{{+1}}Cormorant – variant to the original tie{{-1}}
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The Cormorant was popularised by Graham Pearson who was a boatman in one of the English youth internationals. As the story goes it was one of those competition days when the fishing was tough and very few anglers boated fish. One of Pearsons angler bucked the trend and landed three fish using a short line cast only 20 yards or so and a slow retrieve with a single fly that has become known as the cormorant fly.
The name of the angler concerned unfortunately has been lost and its unsure if the angler conceived the fly or came across it somewhere else or if it was already called a cormorant or if Pearson gave it that name.
In any case is a simple fly that incorporates two of the greatest fly tying materials, marabou and peacock herl and it continues to be a popular single or team fly. It's also a fly that has lent itself to adaptation and you will often come across versions with glass or brass bead heads, bodies of all sorts of tinsels and colours and wings in a range of marabou colours. These days the cormorant and its many variations are fished in all sorts of ways from almost static right up to roly poly on a full range of fly lines.
The original tie did not have the tag tail or the lateral flash.
See also: Cormorant-competition version and original cormorant.
Materials
Hook | Thread | Tag (optional) | Rib | Body | Wing | Lateral flash (optional) |
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Medium shank wet fly (Tiemco 3769) | Black | Uni floss-hot red | Silver wire | Peacock herl | Black marabou | X small holographic tinsel-red |
Process
D |
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