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Mayflies are the age-old staples of fly-fishing.
There are, by far, more dry mayfly patterns than any
other dry fly. Let’s have a look at the lifecycle of
the mayfly and at the imitations created to resemble
them.
The mayflies undergo incomplete metamorphosis. They
have no pupal stage. Mayflies start out as eggs in the
mud of the river or lake, regardless of the species.
The eggs hatch out into larva that we, the fly-fishers,
call nymphs. These nymphs are quite tiny at first, but
grow over the winter and progress through what is called
larval instars. These instars are simply progressively
larger stages of the nymph. The larvae are similar to
an ant, where the little creature wears its skeleton
on the outside of its body, like a suit of armour. This
is called an exoskeleton. The exoskeleton does not increase
in size, so as the larva grows it must shed the exoskeleton
in favour of a larger one. That is what occurs and that
is what the instars are, simply the nymphs shedding
the smaller exoskeleton for a larger one. |
There are three kinds of mayfly nymphs, depending upon which
species we are talking about. There are clinger, crawler,
and swimmer nymphs. The clingers cling tightly to the rocks
on the bottom and are almost never available to the trout
until the hatch. The crawlers crawl along the rocks and often
get washed off and swept downstream. The swimmers are always
moving about and they too are swept around by the current.
Both the crawlers and swimmers are available to the trout
all winter and spring.
Patterns to imitate the mayfly nymphs are plentiful, but
their general shape remains fairly constant. One of the best,
and best known, mayfly nymph imitations is the Gold Ribbed
Hare’s Ear. This pattern has been a standard for decades and
continues to produce. Below are the instructions on how to
tie the pattern:
Gold Ribbed Hare's Ear:
| Hook: #10 to 16, Mustad 3906 |
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| Thread: Black monocord |
| Tail: Guard hairs from hare's mask
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| Ribbing: Gold wire |
| Body: Dubbed fur from hare's mask |
| Wingcase: Mottled turkey feather
over top of thorax (optional) |
| Thorax: Dubbed fur including guard
hairs from hare's mask |
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Fly Tying Instructions:
- Attach the thread to the hook shank and tie in the guard
hairs from a hare’s ear to form the tail.
- Tie in the gold wire.
- Form a dubbing loop with the thread.
- Wax the thread and dub the hare’s fur, including the guard
hairs, onto the loop.
- Spin the loop to form a tight thread and wrap on the hook
to form a tapered abdomen.Stop at the shank’s mid-point.
- Wrap the gold wire forward to form the rib.
- Tie off and cut.
- Tie in the turkey fibres on the spine and then dub on
more fur and wrap to form a large thorax.
- Pull the turkey over the back to form a wing case.
- Tie off and cut off excess.
- Whip finish and cement.
A second good mayfly nymph pattern is the March Brown nymph.
It can be tied in any colour pattern to match any nymph, but
the standards tie is described below:
March Brown Nymph:
| Hook: #8 to 16, Mustad 94840 or 9672 |
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| Thread: Black monocord |
| Tail: A few fibres of pheasant tail
or moose mane |
| Ribbing: Black monocord |
| Body: Brown floss |
| Wingcase: Turkey or pheasant quill |
| Head: Black |
| Thorax: Peacock herl |
| Hackle: 1 furnace hackle |
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Fly Tying Instructions:
- Attach the thread to the hook shank and tie in, at the
butt, a few strands of dark moose mane.
- Tie in a length of black monocord thread and then two
to four strands of chocolate brown floss.
- Wrap the floss to the mid-point of the hook shank forming
a tapered abdomen, fatter towards the eye, tie off and cut.
- Wrap the monocord forward as a rib and tie off and cut.
- Tie in the pheasant tail on the spine of the hook, then
the furnace hackle and then the herl.
- Form the thorax by wrapping the herl to the eye of the
hook ensuring to leave enough space to tie off and form
the head.
- Tie off and cut.
- Palmer the furnace hackle over the herl and tie off and
cut.
- Pull the pheasant tail over the back and tie off to form
the wing case.
- Cut off excess.
- Whip finish and cement.
Once the nymph is ready to mature (about April – May) it
swims as best it can to the surface and breaks its way out
of the nymphal case. This is called the emerger stage and
lasts only a few seconds to a minute. It is not uncommon to
find trout feeding upon the emerger almost exclusively and
at these times a good emerger pattern is essential to being
successful. Below is a good pattern you can tie to represent
the emerger.
Mayfly Emerger:
| Hook: #8 to 16, Mustad 94840 |
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| Thread: Grey pre-waxed |
| Tail: Brown hackle fibres |
| Ribbing: None |
| Body: Olive Brown antron yarn |
| Wingcase:Dun hackle fibres. |
| Head: None |
| Thorax: Same as abdomen |
| Legs: Dun hackle fibres |
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Fly Tying Instructions:
- Attach the thread to the hook shank and tie in, at the
butt, a few strands of brown hackle fibres.
- Form a dubbing loop and dub on an abdomen of olive brown
antron, or any colour that matches your hatch.
- Tie off half way up the shank of the hook. Do not cut.
- Tie in the wingcase hackle and then continue dubbing on
the thorax. Leave room for the head to be tied off.
- Pull the wingcase fibres over the back, tie off and trim
excess.
