When wading, my preference is for medium bead chain eyes. 5 weight outfit with a full floating line. 12 feet of leader, and I fish mostly with 6 pounds tippet. This is a really light fly, and is surprisingly snag resistant. Have a look at below image. Bottom two flies are bead chain. Wing material is craft fur. I’m becoming more of a convert to using UV flash in flies in general. UV krystal flash in various colours. Size of hook is #6 or #8.
Fishing out of a boat, we need to consider a couple of other factors. An intermediate line is going to be more versatile. Leader can come back to 9 feet. Depending on how much structure, tippet may be anywhere from 6 pounds to 20 pounds. This is the time where different weight flies come in handy. How fast the boat is moving, how much current, and how deep you need to get the fly down will decide how heavy a fly you need to fish. To me, in this situation, colour is of less importance. Getting the right sink rate is more important here.
Senyo Predator Wrap On the last blackwood trip, I dug out a heap of material that I had bought a while back. Product looked great, but when used as a wrap as it was intended for, it caused all sort of nightmares. The finished flies looked great, but the wrap caused the fly to constantly foul. I had put this aside ready for the bin, but just never got round to it. What caught my eye this time round was a lot of the range was UV. The barred effect also made the flies pop. Well, length of the material ended up around 100mm. It was long enough to use as flash for bream style charlies. Again wing of fly is mostly craft fur. Senyo Predator Wrap used as a flash material over the top really makes the fly pop. I'm fishing these flies in deeper water, so feel that a littler extra flash helps in this situation.
Below are different variations of charlies I tied up using Senyo Predator wrap. Again, mostly craft fur wing. I’m fishing these flies a little deeper, so I don’t mind a little more flash. Hook size #4 or #2. Various eye sizes. There’s a heap of different styles of eyes. Just pick up different sizes and weights. Take note that there’s both lead and brass eyes. Lead eyes are heavier (think sink faster) and don’t have as much mass. Brass eyes will last longer (lead is a soft material, and prone to snap off the hook).
PS. Don't tell Brian, but this could be the reason I caught one or two more fish over the weekend.
