Fly Patterns - Bill's Swimming Starling Sally


              Bill's Swimming Starling Sally

Hook:

Standard nymph hook, such as TMC 3761BL

Thread:

Pale yellow 8/0 or smaller

Ribbing:

Fine gold wire

Body:

Pale yellow natural dubbing with a slight olive tinge

Thorax:

Same as body

Hackle:

Starling feather, tied soft hackle style

 

Description


I’ve recently designed a new series of three flies for the ubiquitous “Little Yellow Stonefly” that we all (sometimes) know and (always) love. I say “sometimes” when it comes to “know” because this little bug may well be the most mistakenly identified of all of the aquatic insects that we consider to be our fish staples. While guiding, I’ve heard clients refer to them as terrestrials (lacewings, for example), mayflies (PMDs in particular), and light-colored caddis. That’s not a criticism, by the way—it’s easy to mistake the Sally for other small aquatics, especially when it’s breezy. But it’s also important to learn how to “know” Sally when she’s (or he’s) the one doing the flying around in your little piece of heaven. Knotting on a PMD imitation or an Elk Hair Caddis, or the wrong kind of nymph or emerger, will beget only frustration because, at least in my experience, fish keying on Sallies are very selective.

 

The Sally nymph was featured in the September, 2010 Leader. I’ll feature the adult in a future article. For this article I’m presenting the Swimming Starling Sally, which is a soft hackle style pattern that could represent the subspecies that actually hatch in the water column (i.e., an emerging life stage), or simply a nymph that is drifting along after having become dislodged from the rocks. Don’t think in terms of mayfly emergers, because that is an entirely different concept.

 

There are a number of ways of fishing soft hackle flies. One way would be to suspend it by itself under an indicator with a fairly long tippet (6-9’) and a small split shot, cast the rig upstream, mend into a dead drift, and transition to a swing after the rig passes your position. A second way (my preferred technique for pocket water) would be to attach it to the bottom fly in a short-line rig with 14-16” of 5x fluorocarbon and fish it as a “stinger.” This means casting upstream, using a regular short-line drift until the rig passes your position, and then allowing it to swing at the end of the drift. A third method would be to fish it in traditional soft-hackle swing style on a long leader (9-12’) with 5x fluorocarbon at the tip. In all three methods, I will utilize the “Leisenring Lift” technique at the end of the drift to mimic an insect rising in the water column.

 

So, let’s tie up a few.

Tying Instructions


1.    Starling feathers from the neck area have an iridescent black shine and a tannish tip. These are the feathers you should look for.

 

2.    To prepare a feather for a soft-hackle fly, there are several methods that have been written about. I prefer to follow these steps:

 

3.    Strip the fuzz from the butt end of the feather, but don’t cut the stem.

 

 

 

 

 

 

4.    Rib the body with 4 or 5 turns of the gold wire and tie off the wire at the front of the body.

 

5.    Dub a thorax that is somewhat more robust than the body. The purpose of this step is to create a thorax appearance but also to backstop the soft hackle so that it doesn’t just flatten out against the body during the drift. In turn, this allows the hackle to “swim” as the fly drifts. It is important that you leave at least two hook-eye widths open behind the eye so that the hackle (next 2 steps) can be properly wound around the hook.

 

 

 

 

6.    Prepare a starling feather and tie it in by its tip, just in front of the thorax. Since the fly is designed in the soft-hackle style, the concave side of the feather should face the rear of the hook.

 

7.    Wind the feather around the hook at least 3 times, sweeping the barbules back on each turn. Tie the feather off just behind the hook eye, trim the excess, and wind the thread in close wraps rearward to help sweep the hackle backward. Whip finish and apply a small drop of super glue to the head.

 

 

 

Tying Tips

1.   Starling feathers from the neck area have an iridescent black shine and a tan-ish tip. These are the feathers you should look for.

2.   To prepare a feather for a soft-hackle fly, there are several methods that have been written about. I prefer to follow these steps:

3.    Strip the fuzz from the butt end of the feather, but don’t cut the stem.

4.    Isolate the feather’s tip by grabbing it with pointed tweezers and sweeping the remaining barbules rearward.

5.    Tie the feather in using the isolated tip as a tab.

 

Now go crank out a few of these gems and….

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