Post
by skunkaroo » Wed Sep 08, 2010 3:36 pm
You know... We often tye a fly and it goes in the box and gets picked out now and again. Sometimes it's successful, but often just average in terms of it's fish catching ability. However, ever so often you come up with something that seems to get better and better as you go along. The "Rust Belt Spider" pictured above is becoming one of the latter sort.
I generally tye it with a ginger hackle fibre tail and on a wide gape hook these days, but I've found this to be an absolute winner when fished with a stroking "North Country" upstream technique in faster water--i.e. rod length leader, fan cast, short one to two second drifts/pulls, roll and recast. It's been a "killing" fly, but best when there's clearly surface insect activity. It also works down and across, but the upstream technique is a real producer. I've fiddled a little with the thread colour (ginger, pale yellow, taupe, et al.) and most seem to work as long as you keep it "in the family" colour wise.
Sorry for not contributing more lately, but my tying has generally been focused on replacing lost or straightened flies and not coming up with new and interesting varieties.
Aaron