Rene add a cone head followed by a spun hair collar.  I use this type of
bugger in stained water or at night.  It pushes a lot of water.

BobH

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Rene Zillmann
Sent: Saturday, January 01, 2005 7:20 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [VFB] Tying Wolley Buggers

Tony,
good morning and a happy new year to you and your family.
As usual, you are on target here!

Maybe you know that the fishing licences over here run from Jan 1st to 
Dec 31th. therefore usually at the beginning of a year I have no 
license. I buy it somewhere during the course of the year - usually that 
means I miss the early days in january.
This year I managed to get my license last week - therefore today I have 
a valid license and I hope that I can do some serious fishing in the 
Rhine this afternoon. This morning we got a bad weather forcast, may be 
get some storm which will not allow some outdoor activities.

Anyway - currently I'm tying wolley buggers for the Rhine. The river has 
not much clear water. I guess less than 3 feet visibility. Therefore I'm 
working on some flies, which produce attraction not only by 
'visibility'. One idea was, to construct the fly in a way, that it can 
be recognized by the 'side lines' of the fish (Hope the translation is 
ok -- Allan, what is 'Seitenlinie' in English).

During a Bugger swap hosted by Tony Flower, I've got a bugger, which a 
spund dear head. This thing is the start for my experiments. I'm 
wondering, if the hackle construction (long, dense, webby, stiff,...) 
will add attraction for the sidelines as well.

Best
Rene

Tony Spezio wrote:

> Rene,
> I have not kept up with the tread so I may not be on target here. If 
> stiff hackle is used on a bugger type fly where the hackle is spiraled 
> up the body, this will cause the fly to spin. If using a light leader, 
> it will twist the leader real bad. The soft hackles will move in the 
> water and give some "life" to the fly.
> Tony
>
> Rene Zillmann wrote:
>
>> Thanks to all, who replied.
>> I was wondering about the function of the body hackle in this case. 
>> Is it only a visiual thing, or is the stiff, large hackle producing 
>> some waves in the water which are recognized by the side lines of the 
>> fish.
>> Rene
>>
>> Paul Marriner wrote:
>>
>>> Rene, whatever turns you on. The original had a long webby hackle; one
>>> of my favorites is an olive-dyed grizzly saddle.
>>> Cheers,
>>> Paul
>>> http://www.galesendpress.com
>>>
>>>
>>
>



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