Two Generic Patterns from Theo

Here are a couple of generic patterns from Theo Bakelaar in Holland. His Little Black One is simplicity to tie, but very effective. Body: black ostrich herl, bak, Swiss straw, tail: red yarn.  It can be dressed with a peacock herl body or with coarse dubbing, or fine feather dubbing, etc.—color of your choice. The back may be Swiss straw, flash material, peacock herl, deer hair, or a host of other materials. In other words, this is a generic pattern that can be pushed in every direction possible. Want to go wild? Add rubber legs or folded hackle, or…. Note the red tail. This is a strong feature in many imitations from England, Europe, Africa, Australia, New Zealand, and South America. In other words, it works.

The Sili-Skin sand eel is another example of a pattern that can be modified in many ways. The colors of material used, the type of materials used, the length of materials used, the bulk of the fly, the colors applied with the marker, and so on. Fuss a bit, it’s a fun imitation to build from.

 

Little Black One

Black-one

Sili Skin Sand Eel

Tie-in-flash

Thread of contrasting or complimentary color–dependent on final imitation design. Tie in a wing/tail of flash material.

 

Wrap-body-with-sili-skin

Wrap a strip of “skin” around the hook to build the body to the desired thickness. This can be omitted if the body is to be very thin.

 

Tie-in-wind-matrial

Tie in a wing of whatever materials you wish, mix in flash, of a different color than tail, etc.

 

Fold-sili-skin

Fold a strip of “skin” over the fly–length depends on final design.

 

Trim-to-shape

Trim “skin” to shape.

 

color-sili-minnow

Add eyes and color with permanent markers.

 

sili-minnows

Lots of options with this pattern technique.

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