- Tie in the legs on each side of the thorax about 2/3rds
shank length so that they sweep back along the sides.
- Whip finish and cement.
Once the emerger extricates itself from the nymphal shuck
it pulls its wings upright like a sailboat and sits on the
surface drying its new-formed wings. This is the sexually
immature adult, or "dun". The duns can be easily recognised
by their opaque/greyish wings and long slender two or three
filament tail. While the duns ride along on the surface they
hardly ever move until they are ready to fly off. This provides
the trout with ample opportunity to feed on them.
There are innumerable dry mayfly patterns. All colours and
sizes are represented. To pick one out as best would be impossible,
so instead I will give you a pattern that I tie that works
exceptionally well during the dry mayfly hatch and you can
simply change the colour of the various parts to match your
local hatches. The colour pattern described here is for the
Western March Brown Mayfly:
Western March Brown Mayfly:
| Hook: #12 to 14, Mustad 94840 |
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| Thread: Black prewaxed |
| Tail: Two light horse mane hairs |
| Ribbing: None |
| Body: Dubbed light brown antron |
| Wing: 1 long (variant length) ginger
and 1 short (standard length) furnace hackle |
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This pattern is an "all hackle" pattern; it contains no "wing"
as such. The steps to tying it are as follows
Fly Tying Instructions:
- Tie in the thread and then the horse mane hairs.
- Cut the tail fibre off at about twice the hook shank length
(mayfly tails are very long).
- Dub a loop of light brown or tan antron and wrap to a
point mid-way between the hook point and the eye of the
hook.
- Tie it off and cut.
- Tie in the hackles tip first, first the short furnace
and then the long ginger.
- Wrap the long hackle quite thick and heavy.
- Tie off and cut the excess. Trim off the bottom side of
the ginger hackles you just wrapped so that only the top
1/3 of the hackles remains.
- Wrap the furnace hackle forward to standard density to
form the legs and thorax.
- Tie off and trim the excess.
- Whip finish and cement.
Some of you may not know what a "variant" is. The standard
dry fly hackle length is determined by the gap between the
hook shank and the hook point. In a standard dry fly the feather
barbules (hackle fibres) are just barely longer than that
distance. In a variant, the barbules are about ½ again as
long. Thus, the ginger hackle in this pattern sits about ½
again as high as the furnace hackle, thus forming the illusion
of a wing.
Once the duns’ wings are dry they fly into nearby bushes
and rest there while they continue to mature. In a few hours
they will once again break out of their present shuck and
emerge as the sexually mature "spinner". You can recognise
the spinners by their bright, glossy, translucent wings. They
then fly back to the water where the males swarm and hover.
The females fly into the swarm, mate, fall to the water and
lay their eggs, and then they die. When they die their wings
fall to the side and they look like little aeroplanes. This
is called the "spent spinner" stage. Trout can key in on this
stage as well, and a spent spinner pattern is needed to catch
fish.
Below is a fairly standard spent spinner pattern.
March Brown Dry:
| Hook: #12 to 14, Mustad 94840 |
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| Thread: Black prewaxed |
| Tail: Two light horse mane hairs |
| Ribbing: None |
| Body: Dubbed light brown antron |
| Wing:Elk hair, narrow, or ginger
hackle fibres, tied like aeroplane wings. |
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The steps to this pattern are the same as for the March Brown
dry above, except that you "X" in an aeroplane wing of elk
hair or hackle fibres instead of the wrapped hackle wings
and legs.
There is only one lake dwelling mayfly, the Callibaetis,
or speckled mayfly. Most of BC’s lakes contain this mayfly
and you should tie up some patterns to match this insect in
all its stages. The body is a very light blue/grey and you
can substitute this colour for the appropriate body parts
in the above-described patterns. The wings for the dry can
be tied with one variant length blue dun hackle and one standard
length grizzly hackle.
The mayflies are the first of the major hatch to come off
the streams and rivers in the spring. In BC this occurs between
late March and early May, depending upon the weather and water
temperatures. Be sure you tie up some of the representations
that imitate your local species and be ready for their appearance.
Bill
Luscombe has been hunting and fishing for most of his 42 years.
He has been flyfishing for 20 years. He instructs flyfishing,
and has done so for the past 12 years. He also instructs the
federal FSET firearms course and the BC CORE hunter training
course. He is an award-winning outdoor writer and has been
writing freelance since 1987. He has been published in BC
Sport Fishing Magazine, Outdoor Edge, BC Outdoors, Western
Sportsman, Island Fish Finder, and the BC Hunting Guide.
Bill Luscombe was born an army brat and raised in Ladner
(Delta, BC) where he was raised hunting waterfowl and pheasants.
He presently resides in North Cowichan on southern Vancouver
Island where he has lived and worked full time as a professional
forester since 1982.
He presently works in Nanaimo for the BC Forest Service and
continue to write the fly-fishing column for BC Sport Fishing
Magazine as well as contributing articles freelance to various
outdoor magazines in western Canada. Bill Luscombe is also
a BC Director of the Northwest Outdoor Writers Association.
"Catching fish is not hard. You simply need to understand
what makes them tick. If you think like a fish, you will catch
fish. It’s as simple as that."- Bill Luscombe
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