glass on each side of the hook shank.
- I generally use two different colours but two strands of the same colour also works well.
- Once I have tied the body glass in I generally do a couple of half hitches of the thread and trim it off so that it wont be in the way when knitting the body.
- I also generally add a drop of super glue along the hook shank to ensure that the body of the fly will not rotate on the hook shank.
|
 |
C |
- Knit a body along the rear 3/4 of the fly.
|
 |
D |
- Re-tie the thread in directly in front of the body.
- Tie the body glass off directly in front of the body and trim the excess.
- Take the thread back to the 3/4 position.
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E |
- Using the single strand dubbing technique dub on a thorax of seals fur on the front 1/4 of the fly.
- Build up a neat thread head behind the eye of the hook.
- Trim the thread and varnish the thread head.
- If needed use a strip of Velcro to tease out some of the seals fur dubbing to represent legs and feelers and to add some movement to the fly.
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