What better to do on a snow day?

It started snowing this morning. Marylynn, Bridget, and I are all home. I thought what better way to stay out of the way than to tie some flies.

This is a South Branch Chub. Originally tied by Bob Jacklin to fish the South Branch Of the Raritan River in New Jersey. I did really well with this pattern on The Ammonoosuc River in Bretton Woods New Hampshire. I am going to fill my streamer box for next spring. I have used imitation jungle cock cheeks here. I think it will look better with a natural jungle cock. In this article https://www.flyanglersonline.com/flytying/fotw/101998fotw.php , Bob stated that he wanted to call it the Little Brook Trout, but the name was taken. I guess that is why it has worked so well here in New Hampshire. He also said the pattern will work well in ponds I will be giving that a try as well.

Can’t fish! Chores were the order of the day.

Marylynn and I took advantage of a warm November day and got the Christmas lights up. Certainly better than other years when we could not feel our fingers. Cleaned the garage so that we could fit a car in. Then took a run to the dump before the rain. Then spent the afternoon and evening sorting and cataloging fly-tying material. Of course, I enjoyed a local beer. All in all, not a bad day, but I would rather be fishing.

Where the heck can I find that?

I was tying flies tonight and as I looked through some pattern recipes I thought of a pattern that I learned From Michael McAuliffe. Michael had taught a fly-tying class at Ramsey Outdoor when I worked there. It is a Bob Jacklin streamer pattern called the “South Branch creek Chub”. This fly was designed to fish the South Branch of the Raritan river. This was the river I considered my home water when I lived in New Jersey. This fly was a killer on the Ammonoosuc River here in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. I had the two that I tied in class. I found three more that a non-fly fishing co-worker had given to me many years ago.

So I look up the recipe for the pattern and it calls for barred teal with black and white Monga tail underwing. Where the heck can I find that?
I search normal fly-tying outlets and none listed Monga tail. I do a google search and find that Monga tail is from an animal called a Ring Tail Cat. I raccoon-like animal found in the southwest US and Mexico. I get a few hits of tails for sale. One on eBay is listed as out of stock and then another on Etsy, but that is for key chains at a high price, and only two are left. At this point Im a little discouraged. I walk away thinking that I will have to substitute Monga with a black and white bucktail. The bucktail is not nearly as soft as the Monga, but it will have to do.
I decided to buy the key chains. They stated that they are in short supply. They are terribly overpriced, but I’m going to bite the bullet before I can not get any. I sit down at the computer and enter the exact same search. Bam! I hit the motherload. The first listing is for a page that sells nothing but animal pelts. They appear to have an unlimited supply at a reasonable price. I should have a good supply of “South Branch Creek Chubs tied up for springtime.

Working on wings

I found that the ticket to catching wild trout here in the White Mountains floating attractor dry flies in every place that can hold a fish. I had multiple double-digit days. My go-to fly was a “Royal Wulff” in size 14. Why? Because I had a bunch in my box. Probably a gift for somebody or they came free with something else I bought. I know I didn’t tie them. I was sitting at my tying desk thinking about what I was going to tie. I have not been very skilled at calf hair wings and I have not tied many flies with a banded body as found in the Royal family of fly patterns. I like to put a spin on things So I decided to tie the “Patriot” a pattern originated by Charlie Meck from Pennsylvania. It uses the same skill as a Royal Wulff. I like that it is highly visible on the water even in choppy broken water. It’s a little rough, but I did okay on the wings the most difficult part for me.
Practice makes perfect. After I tie a couple of dozen of these it will be my go-to fly next season.

New Water

I thought that I would try some new water today. The East Branch of the Saco is across the street from my house. I have not had any luck in the lower stretch by my house. Not a nibble. So I went upstream into the White Mountain Nation Forest. T picked a spot where Slippery Brook joins the East Branch. Rumor has it that this is a good spot for wild brookies. This is a little less than 5 miles from my house. I parked at a twin campsite that I will surely check out next spring. I started fishing slippery Brook heading downstream to the East branch of the Saco. I saw several grasshoppers jumping in the streamside rocks so I changed from a bead head prince to a hopper/dropper rig. The area looked very fishy but no fish came to hand.

I had no luck so I explored a bit. I traveled up stream a couple more miles to where the road crosses the East Branch. I found a little concrete damn that formed a bridge pool. I made a couple of dozen casts upstream into the pool with a dry /dropper. Again no luck.

The day turned out to be a good recon trip for the spring, but the lesson learned was don’t prospect during the marginal season for trout. Go to where you know there are fish.