Peg's Midge
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 23 ก.ย. 2024
- Detailed instructions for tying Peg's Midge.
Hook: Standard dry-fly hook (here a TMC 100), size 26.
Thread: Veevus 16/0, dark brown.
Tail: Dry-fly hackle, cream or white.
Body: Peacock herl.
Hackle: Dry-fly hackle, cream or white.
Material Source:
Hook: collabs.shop/i...
Thread: collabs.shop/1...
Tail: collabs.shop/i...
Body: collabs.shop/i...
Hackle: collabs.shop/i...
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#flyfishing #trout #flytying
Another great tie - with really useful tips and superb camera work. Thank you.
Great fly and great information.
Tie mine with grizzly hackle, they work great.
Ed Koch talks about this fly in his book "Midge Magic". He ran into a woman, Peg, on several occasions who was catching trout on this fly. I believe it was on Big Springs. It's an interesting story and worth a read. Nice choice to tie here.
Don Holbrook wrote the book with a forward by Ed Kpoh.
Reminds me of Bob Dylan's "The Girl on the Greenbrier Shore. He goes I left my mother underneath the bridge, when I saw the girl on the Greenbrier Shore". lol Thanks for sharing. Vitreous floaters only prevents me form tying this small.
Wow thank you for sharing this.
Awesome fly. I bet this would work great for panfish.
Awesome looking patern but very small for my older eyes lol
now that's a small fly!
Mr Flagler 2 questions:
1.People usually berate the use of a single clump of stiff hackle fibers, aka Catskill style, for tails on dry flies, yet a new school of thought seems to think that a single clump may immitae a trailing shuck and thus perhaps induce a strike from trout keying this attribute. What you say?
2. I have found that a reverse hackling eliminates the troubles of winding down the "hill". When winding down the hill, invariable your hackle will want to jump forward leaving a gap in the hackling. To wind up the hill, tie in your hackle dull side forward at the eye of the hook, wind your thread to the end of the body. Wind hackle to where your thread is. Tie off the hackle with 2 turns and further tie in by winding tread back to the eye and complete with a 3 turn whip finish. What you say?
Thanks
What lens are you shooting with
Quite brilliant. :-)
No new flies, just variations of older ones. This is a good looking variation of Griffiths Gnat
Respectfully, I can't agree with you. The only thing this fly has in common with a Griffiths Gnat is peacock herl. The construction of the two is quite different. Also, Peg's Midge is a very old pattern that may even pre-date the Griffith's Gnat. There are a myriad of patterns that are derivative, this is not one of them.
@@tightlinevideo I appreciate your position and you may well be correct that Peg's Midge predates Griffith's Gnat. They are both great patterns.
What bobbin do you use
How big in size would you tie these? 18?
Ted E. 26
Ted E. I would go no bigger than 20
where can I get hooks that small? and a good tying vice and a midge vice adapter?
William H anywhere on the internet
William H local fly shop or internet. support local shops if you can!!
Get a peak rotary vise
For tiny flies I just use a cheap vice from an orvis kit. I mounted a hook and then dremeled the jaws everywhere they were not needed. I use it more than my expensive vive once things get past about an 18 unless I need rotary.
28 to small? or can i go smaller
ps cuase I want ty some 0n a 32 and i now need some where can i get some
sounds like peg knows to size down
Love the videos. But not the addition of the music.