I dont fly fish but i do use mainly flies for steelhead fishing. I normaly use wooly worms but i have been looking for some diffrent flies to tie. I am a very novice fly tier.
If you guys have any flies that you like to use, and wouldnt mind sharing.
Before I was into FF, for steelheads I always used a lure with a lot of orange. Use to make my own so perhaps that was my intro into tying. This one is name after a nice piece of water in Wa. The Skykomish Sunrise. Its worth a try if the bugger fails you. Good luck.
[inline Skykomish_Sunrise.jpg]
i make alot of those wooly buggers also, i like using some black chanelle that has red sparkles in it wit a bit of red marabou at the end. i will post a couple pics of mine.
Hi jigs nice ties. I am going to help you out with your pictures. For one thing you need to keep them to no larger than 450 mp wide, otherwise they take to long to load & readjust the size.
The Skykomish Sunrise is an old-time pattern that’s still used successfully. Just proving that in our rush to use the latest, greatest, newest we sometimes forget that there’s a reason the old standbys reached that status. In short, they work.
Another group of great old-timers are the so-called Soo Flies. Before Lake Michigan dies there lived a race of giant rainbows in the St. Mary’s River, near Sioux Locks. Big fish and big current (what’s that remind you West Coasters of?) demanded flies that could handle those conditions.
The Great Lakes has developed many fly patterns that are either unknown to West Coasters, or little used by them. A real shame, because some of them are incredibly effective.
One of the best of them is the Spring’s Wiggler. You don’t see it tied commercially too often, because it’s a two-part, hinged fly. But fish can’t seem to resist it. It’s actually easy to tie if you have a tube-fly adaptor for your vise. Otherwise it can be a PITA. But, IMO, worth the effort.
I’ve often thought, too, that many of the Atlantic salmon tube fly patterns would work well for steelies. Never put it to the test though.