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  2. Elk Hair Caddis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elk_Hair_Caddis

    The fly was inspired by several palmered flies Troth like to fish and G. E. M. Skues' Little Red Sedge fly which featured a hair wing. Originally tied to imitate the Green Caddis hatch, the Elk Hair Caddis has since been tied in a variety of wing, hackle and body colors to simulate different caddis and small stoneflies. [citation needed]

  3. Woolly Bugger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woolly_Bugger

    The Woolly Bugger fly is constructed with a marabou tail (with or without some sort of flashy material in the tail), a chenille or fur body, and a hackle palmered from the tail to the head of the fly. Tying the pattern with a rib of fine copper wire helps protect the palmer hackle. The underbody may be weighted with lead or tungsten wire.

  4. Artificial fly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_fly

    For instance, Charles Jardine, in his 2008 book Flies, Ties and Techniques, speaks of imitators and attractors, categorizing the Royal Wulff as an attractor and the Elk Hair Caddis as an imitator, whereas "... in sea trout and steelhead fishing there is a combination of imitation and attraction involved in fly construction". [12]

  5. Fly tying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fly_tying

    Foam Beetle with buggy dubbing Black and Brown Wooly Worm with bead head Elk Hair Caddis. Fly tying material can be anything used to construct a fly on a hook. Traditional materials were threads, yarns, furs, feathers, hair, tinsels, cork, balsa and wire. Today's materials include not only all sorts of natural and dyed furs, hair and feathers ...

  6. Floating Flies and How to Dress Them - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floating_Flies_and_How_to...

    Floating Flies and How to Dress Them - A Treatise on the Most Modern Methods of Dressing Artificial Flies for Trout and Grayling with Full Illustrated Directions and Containing Ninety Hand-Coloured Engravings of the Most Killing Patterns Together with a Few Hints to Dry-Fly Fishermen is a fly fishing book written by Frederic M. Halford published in London in April 1886 by Sampson Low.

  7. A Concise Treatise on the Art of Angling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Concise_Treatise_on_the...

    Frontispiece (7th Edition) showing very early renditions of artificial flies Frontispiece (9th Edition). Although the first part of A Concise Treatise is a general angling work that provided little new information when it was published, the second part of the book--The Complete Fly-Fisher was one of the earliest how-to books on the subject of fly fishing and artificial fly making.

  8. Al Troth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Troth

    In 1957 Troth invented a new type of fly, the Elk Hair Caddis fly. [2] [4] This fly, and variations of it, has been a fly fishing standard for over fifty years. It was tied using the hair of a female elk, bleached so as to be more visible. [5] He also designed other flies, although none were as popular as the Elk Hair Caddis.

  9. Bonefish fly patterns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonefish_fly_patterns

    Bonefish fly patterns are a collection of artificial flies routinely used by fly anglers targeting various species of Bonefish. Bonefish frequent tidal sand and mudflats in tropical and sub-tropical latitudes to feed on benthic worms , fry , crustaceans , and mollusks . [ 1 ]

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