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Jiggy

A jigging fly for almost any predatory fish originated by Bob Popvics. After a trip to Danish island Bornholm in 2007 Kasper Mühlbach wanted to tie and try this successful pattern and ordered a special color. But someone else came first and bought his custom dyed bucktail.

11 commentsBy
Jiggy fish
The Jiggy where it belongs
Martin Joergensen

Bornholm 2007. The conditions are perfect. The weather shows its nicest side and I am on the ferry with my friend Jens on our way to the Danish island Bornholm to meet Martin, Ken, Henning and Jorgen. It is the annual fishing week for our small group. The fantastic four have been on the island for three days - with no fish to show for it.

That is what they say and what they send us in their text messages.

It cannot be true. Not in this water. Not under this sun at this time of the year.

They must be kidding. When we arrive they will tell us the true stories. There will be slide shows that should never have been showed giving us visual evidence that they have had a great three days. And for dinner tonight? Fresh trout with crispy salad, of course.

But the truth is sad. The fishing has been a disaster so far. Henning is the only one who has had a take - for three days in the peak of the season!
Sadly it's still not a record. Some guys I know, have been fishing for a week without the slightest contact. In the end they actually didn't want to have a take as it would ruin the mystery of that week.

We set up our gear and eagerly enter the water - well, some more eagerly than others. After a few casts a kilo-fish grabs my Grey Fred and jumps immediately. Of course there are fish! It is all about skills…

The fish comes off quickly after the jump. That will be my only take for the next three days.

Thinking back. What did we do wrong or what didn't we do right? We experimented with the flies. We found the fish. We saw them hunt for sand eels. We cast sand eel imitations at them - even the Epoxy Miracle, which was my most productive fly 2007, did not tempt these strange fish.

Orange/White Jiggy
Natural color
Jiggies
Martin Joergensen - Henning Eskol

Two Norwegian guys were fishing from float tubes some 100 meters from the shore. Their rods bent so we prepared an ambush. We found a car with an "N" on the license plate in the parking lot and stalked it.

By coincidence Henning went for a walk along the beach as they paddled in. A streamer with a cone head, white and orange bucktail was the medicine, they said. A Jiggy. Shown in Bob Popovics' excellent book "Popfleyes". Martin quickly shot a spy photo of the sample fly in a window sill.

Upon return from the dreaded trip, I wanted to tie some of these killers. I did not like the color combination but wanted a more natural version. I could not find the right olive color tone anywhere so I had one dyed specifically for me. For some reason I was in a hurry and did not pick it up as agreed with the shop owner.

Another fly tier entered the very same shop to pick up some hooks and some flash. He was astonished by this perfectly colored bucktail behind the desk. The owner mentioned something about a Dane, living in Sweden and not to be relied on (who me!?).
The tier said that he knew about that guy, and now that he was here he would like to buy the bucktail and the deal would be done anyway - with a different buyer of course.

Some weeks later I logged on to our internal report site saw that it was my good friend Ken who had bought my bucktail and tied my Jiggy.

It is a poisonous fly and should be in many fly boxes if you fish for large predatory fish no matter if it is in cold or warm water.


Jiggy

Cold saltwater fly
Bob Popovics
sea trout (sea run)
striped bass
Materials
Hook Stainless streamer, size 6-2, bent to shape
Tying thread Thin mono
Cone Silver to fit the hook
Wing White, olive and black bucktail with a few straws of flash
Eyes Stick on
Head Epoxy
See the images for the tying sequence
Easy

The flies are tied by Ken Bonde Larsen.

Prepare the hook. It's a good idea to make several hooks ready at once before tying the flies. And after having tied the fly and added the eyes, set the fly aside, tie some more and epoxy a bunch at a time.

After having prepared the hook, you are ready to tie the fly itself.

When the fly is done, it's ready for epoxy. Set it aside and epoxy several flies at a time. It's easier and is far more economic with the epoxy.

Step 19 - curing
Last step - curing
Martin Joergensen
Large but light
Olive Jiggy
Slim and sparse
Dense head, long wing. The Jiggy
Martin Joergensen

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