Ol' Mr Wiggly Fly Tying Instructions by Charlie Craven

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Ol' Mr. Wiggly Fly Tying Recipe:
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Hook: #04 Gamakatsu B10s
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Thread: Black UNI 6/0
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Glue: Zap A Gap
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Body: Beetle Green Loco Foam
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Underbody: Black Peacock Ice Dubbing
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Black Legs: Black Blue Flake Sili Legs
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Front Legs: Metallic Silver or Smoke Grey Sili Legs
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Hot Spot: Yellow Thin Foam
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For the past couple years, I have traded texts and phone calls with Fly Fisherman editor Ross Purnell to determine which flies we will feature in the Fly Tier's Bench column for the upcoming season. He generally gives me free rein to pick the flies if they fit in seasonally and don't overlap too much, or perhaps even complement, other features in any given issue.
This past year was a little different. We hashed out a few different flies but when it came time to finalize the list, Ross very strongly recommended, "You have to look at Ol' Mr. Wiggly."
I'm pretty amenable to suggestions, but this one was a fly I had never even heard of, which was both compelling and worrisome. Ross went on to tell me about his experiences with this small­ mouth pattern, and told me that he fished this fly more than any other smallmouth fly the previous year in Pennsylvania, and that it was already a staple pattern in Michigan and Wisconsin.
It seems that pressured smallmouths in low, clear water don't crush the conventional chugging poppers of yore like they used to; in fact, the loud popping often spooks them. Savvy bass anglers are now using more subtle, low-floating patterns like Charlie Piette's Ol’ Mr. Wiggly to fool them as they get more finicky.
With this information in my hot little hand, I set out to reach Piette, and rang up Tim Landwehr at Tight Lines Fly Shop in De Pere, Wisconsin, where Piette worked for more than a decade. As it turns out, Piette had just recently moved across the country to manage the Gorge Fly Shop in Oregon, but Landwehr was happy to extol the virtues of this apparently incredible pattern before giving me Piette's cell number so I could finally talk to the man himself. This fly comes highly recommended!
After leaving Piette a fervent message telling him that I simply must talk to him about this fly, he called me back right away and I was struck by what an easygoing, humble guy he is, a trait that carries through with every truly good angler and tier I have ever met. Piette was very forthcoming with the details on his fly and gave credit where credit is due for the ideas behind it.
In the fly-fishing industry's equivalent of an unpaid internship, years ago, Piette just hung around Tight Lines enough that Landwehr finally hired him. Piette worked in the shop while he finished his bachelor's degree, and he started guiding while pursuing his master's degree at University of Wisconsin in Green Bay. During the early days of the Tight Lines smallmouth operation, the shop had a repeat client named Jack Allen who was a backcountry largemouth bass guide down in Florida. The patterns Allen fished made the Tight Lines staff take a whole different approach to topwater flies for smallmouths. Allen often fished slightly oversized sponge panfish spiders for Florida fish, and the Wisconsin smallmouth ate these unusual patterns very confidently and in an entirely different manner than they would a conventional popper. After also experimenting with Western patterns like the Chernobyl Ant and Fat Albert, Piette combined the ideas for a bit more purpose-built fly for his home waters.
The resulting fly came to be known as Ol’ Mr. Wiggly, no doubt owing to its protuberance of extra-long, dangly Sili Legs. Constructed only of various colors of 2mm foam, Sili Legs, and a bit of dubbing, Piette's simple fly has taken the Midwest smallmouth fishery by storm.
Piette fishes the OMW as you might fish a hopper from a drifting boat, with a downstream cast angled toward the bank with a long, essentially dead drift in most cases, but he did mention that imparting a little tug now and then can also draw strikes. Often, when you make an upstream mend to continue the drift, just that slight unintentional movement of the fly can draw strikes.
While the OMW looks unconventional to this old trout fisherman, I can clearly see where a stealthy yet animated pattern like this could be an ace in the hole. I've tied up a couple dozen in preparation for this article that will go directly into my own fly box, and I now have an actual fly order from the esteemed editor Mr. Purnell for a couple dozen more for his personal stash as well.
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Пікірлер: 14

  • @melchurch3019
    @melchurch30192 күн бұрын

    Great story on the history of this fly. I will be tying some for the Smallmouth in my local Kalamazoo River. Thanks Charlie.

  • @thomasw_
    @thomasw_10 ай бұрын

    interesting fly patttern that i could see being effective for stillwater trout. thanks for sharing this, CC.

  • @T.N.TFly.company
    @T.N.TFly.company10 ай бұрын

    Yet another great tying video by Charlie craven, such a cool looking pattern! I will have to tie one of these.

  • @pzadek1
    @pzadek110 ай бұрын

    Your tying videos are SO clear and descriptive! Great job!! Thanks!

  • @jamesvatter5729
    @jamesvatter572910 ай бұрын

    Really enjoy your videos, Charlie.Thanks for sharing.

  • @huntingmissouri5420
    @huntingmissouri542010 ай бұрын

    Cool bug! Thanks for sharing!

  • @chadweberg6039
    @chadweberg60399 ай бұрын

    Patiently waiting for another fly

  • @theinvasivespecies1119
    @theinvasivespecies111910 ай бұрын

    Looks kind of like the invasive emerald ash borer. Very cool

  • @josephsichting8162
    @josephsichting816210 ай бұрын

    Thanks, man. An Indiana fly.if I ever saw one!

  • @sonja9001
    @sonja900110 ай бұрын

    I gotta try this pattern. Last year I tied up some woven detached abdomen dragon flies and caught city pond largemouth on them…..however they were hard to cast and twisted my leader up because I used bucktail for the wings. This bug looks way more efficient to cast. I gotta try to tie it and use some soon. Thanks for give a great tutorial again.

  • @fernandomiron7557
    @fernandomiron755710 ай бұрын

    👏👏👏👏👏👏

  • @fernandomiron7557
    @fernandomiron755710 ай бұрын

    👍🥇

  • @seizedcarcass8440
    @seizedcarcass84409 ай бұрын

    Where do you get foiled foam? That is a awesome material. And what an amazing fly!

  • @Flytieco
    @Flytieco10 ай бұрын

    Yah the stillwater trout would eat it up.

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