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May on Vancouver Island brings with it
every hatch that occurs on the island. March and April
saw the midges (chironomids) start and they are still
going gangbusters on the lakes and ponds. April brought
with it the mayfly hatches, and the caddisflies will
begin hatching later in May to join them in both the
rivers and the lakes. Mixed in with the early hatches
is the odd stonefly hatch on several of our rivers.
Thus May and early June produce a plethora of dry fly
and nymphing opportunities throughout each day. |
The chironomid hatch on the island lakes can be profuse and
trout rise readily to feed on these tiny midge pupa. To start
the hatch though, the midges first start out as a bloodworm
on the muddy bottom. My Larva Lace bloodworm pattern works
well when fishing the very early season.
Larva Lace Bloodworm:
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|
| MATERIALS |
| Hook: #12 or 14 Mustad
9672 |
| Thread: Black monocord |
| Tail: Short black marabou
feather |
| Underbody: White floss
|
| Overbody: Red larva
lace (clear red plastic lacing) |
| Head: Black monocord
|
TYING STEPS
1. Attach the thread to the hook shank and tie in, at the
butt, a very short tail of black marabou. Don't make it too
thick, as you want it to flow freely and impart motion to
the fly.
2. Then tie in a length of red larva lace and then a length
of bright white floss.
3. Wrap the floss to the head of the fly ensuring you cover
the entire shank of the hook and tie off.
4. Wrap the larva lace to the head of the fly ensuring you
do not overlap the wraps. Tie off.
5. Create a black head by wrapping the thread around the shank
behind the eye until you achieve a small smooth head.
6. Whip finish and cement.
As the water warms the bloodworms pupate and they rise to
the surface as chironomids. The most common (and accurate)
colour patterns to imitate them are copper and brown, or gold
and green chironomids. Silver and black holds its own as well,
but I have found the best producer by far to be the copper
and brown.
To tie it, follows these steps:
Basic Chironomid:
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|
| MATERIALS |
| Hook: Daiichi 1130
#12 - 18 or Mustad 94840 |
| Thread: Brown waxed
|
| Tail: None or short
marabou to match body colour |
Rib: Fine copper wire
|
| Underbody: White floss
|
| Abdomen: Brown floss
or Spanflex |
Shellback: Pheasant
tail fibres |
Gills: White ostrich
herl |
| Head: None, or brass
or black glass bead |
TYING STEPS
1. Tie in the thread and tie in a sparse, short tail of brown
marabou.
2. Tie in the wire and then the floss or Spanflex at the butt
of the hook.
3. Wrap the floss to a point midway between the hook point
and the eye and secure. Do not cut it off.
4. Wrap the wire in the opposite direction to the direction
you wrapped the floss, to form a rib to the same point along
the shank. Tie it off and cut.
5. Tie in the pheasant tail fibres on top of the hook shank.
6. Wrap the remaining length of thorax with the floss, building
up a small bulge to form the thorax. Tie off and cut at the
head.
7. Tie in one strand of white ostrich herl at the head and
wrap once to form the gills. Tie off and cut.
8. Pull the pheasant tail fibres over the back and over the
herl. Tie off to form the wing case or shellback. Trim off
the excess
9. Whip finish and cement
To tie the other colour patterns simply change the body and
wire colours.
As April progresses and the waters get warmer the mayflies
start hatching. The most common mayfly hatch on the island
is the Western March Brown. For the nymph I like to use a
Pheasant Tail nymph pattern and for the adult an all-hackle
March Brown pattern as shown below:
Pheasant Tail Nymph:
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|
| MATERIALS |
| Hook: Tiemco 2302 #12-20 |
| Thread: Brown 8/0 |
| Tail: Pheasant tail
fibres |
Rib: Copper wire |
| Abdomen: Pheasant tail
fibres |
| Thorax: Peacock herl |
Wingcase: Pheasant tail
fibres |
Legs: Pheasant tail
fibres |
TYING STEPS
1. Wrap on tying thread at the eye of the hook. Wind down
to the butt.
2. Secure the tail in place, then attach the copper wire and
the pheasant fibres for the abdomen.
3. Wrap the thread back half way up the hook shank.
4. Wrap the pheasant fibres forward to form the abdomen. Stop
half way up the shank. Tie off and trim excess.
5. Wrap the copper wire forward to form a rib. Wrap in the
opposite direction to the way you wrapped the pheasant fibres.
Stop half way up the shank. Tie off and trim excess.
6. Tie in the pheasant fibres to be used for the wingcase,
and then tie in the peacock herl.
7. Wrap the herl forward to the head of the fly, forming the
thorax. Tie off and trim excess.
8. Pull the pheasant fibres over the back to form the wingcase.
Tie down and trim the excess.
9. Tie in a wing of pheasant tail about shank length. Tie
off and trim excess.
