Hook: 
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6-16 
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Thread: 
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Burnt orange 
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Tail: 
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Red fox squirrel back fur (optional) 
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Rib: 
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Gold twist 
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Abdomen: 
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Red fox squirrel underbelly fur 
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Thorax: 
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Red fox squirrel back fur (dubbed slender) 
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Hackle: 
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Dark speckled brown hen hackle 
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Including the Red Fox Squirrel Nymph as soft
  hackle might be criticized as taking too much liberty with the blog
  definition of the style, as in the case of the northeastern Breadcrust, the
  ubiquitous Greenwell’s Glory, or the Tup’s Nymph (or most other patterns dressed by G. E. M. Skues). Nevertheless, it an
  impressionistic pattern and lends itself to dressing in many familiar styles.
  Pinpointing the inception of one of Dave Whitlock’s most iconic flies is a
  task likely best left to Whitlock himself. Since tracking down every
  reference to the fly would be even harder, a sample of Whitlock’s own words
  on the pattern must suffice.  
An early publication that includes the Red Fox
  Squirrel Nymph was The Masters on the
  Nymph (1979), to which Whitlock contributed a chapter 7, “Nymphing
  Tackle.” The first of the four “favorite nymph patterns” he includes is the
  Red Fox Squirrel Nymph,” which he describes as his “favorite all-purpose
  nymph, as versatile and effective for a nymph as the Adams is for a dry fly.
  It works as well where mayflies, stone flies, caddis pupae, and scuds of similar
  colors exist, and where there are no nymphs. 
Hook:   Mustad 9671, sizes 4-18 
Body weight:   6 to 10 wraps of lead wire at thorax 
Thread:   Black 
Tail:   Sparse tuft of red-fox squirrel back hair,
  including both guard and underfur ½ length of hook shank 
Rib:   Small oval tinsel 
Abdomen: Red-fox squirrel
  belly fur 
Thorax:  Red-fox squirrel back fur (with guard and
  underfur included) 
Wing case:   Dark-brown swiss straw or turkey tail 
Legs:   Either guard hairs of red-fox squirrel
  back or one turn of dark partridge hackle” 
He also cited it as the nymph he used in his
  nymphing system in a pair of articles in Fly
  Fisherman magazine from 1983, but did not give it an explicit treatment
  of the fly itself until a June 1984 article entitled “Red Fox-Squirrel-Hair
  Nymph.”  In this article, he describes how to trim a red squirrel hide to preserve the scarce belly fur—split the
  skin down the back when dressing the body—and how to sort the fur into like
  colors. (He also notes that a shaved, tanned red fox squirrel skin can
  repurposed into buckskin nymphs. Very little of the animal goes to waste for
  the savvy, creative fly tier.)  More
  importantly, he discusses the reasons for the fly’s success. Rather than
  clinging to a narrow representational niche, the Red Fox Squirrel Nymph aims
  for impressionistic representation and is, as a result, characteristically
  versatile. By adjusting the length and thickness of the abdomen, and thorax,
  as well as the sparseness and length of the hackle, the Red Fox Squirrel
  Nymph could give the impression of a broad array of insects. In this article,
  he gives a dressing for “Dave Whitlock’s Standard
  Red Fox Squirrel-Hair Nymph” that looks much more like a soft hackle: 
“HOOK:  Mustad 9671 or Tiemco Nymph Hook, #2 to
  #18. 
THREAD: Black or dark
  brown nylon. 
CEMENT: Dave’s
  Flexament. 
WEIGHT: Lead or copper
  wire. 
ABDOMEN: Belly fur from
  red fox squirrel skin, may be blended with synthetic sparkle dubbing. Abdomen
  should be ½ to 2/3 of the overall body length. 
THORAX: Back fur from
  red fox squirrel skin, may be blended with synthetic sparkle dubbing. Thorax
  should be ½ to 1/3 of the overall body length. 
RIB Gold wire or oval
  tinsel.” 
In his Guide
  to Aquatic Trout Foods (1982), Whitlock’s fly boxes illustrate this
  versatility: it shows up, for instance, in his “Box No. 1: General Utility
  Box” at the head of the list in sizes 6-16, as well as “Box No. 4:
  Terrestrials and Summer Midges” in sizes 16 and 18. 
Whitlock’s prolific writing has continued to describe the
  efficacy of the Red Fox Squirrel Nymph. He contributed a short article on the
  pattern in the September/October 2010 issue of Eastern
  Fly Fishing that reflects many of the modern, commercial interventions in
  fly dressing that have risen alongside media popularization of the sport,
  especially in print but also in film. This version updates the materials that
  Whitlock originally posted for the do-it-yourself fly tier of the late seventies
  and early eighties. In their blend of synthetic and natural fibers, these
  newer, branded materials regularize the color and consistency of the abdomen,
  thorax, and hackling, and they incorporate colors and sparkle that are more
  likely to attract a trout’s attention, particularly in off-color water. Both
  the original and contemporary versions have a place in the angler’s fly box. This
  Red Fox Squirrel Nymph uses: 
“Hook: TMC 5262, size 2-20 
Thread: Orange Wapsi Ultra Thread 70 
Weight: Lead Wire the diameter of the hook wire 
Cements: Zap-a-Gap and Dave’s Flexament 
Tail: Back hair of red fox squirrel 
Rib: Small or medium gold oval tinsel 
Abdomen: 50-50 blend of red fox squirrel belly hair and similar
  colors of Antron and SLF or No. 2 (red fox squirrel abdomen) Wapsi Dave
  Whitlock Plus SLF dubbing blend 
Thorax: 50-50 blend of red fox squirrel back hair blended and
  hare’s ear Antron and SLF or No. 1 (red fox squirrel thorax) Wapsi Dave
  Whitlock Plus SLF dubbing blend 
Legs: Dark ginger Metz hen back feather for hook sizes 2-12; for
  smaller hooks, pick out the dubbing guard hairs for legs 
Head: Orange thread or gold bead.” 
 | 
 
Wednesday, December 28, 2016
Red Fox Squirrel Nymph
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Nice job Neil! Love that one
ReplyDeleteThanks, Mark! This is my searching fly in the Smokies on a size 14 nymph hook.
DeleteThanks for the thorough overview of the Red Fox Squirrel Nymph. Fished as a Soft Hackle makes this a great variation to a great nymph pattern.
ReplyDeleteMy take on Whitlock's pattern - on his impressionistic method overall - is the importance of infinite variabity.
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