September Freshwater Fly of the Month: Streamer- Thin Mint Wooly Bugger - Beadhead
September Freshwater Fly of the Month: Streamer- Thin Mint Wooly Bugger - Beadhead
September Freshwater Fly of the Month: Streamer- Thin Mint Wooly Bugger - Beadhead
The woolly
bugger is always listed as one of the top ten flies you should have in
your fly box. This is one of the most productive and popular wet flies
for a variety of species of fish. The woolly bugger is an awesome
sub-surface fly that imitates a variety of baits. Leeches, minnows,
nymphs, and sculpins begins the list of what this fly can represent to a
hungry trout, steelhead, bass or panfish. "The
Woolly Bugger is so effective, it should be banned from some
watersheds. I suspect its effectiveness is due to its resemblance to so
many edible creatures in the water--nymphs, leeches, salamanders, or
even small sculpins. Its tail undulating behind a fiber, bubble-filled
body is just too much for most fish to resist. It just looks like a
meal!" – Bill Hunter, The Professionals' Favorite Flies
Trout spend
most of their time on the bottom of rivers, near the rocks and in the
cover of structure. The advantage to anglers using bead-head flies, is
the fact that the weight of the bead, sinks the fly. Bead-head flies can
be especially effective in rivers with fast, deep water. Keeping your
hooks around the fish is a sure way to get more strikes, and ultimately,
catch more fish.
Most anglers
would agree that a common nymph rig with an indicator and additional
weight is perhaps the easiest way to catch fish in moving water.
However, many sporting fly fishers also enjoy fishing a large dry fly
with a bead-head dropper attached.
Bead-headed
flies became popular in the eighties and have been catching fish since
then. Bright gold, silver and copper metal beads are most commonly used,
but flies that include glass beads are also very effective.
Every
conceivable nymph pattern has been tied with a bead at some point.
Mayflies, stoneflies, midges, and many more imitations of aquatic
species have bead-head variations. Limited only by imagination, beads
can be used in many ways to add to the effectiveness of a fly. As the
popularity of flies with beads increases, bead manufacturers have begun
to increase a fly tier's options with colorfully anodized and painted
versions.