

|
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CAM
Emerger
Flies and
photos by Steve Thornton
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| Hook |
Kamasan
B100 #8 - #16 or Varivas 2000 #12 - #16 |
| Thread: |
Uni-Trico
17/0 and Dyneema |
| Abdomen: |
Condor
Herl (use peacock support tail feathers as a substitute) |
| Legs: |
Spun
CDC |
| Wing: |
Poly
Yarn in white or grey |
| Wing
and Hackle Positioner: |
Virtual
Nymph Ever-Stretch |
| Hackle: |
Cree
from a neck cape |
| Glue: |
Hard
as Nails |
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The C&F extended tube body tool is more than two darning needles in a fancy holder. If you - like Dutch Henk Verhaar - like doing it yourself, this might be worth looking into. The flies tied with extended bodies can become very realistic and still be simple to tie.
A small mayfly, which may be (mis)taken for a dun during the sometimes the concentreted hatches on late August and Septemper evenings. It uses a hollow extended body, parachute hackle and wings of cdc stems to float high.
Section: The best fly patterns from all over the globe
A sedge pattern in the Goddard tradition - with a twist
This fly is a combination of the G+H Sedge and a hackling method adapted from Dutch Piet Weeda - making it a one-material-fly.
By Sven Ostermann
The words we use
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