Expand the stillwater arsenal
As most people can attest by reading our antics on the site here, we mess around a LOT with a LOT of different patterns and materials. So, a while back when I saw the concept of a balanced fly pattern from Jerry McBride, via Phil Rowley's website, I was understandably interested.
As it happened, I was looking for a good way to present some damsel nymphs and emergers on top of and amongst the weed beds on the shallow weedy end of a lake I fish that contains some big cutthroats and rainbows. Indicators seemed to be the ticket, allowing me to vary the depth (as opposed to floating or intermediate lines), but as I watched the naturals in the water, they didn't hang vertically -- they swam horizontally (well fairly squiggly if you're going to draw a representation of the squirrelly damsels as they swim). So the balanced style fly would seem to be a great fit.
As I began to formulate the pattern, I kept going back to a concept my friend Jeff Brooks espoused when it
came to damsel coloration and imitating them. His observations of the naturals and how they reflected a lot of colors led him to design a popular dubbing mix he calls "Golden Olive Spectrumized" to go along with the damsel pattern he tied using it. His original recipe, which calls for up to 8 different dubbings and materials, worked great for me over the years until I ran out and was too lazy to go snag all the ingredients again. Instead, I looked at the pictures of damsel nymphs I had taken and ones I found online and came up with my own mix that would incorporate the needed colors but require less ingredients (see below for the exact mix) and allow people to more easily duplicate the concoction.
So design history aside, I began using this pattern last year and have had some incredible days on the water. I usually fish it under an indicator and find that even in choppy windy conditions, it fishes well because the wind and waves will telegraph a jigging motion to the fly as it hangs horizontally in the water.
In one instance, in particular, I was throwing leeches and chironomids with little success. Although I knew it was early, I figured the BFBD would stand a chance. Casting into the same depth of water from the same indicator depth (the only difference being really the horizontal orientation) and it was the day-maker pattern. Fish were coming out of the woodwork to nail it at the slightest movement. Anyway...it works.
A couple of important notes: The proportions on the pattern are über-important. If you leave the bead too far from the eye of the hook, it won't hang right. Likewise, if you push it too close to the eye of the hook, it won't balance well either. Bead size and weight is also a consideration to achieve a proper balanced orientation. Tungsten is best I've found. And, at least in my mind, the dubbing combined with the tinsel underbody are a deadly combination on their own.
Thread: MFC Olive 6/0 -- Buy Here --
Bead: Tungsten 2.8mm to 3.2mm (depends on hook size and type) -- Buy Here --
Extender Pins: You can make your own from a small pin or buy them here pre-cut.
Head casing: MFC Skinny Skin (Mottled Brown) -- Buy Here --
& Holographic Tinsel, Orange, Med -- Buy Here --
Tail: Wooly Bugger Marabou, Sculpin Olive -- Buy Here --
Under-Body:Pearl Tinsel, Large -- Buy Here --
Dubbing: Equal mix of
-- Ice Dub Brown Olive -- Buy Here --
-- Arizona Simi Seal: Canadian Brown, Canadian Olive, Olive -- Buy Here --
As it happened, I was looking for a good way to present some damsel nymphs and emergers on top of and amongst the weed beds on the shallow weedy end of a lake I fish that contains some big cutthroats and rainbows. Indicators seemed to be the ticket, allowing me to vary the depth (as opposed to floating or intermediate lines), but as I watched the naturals in the water, they didn't hang vertically -- they swam horizontally (well fairly squiggly if you're going to draw a representation of the squirrelly damsels as they swim). So the balanced style fly would seem to be a great fit.
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Belly Flop Balanced Damsel at work |
As I began to formulate the pattern, I kept going back to a concept my friend Jeff Brooks espoused when it
Some Belly Flops in production |
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Rainbow trout taken on a Belly Flop Damsel |
In one instance, in particular, I was throwing leeches and chironomids with little success. Although I knew it was early, I figured the BFBD would stand a chance. Casting into the same depth of water from the same indicator depth (the only difference being really the horizontal orientation) and it was the day-maker pattern. Fish were coming out of the woodwork to nail it at the slightest movement. Anyway...it works.
A couple of important notes: The proportions on the pattern are über-important. If you leave the bead too far from the eye of the hook, it won't hang right. Likewise, if you push it too close to the eye of the hook, it won't balance well either. Bead size and weight is also a consideration to achieve a proper balanced orientation. Tungsten is best I've found. And, at least in my mind, the dubbing combined with the tinsel underbody are a deadly combination on their own.
Material List:
Hook: Allen J100BL #8 -- Buy Here --Thread: MFC Olive 6/0 -- Buy Here --
Bead: Tungsten 2.8mm to 3.2mm (depends on hook size and type) -- Buy Here --
Extender Pins: You can make your own from a small pin or buy them here pre-cut.
Head casing: MFC Skinny Skin (Mottled Brown) -- Buy Here --
& Holographic Tinsel, Orange, Med -- Buy Here --
Tail: Wooly Bugger Marabou, Sculpin Olive -- Buy Here --
Under-Body:Pearl Tinsel, Large -- Buy Here --
Dubbing: Equal mix of
-- Ice Dub Brown Olive -- Buy Here --
-- Arizona Simi Seal: Canadian Brown, Canadian Olive, Olive -- Buy Here --