Flies for Nundle
- Posted on:
- Author: Peter Glasson
- Categories: Captain's Picks, The Fly Box
- Tags: Backstabber Hybrid, Backstabber Hybrid in larger sizes., Bass Vampire Cod - Vince’s Loudmouth Popper, Bead Headed Carp Fly, bread flies, Carp, carp flies, Emerging Woolly Bugger, olive woolly bugger, Paul’s Orange Bass Flopper, Perch, red tag, Rodney’s Blowfly, Rodney’s hopper, Termite fly, Trout, Vince's Diving Gurgler
Trout – Chaffey Dam and Sheba Dam
Termite fly, Rodney’s Blowfly, Rodney’s take on a hopper, Red Tag, Emerging Woolly bigger and Olive Woolly Bugger
Carp and Perch – Chaffey Dam and Peel River
Bread Fly, Backstabber Hybrid Carp Fly, Bead Headed Carp Fly and Bass Vampires
Cod – Chaffey Dam and Peel River
Try Purple and Brown colours and take a sinking line to get the flies down deep.
Try some Vince’s Loudmouth Popper‘s, Vince’s Diving Gurgler, Paul Fedeles’ Orange Bass Flopper and the Backstabber Hybrid in larger sizes – 1/0 and 2/0s – plus a few of Rob Meade’s Gutless Flies.
I don’t have specific tying instructions for either but with some 2 or 3mm sheet foam, plastic eyes and silly legs the shuffler is not too hard to tie.
Little lengths of tube can be used to glue on the eyes. The tube can be secured just behind the eye of the hook and used to wrap the foam to form the head.
It seems getting the barb hole in the right place is the only tricky bit. Purple and Brown seem to be popular colours.
The gutless frog is even easier with Gap Filler Rod in 6mm from Bunnings, some silly legs, plastic eyes, super glue and a variety of coloured marker pens – make your frog the right colour!
The closest I could find was this video – so the main difference is to use the gap filler rod and glue the rod together half way down the hook – from the eye – leaving the gutless bit around the barb.