{{+1}}Woolly bugger{{-1}}
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My first fish on fly fell to the magic of a Woolly Bugger and many have gone the same way since then. With its origins in America where it appears to be tied, as a Leach imitation there is also an English version with bead chin eyes called a Dog Nobler. Whatever the name it's a very good fly. It's also very versatile because the body can be made from a range of materials such as chenille, wool, dubbing, peacock herl, Estaz chenille etc. and eyes in various shapes and forms including dumb bell eyes, lead shot, bead heads, jiggy heads etc. can be added for appearance and weight.
In Australia it's probable that fish take it as a Yabby, small fish, mudeye or even a Leech depending on the colours of the dressing and the way it's fished.
It's also likely that on many occasion fish take a woolly bugger as an aggression response or because they are just interested.
The Woolly Bugger can be fish in all sorts of fisheries, on all sorts of fly lines, at all sorts of depths and using all sorts of retrieves dead drift through to “roly poly” to see what's working on the day.
The tie I have shown below is the basic black woolly bugger as I was taught it many years ago. These days I tie them basically the same except that I tie longer tails for waters that contain smelt of any kind and I tie them smaller for most of my fishing. By adding, subtracting and changing the type or size of materials you use you can of course tie a range of woolly bugger type flies and variants that is only limited by your imagination.
Here is a range of woolly buggers and variants.
Materials for a "midge" bugger
Hook | Weight | Tail | Rib | Body | Hackle |
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Size 8 to 12 Tiemco 3769 | (Optional) lead wire, bead chain, dumbbell eyes, bead head, cone head or split shot | Black Marabou with 4 strands of Pearl Flash or Krystal Flash | Silver wire | My personal preference is peacock herl but dubbing, chenille or wool work well also. | Grizzly hackle |
Process
B |
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F |
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G |
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