As winter turns to spring and the weather begins to warm, I again find myself reminiscing of the days, months, and years that have gone by since I originally made the move west. I could have never done any of this without the never-ending support and comfort from my family back in Jersey and the constant love and affection from my wonderful girlfriend who allows me to pursue my dreams and passions even if they aren’t always hers.
This is what I have been up to lately.
The resorts are seeing less and less visitors.The backcountry comes to life again after some fresh snow.Jake getting waste deep.LeMatty in the white room.The end of a great runSpring is coming to the Snyderville BasinThe road less traveledThe river less fishedBottom dweller seeing the lightA nice rainbowThis rainbow put up a great fight
Thank you to all that have helped me out along the way and everyone that took part in the fishing and boarding with me. It’s been fun living this dream so far.
A very simple fly to tie, the Brassie is a requisite in your arsenal for opening day fishing exploits. Tied in the small size I demonstrate here (sz 20), it imitates a midge. You can adjust the pattern to mimic a Caddis Larva as well. The Brassie is effective due to the copper wire weighting down the fly to where the fish are feeding on its own. Further, this is my favorite dropper as it stays down but will not pull the lead fly down.
Materials
Mustad – Nymph Sproat – Size 20
Black Ultra Thread 70
Copper Ultra Wire
Black Rabbit Dubbing
Step 1 – Size 20 Hook
Carefully place your hook in the vise. You can de barb the hook at this point. I do not go through the hassle for such a small hook, any bit of hold you can maintain on the Trout’s jaw is worth it.
Step 2 – Base Layer
Start your thread an eye width’s behind the eye. Careful not to crowd in this step as you will need to dub and whip finish later. Work the thread down the shaft to the hook bend and then back to your starting point. This creates a base layer and prevents the copper wire from slipping later.
Step 3 – Tie in wire
Now we tie in the wire. I like to start with the wire partially perpendicular, underneath the hook eye and wedge it in there good with a few turns. Then pull back the tag end under the wrappings you just created, this will make a nice, clean starting point.
Step 4 – Cover the Wire
Wrap your thread down the shaft and back up to your tie in point. This creates a firm base with which we wind the wire up the shaft back to the tie in point.
Step 5 – Wind wire
Wind the wire in tight wraps back up to just before the tie in point. Make four twists of thread over the tag end of the wire. Helicopter the tag end off and locate your dubbing.
Step 6 – Apply Dubbing
Apply as small amount of dubbing to the thread and twist. Do not apply too much, this is after all a size 20 hook. You can always add more dubbing later, it is more difficult to remove once applied. Some tiers will change the color of the dubbing, a red head looks neat.
Step 7 – Whip Finish
Finish dubbing and whip finish in front of the dubbing. If you spaced your tie in part properly, there will be room to get in four turns. Be careful and do not mash your dubbing.
Finished
Opening day in New Jersey is next weekend. I plan on deploying this pattern in my nymph rig outs first thing in the morning. The Brassie is both easy to tie and highly effective at any time of the year. When fish are not taking the nymphs you are presenting, it generally means they are too big. Downsize, get the fly down deep and try again!
My time in Colorado is almost done. Jess and I are starting our drive back east tomorrow, so I decided to get back into the Stagecoach Tailwaters one last time. With the access road still closed, I borrowed my neighbors bike to cut down the travel time.
The fishing started slow with temps around 15 degrees when I first arrived. Nymphing zebra midges was the way to go until about 11 o’clock when more trout heads started to look up towards the surface. Black and olive size 20 RS2’s were the next flies that took trout. At about noon, aggressive surface activity picked up and I switched over to Charlie Craven’s size 20 mole fly. This fly did the most damage and was consistently nailing the fish until about 1:30 when the trout began sipping in more of a rhythm. When this started, I still got some on the mole fly, but when I tied on a snowshoe spinner it was instant success until I left. 21 trout in total, 4 on nymphs, 17 on dries. The size range was 8-20″, great colors on the rainbows! Now back to the New Jersey for a week, some fishing with fellow bloggers Chris, Dave, and Zach, then off to the Bahamas in pursuit of bonefish! Thanks Steamboat Springs for everything these past 6 weeks, it has been amazing.
Lower Tailwaters
Middle Tailwaters
Size 20 Zebra Midge on the NoseA fiesty little guyJust over 19″ on the Zebra MidgeSize 20 Black RS2RS2 again
RS2 Hook: 20 Thread: Black Tail: Two Split Microfibbets Wing: Snowshoe Hare Foot Body: Black Superfine
This guy was just over 20″, had him on a size 20 mole flyNice hook jaw
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