10. Tie in 2 – 4 strands of pheasant fibres on each
side of the thorax to form the legs. They should reach to
about the hook point. Trim the excess. Form the head with
the thread.
11. Whip finish the head and cement.
Western March Brown: |
 |
MATERIAL
|
| Hook: Mustad 94840
#12 – 14 |
| 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 |
This pattern is an "all hackle" pattern; it contains
no "wing" as such. The steps to tying it are as
follows:
TYING STEPS
1. 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).
2. 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.
3. Tie in the hackles tip first, first the short furnace and
then the long ginger.
4. Wrap the long hackle quite thick and heavy. Tie off and
cut the excess.
5. Trim off the bottom side of the ginger hackles you just
wrapped so that only the top 1/3rd of the hackles remains.
6. Wrap the furnace hackle forward to standard density to
form the legs and thorax. Tie off and trim the excess.
7. 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 1/2 again
as long. So the ginger hackle in this pattern sits about 1/2
again as high as the furnace hackle, thus forming the illusion
of a wing.
The most numerous caddisflies on the island seem to be of
two different species and colour patterns. There is an all
brown adult similar to but darker than the Cinnamon Sedge
and there is also an olive-bodied adult. Both are about the
same size although the all brown seems to be a bit smaller.
The nymphs are both case-builders and can be imitated well
with the following pattern:
Mohair Caddis Larva: |
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| MATERIALS
|
| Hook: Mustad 9671 #6
- 14 (Can be weighted) |
| Thread: Black or green
monocord |
| Tail: None |
| Abdomen: Mohair dubbed
onto silver sparkle chenille |
| Thorax: Green or black
wool |
| Hackle: Sparse black
hen hackle |
TYING STEPS
1. Tie on the thread and wrap to the butt of the hook. Tie
in the lead if you plan to weight the fly.
2. Tie in the silver chenille.
3. Dub onto the chenille strands of mohair. Wrap the chenille
forward 2/3rds of the way up the shank. Tie off and trim excess.
4. Tie in the green wool. Wrap to the head. Tie off and trim
excess.
5. Tie in, at the tip, one black hen hackle. Wrap 2 or 3 turns.
Tie off and trim the excess.
6. Whip finish the head and cement.
To match the caddis pupa I like to use the following pattern:
| Nation’s Green
Sedge: |
 |
| MATERIALS
|
| Hook: Mustad 9671 #6
- 14 |
| Thread: Green or black
monocord |
| Tail: None or red quill
|
| Ribbing: None or oval
silver tinsel |
| Body: Dubbed olive
wool, seal, or antron yarn |
| Wing: Mallard flank
|
Hackle: Badger (long) |
TYING STEPS
1. Tie in the thread and wrap to the butt.
2. Tie in the tinsel (if you want a rib).
3. Form a dubbing loop and dub on the olive body material.
Wrap forward to the head forming a fairly fat body. Tie off
and trim excess.
4. Wrap tinsel forward to form the ribbing. Tie off and trim
excess.
5. Tie in the mallard flank overwing about 11/2 times as long
as the hook shank. Tie off and trim excess.
6. Tie in one long fibre badger hackle. Wrap 2-3 times and
tie off. Trim excess.
7. Whip finish the head and cement.
For the adult caddisflies I tie up an Elk Hair Caddis:
| Elk Hair Caddis: |
 |
| MATERIALS
|
| Hook: Mustad 94840
#6 – 16 |
| Thread: To match natural
body colour |
| Tail: None |
| Body: Dubbed wool or
spun deer hair dyed to colour |
| Rib: None or palmered
furnace or ginger hackle |
| Hackle: Ginger or furnace |
Wing: Deer or elk hair (11/2 times
the body length) |
TYING STEPS
1. Tie in thread. Wrap to butt. Tie in hackle by the tip.
2. Form a dubbing loop. Dub on the body material and wrap
forward to head forming fairly fat body. Tie off and trim
excess.
3. Palmer the hackle forward over the body. Tie off and trim
excess.
4. Tie in the deer hair wing. Avoid flaring it too much. Wing
should lie tent-like over the back of the fly. Tie off and
trim excess.
5. Tie in the ginger hackle by the tip and wrap to form a
hackle throat. Tie off and trim excess.
6. Whip finish and cement the head.
Other patterns that work well as adult caddisfly imitations
are the Mikaluk Sedge (although it tends to fall on its side)
and the Goddard Caddis.
Spring on Vancouver Island offers many opportunities and
you need to stock your fly box with an array of spring patterns
so that you can take advantage of all that you might encounter.
The preceding patterns are standards that I carry in my fly
boxes all the time and use on a regular basis. You should
tie up at least half a dozen of each and never venture out
to fish in the spring without them.
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
Previous Articles by Bill Luscombe:
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visit:
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courses visit his home page at:
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