That's great Zak, I think that would work to imitate those freshwater shrimp in the Snake I was looking at a while back.
What size hook and did you make the eyes?
"Larson's Shrimp" Ahrex NS156 Traditional Shrimp, Size 10 (squeezed barb). I did not make the eyes, I bought them. I also bought the shellback: ProSportfisher, Gammarus, Brown, medium. All from Gig Harbor Flyshop, which made the video I followed:What size hook and did you make the eyes?
A riff on the Larson, Didn't have any artic fox or the shell back so subbed synthetics and a strip of mylar, sharpie and uv flow.
How do you all prefer to strip/ retrieve when fishing a shrimp pattern for cutts?View attachment 89623
^ this is the hardest part. Or, at least it was for me with my shrimp pattern. Had to experiment to get foam in the right places.The number one characteristic I look for in a solid shrimp pattern is not turning upside down when retrieved fast or in current.
It is the hard part. It's also the part the fish look at the most. We all know flies ride with the most bulk seeking the top side. A shrimp is by nature shaped the opposite. But let's really look at shrimp. I mean let's eat these mushrooms and really trip out watching shrimp. Did you see it? When they really wanna move all that stuff folds up and they go for it. Therefore you need a fly that does the same. I like pliable materials that fold out underneath when at rest. When I strip I want them to collapse and allow the fly to ride upright. I don't want a spinning shrimp. They don't do that. At any rate it's something to think about when making shrimp flies. As always less is more and sparse moves most and looks most convincing.^ this is the hardest part. Or, at least it was for me with my shrimp pattern. Had to experiment to get foam in the right places.
One of the few patterns that really benefitted from time in the fly tester—until I gave it to @Nick ClaytonIt is the hard part. It's also the part the fish look at the most. We all know flies ride with the most bulk seeking the top side. A shrimp is by nature shaped the opposite. But let's really look at shrimp. I mean let's eat these mushrooms and really trip out watching shrimp. Did you see it? When they really wanna move all that stuff folds up and they go for it. Therefore you need a fly that does the same. I like pliable materials that fold out underneath when at rest. When I strip I want them to collapse and allow the fly to ride upright. I don't want a spinning shrimp. They don't do that. At any rate it's something to think about when making shrimp flies. As always less is more and sparse moves most and looks most convincing.
That looks really fishy!Tried a little guy tonight sz10
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really like that one...have used a similar pattern with vg success on Kings at the rivermouth of a small OR riverTried a little guy tonight sz10
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