Thanks everyone.
Ray- Will do.
Bill - I did this in a dubbing loop for durability. You could use a dubbing block but it requires quite a bit of dubbing to build the body profile. The otter is pretty slippery too. What I actually did was noodle the amount I wanted on the thread, turn this into a dubbing loop, wrap it tight and then pick it out some.
Ruard - I haven't seen that one.
swellcat wrote:_____
Handsome fly.
. . . it was important that this was not tied on a curved shank . . .
Any idea why? Seems counterintuitive, to say the least.
_____
Not at all counter intuitive actually. There is a misconception with scuds. Even though we see them most often tied on curved hook shanks, they only take this profile when they are dead or actively feeding on vegetation. When moving at all, they take a straight profile and swim very swiftly from spot to spot. This is often when fish take them. Fish will congregated in vegetation and snack on them as they dart about. Some fish do feed directly upon the vegetation taking feeding scuds. I have emptied stomachs of fish that are 70% vegetation and 30% scuds. To me this says they are just feeding off the vegetation. However, as of yet I don't have the skill to keep a fly on a piece of vegetation.

So actively working a scud pattern near the vegetation with short twitches seems to be more productive and in this scenario they are in a straight profile. Both in stillwater and slow moving water.
Here is a neat little link you can see this in action.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bXx6SLoqQC8