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Saltwater

Fished BCKFC’s Redfish Rumble with Blake and Kevin this past weekend to less-than-spectacular results. I was fairly confident going in that I’d at least catch five redfish as the format calls for your five heaviest slot redfish. Right in my wheelhouse, or so I thought.

The combination of high tide and winds from the south turned the spot I chose to fish into something I wasn’t too familiar with. It was tough to come across areas of good water clarity and when I did they were deep water areas. I’m much more comfortable sight casting reds in shallow water, so I was a little lost. I did so awful that I didn’t shake the skunk off until about six hours in, it was a trout that went about 13″. I did finally see a 25.5″ redfish and I managed to get him to eat a spoonfly tied by Kevin, but by that time it was too late to weigh-in and it wouldn’t have much mattered as I’m sure others had much better luck. Big thanks to Kevin on the fly and the pictures.

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DCIM100GOPRO

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Still, it was fun to get out on the water with Blake and Kevin and my poor day wasn’t shared by everyone. Kevin was out in his new Cruise and he was able to stand up and sight fish a few drum and sheepshead. Standing up to sight fish was something that he hadn’t been able to previously do out of his Tarpon and I could tell he was pretty excited at the possibilities on a good day. After having truck problems last time we were supposed to go out, Blake was finally able to take his new Cuda 12. He ended up catching a couple over slot reds and picked up around ten or so trout, with a couple of those around 17-18″. On one his line popped above the cork and the cork disappeared. I found it ten minutes later in a different spot and was able to hook the line and retrieve the trout. Unfortunately not as big as we thought when he set the hook, must have had a nick his line.

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I haven’t seen final results posted from the event anywhere, except for a blurb on Kayak Fishing U on facebook: “Congratulations to Michael for his 1st place 29.75# – 5 redfish stringer @ the Redfish Rumble today!” Sounds about right, I believe Michael paddles a Jackson Cuda as well!

Fly of the month for April is the fly that was effective on black drum my last trip out. It was something Blake had tied up and given to me a while back to try out on sheepshead (I’ve found sheepshead to be fond of the color purple). Didn’t see too many sheep out this past weekend, or reds for that matter, but it worked pretty well on the big uglies. Try it, you might like it. Oh, and why a black crab, well, after 2010, why not?

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Photo: Patrick Semansky  /  AP

Materials:

Mustad 34007 size 2

Zonker strip

EP fibers

Spanflex legs

Dumbbell eyes

Flashabou

Step 1. Start a thread base behind the eye and wrap back to the bend. Put down a layer of glue to keep everything secure. Tie in a few strands of flash at the bend.

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Step 2. Cut the hair off the end of the zonker strip and trim the hide to a point so that you don’t end up with a bulky tie-in spot. Turn the fly over and tie it in right before the bend.

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Step 3. Make a dubbing loop at the bend of the hook and pull it out of the way. We will use this in a later step.

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Step 4. Tie in your legs.

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Step 5. Tie in dumbbell eyes leaving room between the hook eye and the dumbbells to tie down the zonker.

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Step 6. Cut enough small sections of EP fibers to fill your dubbing loop. (It would be easier here to use a dubbing brush if you have one, I didn’t have time to make one.) Put the sections of EP in your loop, spin it, and brush it out to untangle any trapped fibers.

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Step 7. While pulling the fibers toward the rear of the fly, palmer the dubbing loop to behind the dumbbell eyes. The legs tend to get in the way, so I use a piece of lead to wrap them all up in front of the dumbbell eyes. As I wrap up the hook shank, I use my bodkin to pull the different leg sections out from under the lead. Tie in the dubbing loop behind the dumbbell eyes.

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Step 8. Comb out the fibers on the fly. Part the fibers on the top of the fly and run a line of hard as nails down the part line. Next, pull the rabbit strip over and tie it in between the dumbbell eyes and the hook eye. I forgot to get a picture of the rabbit tie in, but you can see it in the final fly pics.

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Step 9. Here, you can do one of two things on the bottom of the fly. One is to cut the fibers on the bottom of the fly (do this if you have too many fibers), or the other is to part the fibers to either side as you did on the top of the fly and add some superglue along the shank (do this if you want a fuller fly). I decided to cut the fibers along the bottom of the fly leaving only the sides.

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Step 10. Trim the fly to your preferred shape. Use a clip to hold all the legs out of the way while trimming. I like to use a round shape. Flip the fly, clip the other legs out of the way and do the same trim pattern.

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Step 11. Put a little glue on the head and trim the legs to your desired length. Finished fly.

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Proof of Concept:

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