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Duo Monkey

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  • Duo Monkey

    A pattern dressed for salmon and it works extremely well for them. With the wing 'skinnied down' and tied a little slimmer than the original scheme it takes on even more mobility and for some obscure reason it has a strange allure for both brown and sea trout. Cast a little upstream on a medium sinking tip and inducing a large bow in the line strip, strip strip and and all the force of hell usually lets loose.


    The Dressing


    Tube: 3/4" long aluminium
    Thread: Black
    Tag: Glo Brite No 9 Floss
    Body: Orange Uni Tinsel
    Rib: Silver wire
    Hackle: Dark orange salmon shrimp patch
    Wing: Black calf tail overlaid with long slim bunch of black dyed Cashmere goat hair overlaid with 4 strands of gold Krystalflash
    Cheeks: Jungle cock nails


    Tying Method

    Step 1: Secure the tube in your chosen holder.


    Step 2: Attach black tying thread.


    Step 3: Tie in a doubled length of No 9 Glo Brite Floss. Wind thread to rear of hook and wind floss as tag. Apply a small blob of superglue and run around the floss to bond. Run thread to front of tube.


    Step 4: Tie in length of silver wire. Run thread to end of tag and return to front of tube.


    Step 5: Tie in a length of orange Uni Tinsel and run a small seam of superglue along the top of the tube.


    Step 6: Wind the tinsel to the rear of the tube and back to the front to form body.


    Step 7: Wind the wire in open turns to form rib.


    Step 8: Tie in hackle as shown


    Step 9: Double the hackle and wind to form collar


    Step 10: Tie in a bunch of black dyed calf tail short and flat over the top of the tube.


    Step 11: Overlay the calf tail with a slim bunch of black dyed Cashmere goat hair.


    Step 12: Overlay the goat hair with 2 doubled lengths of fine Krystalflash


    Step 13: Tie in a pair of jungle cock nails as cheeks.


    Step 14: Whip finish


    Step 15: Varnish to complete.


    The finished article



    www.silversalmon.co.uk

  • #2
    Very, very nice! very neat and a great step-by-step, thanks a lot for sharing. Looks like it would do the business with the salmon too!

    I especially like the butt. If we look at flies such as the green machine, undertaker, green butt etc. all great flies, and all have this little attractor. I think it sets the fly off nicely.

    Thanks again,

    TT.

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