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Two flies in one

The small dipterae - Simulium sp. - has always been a problem - they are tiny and shows up in fantastic numbers. Why should a trout prefer our imitations when there are so many all over the water?

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Two Flies 1
The small dipterae - Simulium sp. - has always been a problem - they are tiny and shows up in fantastic numbers. Why should a trout prefer our imitations when there are som many all over the water?

An old friend of mine - the late Johannes Vangsgaard - created an imitation, He copied two flies in the act of sex on the same hook.

HookSize 14 - 16.
Tying silkBlack.
Rear- & Front-hacklesBlack cock - the one at the bend with shorter fibres than the one at the front.
BodyBlack silk, black herl or black quill.

Two Flies 2-3
After tying the front-hackle down behind the neck of the hook, one winds to the bend, tie the rear-hackle down and turns it. To tie the body materail down - should it not be the tying silk - can be a problem, if one has thick, clumsy fingers; but in the drawing I have shown, how to do it very easily.

Two Flies 4
The body is formed and the longer front-hackle turned and the fly finished in the usual way.
 
© Preben Torp Jacobsen. 'Flyleaves', 1996. 

Submitted by Chuck Fawcett on

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This pattern reminds me of a renegade, and a double renegade it too works excellent on trout of all species, I use it pretty much exclusively when trout fishing and always limit out. Check it out can be tied weighted as well. Later Chuck

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