Monday, September 19, 2011

Olive Nymph


i have been tying up these Olive Nymphs for a fly swap. Here is a simple step by step on how to tie them.


Install a bead and attach olive tying thread.


Tie on a few coq de leon feather barbs for the tail and return the tying thread to behind the bead.


Take a piece of brassie sized black ultra wire and a piece of midge size chartreuse tubing and inert the ends of both into the open end of the bead. By inserting both ends into the open end of the bead, this will ensure that the body will be smooth and not show any bumps which would have occurred if I tied these material in at the bend of the hook.


While stretching the tubing and holing the wire, wrap these materials back to the bend of the hook and maintain a smooth under body.


Grasp both materials and wrap a neat body forward to behind the bead. it will be required to stretch the tubing while wrapping forward. Trim the materials as shown.


At this point its time to decide if you want to coat the body with one of many brands of UV cured goos. The one above was covered with Diamond Hard Resin.


Now its time to dub a thorax with your favorite dubbing. On this one I used some brown olive Free Range wet fly dubbing from Kieth Barton at Singlebarbed.com.


Whip finish or half hitch the tying thread and clip it off. With a dubbing picker/brush, tease out some fibers in the thorax for a buggy look.

Recipe

Hook: your favorite style in your favorite sizes
Thread: color to match
Tail: Coq de Leon Feather fibers (grizzly will work just fine)
Body: brassie size wire and midge size stretch tubing (v-rib, d-rib, body glass etc will also work)
Thorax: your favorite dubbing (natural or synthetic)

Tying Note

The above method of tying is simply a guide and if you don't have the exact materials I used, please feel free to substitute any one of them to tie the nymph above. There are so many tying materials the could have been used, I just pick out some I Had on hand at the moment. Experiment. I dont want you tying how I tie. Try out different materials. Be creative.


As always, thanks for looking!

3 comments:

  1. I really like this fly...and your color choices.

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  2. Great little nymph pattern. I just order some of that dubbing from Kieth Barton myself, can't wait to try it out.

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