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First published before January 1st 2001 - More than 7 years ago
Simo LummeA fascinating fly pattern has developed into an even more fascinating family of patternsBy Preben Torp Jacobsen
I came in 1973 into contact with the finnish architect and flyfisher Simo Lumme.
He send me copies of some of his own creations and moreover delicate watercolour drawings of his in Scandinavia very famous Sedge Pupa - imitation. As his flies are very little known in Europe, I shall try to give a description. He had in his caught trout at certain times of the year seen a tremendous amount of sedge pupae in their stomach - and being a draftsman he made the inspection of the stomachs the moment he had killed them, and shortly after made sketches of them in his notebook using an Indian ink-pen plus a few colour-pencils. One has to make this inspection very short after the killing, then the stomach-fluids will very fast change the colours and appearance of the insects. His tying is as follows - he uses three different colour-variants:
"I try to imitate it with a dubbing of a mixture of artificial wools - partly stiff; but with a sharp lustre like polyamid (nylon, perlon, antron etc.), partly something more soft like polyacryl (dralon, rayon or natural wool), and I use white wool to 'tone' the colours down. I cut the fibres in short lenghts, separate them and mix them thoroughly, until I get the right hue. Exactly the same way a painter mixes the colours on his palette".
Simo is not using very much dubbing - Most flytiers use all too much material! After each turn of dubbing he brushes the dubbing backwards with his fingers. In that way, the tying silk will always be close to the hook and not placed on top of another turn of dubbing. After the tying he combs the whole fly with a piece of ‘Velcro’ , so that the fibres trail backwards. Should he by accident have used too much dubbing, then he cuts the fly with a pair of scissors and then treats it once more with the 'Velcro'.
I got a large amount of the different artificial wools he used and the Antron is just as sparkling as the wool one gets today. Simo Lumme describes his final colours for the abdomen as: Light orange, light sea-green and light sandy-brown.
The tying can seem very simple; but it’s of utmost importance, that the fly looks ‘light’ and surrounded by a 'halo' of fine, fluttering fibres, that diffuse the contour of the fly.
Nalle Puh
It’s a very effective fly and floats high on the water.
© Preben Torp Jacobsen. 'Flyleaves'.
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Submitted May 9th 2008
this pag is the best you can learn to tiy flys, look at rods, and lok at pics of peoples fish and them fishing