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February’s fly of the month (better late than never) is the Chubby Chernobyl. This is the fly we use when we want to float multiple nymph rigs with a lot of weight. When available I prefer it over a thingamabobber because it has killer buoyancy and there is nothing more badass than when a fish takes a swipe at this fly.

Materials:

–          Flash

–          Dubbing

–          3mm foam

–          Wing material

–          Legs

Step 1. Insert hook in vise. I used a size 8 streamer hook. Wrap down a good thread base. I hit the thread with some super glue to lock it down.

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Step 2. Tie in some flash at the back of the hook and cut it to be hook gap long.

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Step 3. Dub the shank until you are even with the point of the hook.

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Step 4. Cut a strip of 3mm foam the width of the hook gap. Trim the corners. I use 3mm foam on size 8 and larger and 2mm foam on anything smaller. This fly is all about floating, especially when dropping multiple nymphs off the back of it. Tie in the foam above the hook point extending to half the length of your flash.

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Step 5. Tie in a wing on top. I used the material that comes in the middle of mylar tubing. Any hydrophobic, crinkly fiber will do though.

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Step 6. Add a leg to either side.

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Step 7. Dub a few wraps around the wing/leg tie in, then continue dubbing up the shank until about one eye-length behind the eye

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Step 8. Tie down the foam and repeat steps 5 – 7. Whip finish thread between the eye and the foam.

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Step 9. Trim foam over the eye to your desired length. Trim corners as you did the other side.

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Step 10. Trim wing and legs to desired length and you have a finished fly. The wing on this fly, coated with some floatant, will float like a cork all day.

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A pair of Colorado River browns that fell to the fly.

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A Georgia rainbow that couldn’t resist either.

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Day 4

Our last full day at Georgia was spent fishing at the cabin. Hard to argue the decision after the success we had our first day there; we were basically having withdrawals not hitting it the the day before. It was another good day with some quality fish caught, though not quite as many as on day one. On day one trout were holding all over the place, by day four water levels had dropped and clarity improved a good bit. Instead of getting hits on lousy drifts, you actually had to concentrate and work the water over, hitting every seam where they might be holding. When you got a hit though it was usually a quality fish. I finally lost the Upper Colorado rig that worked well the first day, but Blake had tied up similar stonefly patterns that worked nearly as well, one of them I’ll have up for an SBS pretty soon.

The first fish I tied into on the day was a strong fighter, made several jumps and ran me downstream to the point where I had to actually follow the fish (not quite River Runs Through It style).  It may not have been the biggest fish on the trip, but I’m really happy I didn’t screw it up and was able to bring this fish to hand.

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Then Blake got in on the action with a couple nice fish, the second one on actually came on the dry. Always a treat to watch a big trout rise and sip (or clobber) a big dry.

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The day went on like this as we picked our spots and worked them over. The first (and only) snake encounter we had on the weekend was with a black rat snake that just wanted to be left alone.

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Later on I landed a brookie, a rare treat on this stream which gave me a slam on the day.

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After that we grabbed a beer at the cabin then headed to the spot where we doubled on day one and I tried (and failed) to document with the GoPro. We approached the hole a little differently as the fish weren’t holding in the same spot. These fish were stacked up under some rhododendron so Blake stood on the bank and told me where my drift needed to go and after a short while I was rewarded with a good eat.

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We let the spot settle down, then tried our luck drifting through again, this time a bit further downstream. It wasn’t long before I had another eat and this time it was a better fish. The fish ran sideways and after a very short fight my tippet gave way. What a heartbreak. We pushed further down, beating the bank with nymphs and streamers. Blake threw at a downed tree and I remember telling him that looked like a good spot. I threw at it and had a massive take, then as I laid into him to set the hook deep, I came up empty. My entire rig broke off above the dry! Not quite sure how it happened, there was a lot of structure down there, so it could have run me up into there, all I know is that this fish seemed larger than any other we caught all weekend, now maybe he’s sporting some lip jewelry. Another heartbreak, I really wasn’t in the mood to tie anything else on after that. Blake fished on and caught one last fish before we went back to the cabin.

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It really didn’t take much to convince me to rig up again and I was able to land one more before it got too dark to see.

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Day 5

We woke up a little bit earlier to fish before the long drive back to Louisiana. Not much doing for me on the day, but I did land a couple of fish of note – another brookie and a “trophy” bluehead chub.

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BBQ and Lazy Magnolia at The Shed in Ocean Springs put a nice touch on the end of the trip – I forgot how good this place was. Another successful trip to North Georgia for Memorial Day weekend in the books. It’s too bad we caught a year when my parents were out of town and the girls couldn’t make it, but that certainly freed us up to do a ton of fishing. It was a good year for it too because the creek at the cabin is fishing better now than I ever remember. Hopefully it fishes the same next time I head that way, not sure when that will be, but I always look forward to it.

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