Monday, 28 May 2012

Tube Bass Popper – Home Made Edition


Introduction

This is my first attempt at a tube fly and I used materials lying around in my house. The main materials are a cork from a port bottle and an old pen cartridge.  This tying sequence is just a basic idea of a tube popper and probably not the most correct way to tie a tube fly. It basically just gives you some ideas regarding the materials you can use for a fly like this and how easy it is to tie it. I hope this inspires you to try this alternative method of fly tying and also see odds and ends lying around in your house in a different light.

Tube flies have various advantages such as:

  • Various types of hooks can be used with one fly
  • The fly can be used with or without a wire trace
  • Often the fly will slide up the line once a fish is hooked and then the fish cant bite down on it
  • Another advantage is that the fish will only be left with a hook in the event of line failure

Materials:

1.      SF  Flash Blend - Bleeding Black (Alternatives: Bucktail, Marabou, Zonker Strip etc)
2.      Crystal Flash
3.      Crystal Chenille or Dubbing
4.      Saddle Hackle
5.      Rubber Legs
6.      Stick-on Eyes
7.      Marker Pen
8.      Nail Varnish
9.      Sally Hansen – Hard as Nails ( Ideally epoxy should be used)
10.  Superglue
11.  Wine Cork or Foam Popping Head
12.  Any material suitable as a tube – I used an old pen ink cartridge
13.  6/0 Thread



Materials
Cork and Pen Ink Cartridge
Tying Sequence:

Step 1:

Color the cork with a permanent market to act as a base layer for the nail varnish



Step 2:

Form a hole in the middle of the cork with a fly tying needle, then insert the tube trough the cork


Step 3-4:
Apply some superglue on the tube and push cork further up the tube

Step 3
Step 4
Step 5:

Paint the cork with nail varnish using long strokes



Step 6:

Leave the nail varnish to dry for approximately 20 min



Step 7:

Superglue eyes to both side of the cork and leave to dry for approximately 3 min



Step 8 and 9:

Paint a layer of Sally Hansen or ideally epoxy over the cork and leave to dry (the Sally Hansen will take around 20min the epoxy will take longer)


Step 8
Step 9

Step 10:

Cut shallow slits into the tube material to prevent your thread slipping on the tube



Step 11:

Add a base layer of thread onto the tube



Step 12:

Pinch wrap the SF material and secure with a few wraps



Step 13:

Pinch wrap some flash material and secure with a few wraps



Step 14:

Select two saddle hackle feather, pinch wrap the on both sides of the tube and secure with a few wraps



Step 15:

Take another saddle hackle feather and hold it with the shiny side facing you. Pinch wrap the feather to the tube and secure with a few wraps



Step 16:

Take two round rubber legs, pinch wrap it and secure with about 3 wraps



Step 17:

Turn the legs perpendicular to the tube and secure it further with figure of eight wraps



Step 18:

Wrap the legs in front of the cork and tie in some crystal chenille.



Step 19:

Wrap the chenille forward towards the legs and secure with two wraps



Step 20:

Wind the hackle over the chenille and secure in front of the legs with a few wraps



Step 21:

Figure of eight wrap the chenille over the legs and finish of with another few chenille wraps in front of the legs. Secure the chenille with a few thread wraps and finish of the fly by whip finishing the thread behind the cork.



Trimming:


Step 1:

Trim the SF and flash to the same length of the saddle hackles



Step 2:

Trim the legs to three quarters of the length of the tail.



Leg Trimming Result


Step 3:

Cut the tube behind the tail to around 5mm


 Step 4:

Cut the tube as close as possible to the cork



Final Result:

Top View

Side-on View


Rigging:


Step 1:

Slide the tube fly and a carp rig rubber sleeve onto the line and tie your choice of hook to the line



Step 2:

Slide the rubber sleeve over the hook



Step 3:

Slide the tube into the sleeve



Friday, 25 May 2012

CliMate Sports Scarf

The CliMate Sports Scarf is a multi-purpose, multi functional headwear that is meant to control temperature, manage moisture and offer UV protection. In most fly fishing conditions it will be worn to cover your neck and lower part of your face. This offers UV protection to the lower part of your face caused by sunlight reflected by water. It also offers some protection against insects such as midges, mosquitoes etc. 

Please read my review at: Flyloops.net

Wednesday, 23 May 2012

Weird Creatures - Braam's Place

On 6 May 2012, A friend and I visited Braam's Place next to Garsfontein Road (See map below):



View Braam's Place in a larger map


The venue is suitable for beginners and fishing is quite dependent on when the dams where last stocked. Due to this fact it is wise to phone the owner Braam Swart at 083 250 4029 before a visit. The dams are usually stocked with fairly big Rainbow and Golden Trout around 1.5 kg to 2.5 kg fish, they also contain some Largemouth Bass around 500 g.

I managed to catch a rainbow trout in the top dam (refer to map at the bottom) on a white salty bugger on a slow retrieve with an intermediate line. 

Top Dam with Lapa and Braai Area 
Rainbow Trout on White Salty Bugger
About a half an hour later my friend managed to catch a Largemouth Bass that was lying next to the bank in the second top dam (refer to map at the bottom)

My friend's Bass
I managed to catch another two Largemouth Bass in the bottom left dam (refer to map at the bottom) on a brown foam hopper where after the fishing became quiet. 

First fish on Hopper

Second fish on Hopper
I headed back to the top dam and tried the white salty bugger again it was not long before I added another two species to the list...but unfortunetly they did not belong to the fish family... A crab and a platanna (African clawed frog) grabbed my fly with gusto! 


Crab on Fly!

Platanna on Fly!

A map of the day's events:



View Braam's Place in a larger map

Wednesday, 2 May 2012

Making New Friends

One of the many reasons why I love fly fishing is making new friends! This sport is growing fast and it can be quite a daunting prospect to start from scratch with no assistance. On the weekend of 15 April, I offered to take two new friends to fish at Vaal Streams. 

As we arrived I help them to set-up some leaders and we were of to the slower section of the river to cover the basics of casting. After the short lesson, I left them to fish on their own and I waded across the river to my usual spot. The fishing was indeed very tough and after about 2 hours fishing with dry flies I opted to switch to nymphing. After changing my rig set-up I headed back to the car where helped the two student also to switch their rigs to   a nymphing set-up. 

I decided to nymph downstream to my dry fly spot where I would try to get some fish in the late afternoon hatch. After about an hours fishing I felt a very soft take on my Czech nymph rig and quickly set the hook. The fish fought quite hard and kept to the bottom, unmistakeably a Mudfish! The fish took my bottom fly, a floating orange hotspot PTN! I found this quite interesting as you normally catch Mudfish on the bottom and not in the mid-water column.
Floating Orange Hotspot PTN!


My only Fish for the Day!
After this fish I headed back to my dry fly spot, after about a half an hour I got a take on a black foam beetle pattern, but I missed the fish with the strike. The two student met up with me a while later and asked for some dry flies as they had no success while nymphing.      I gave them a black DDD and a black foam beetle and suggested that they head further downstream as I have not fished that area before!

I fished for another 20 minutes or so and decided to call it a day and head back to the car. After I packed all my gear in the car I tried  to signal the two students to head back. I noticed they where next to the bank, possibly netting a fish... I thought to myself I would eat my hat if they managed to catch a Yellowfish on dry fly!

When they eventually got back to the car they told me that there was a decent hatch of insects on the river, the weren't sure what exactly, but the fish where going crazy! They managed to catch one yellowfish and another one snapped the the line! 

First Yellow in the Net!
Future Pro!
I did notice a lot of beetles flying around during the day and it might have been what the fish where feeding on.


One of the Prolific Beetles on the Day!
All in all it was a tough days fishing, but still a success in my eyes, another two fly fishing addicts joined the club!