Skip to main content

Pacific Northwest Streamer Conversions

A small series of flies from Roy Patrick's pattern book converted into streamers

1 comments
Roy Patrick conversions
Roy Patrick conversions
Dean Endress

"Pacific Northwest Fly Patterns" was a charming fly pattern book self published by the late Roy Patrick, original owner of Patrick's Fly Shop in Seattle, Washington state.
Patrick opened the shop in 1946 and it is still in business.

The book was a comb bounded

paperback, and the original manuscript is hand typed and is accompanied by somewhat crude ballpoint pen drawings of a number of the patterns.
There were a number of editions, the first one from the 1950's and continuing into the early 1970's. The first edition from 1953 contained a mere 50 pages. The 1970 enlarged edition, which I own, has 142 pages, so it's obvious that Patrick updated it over the years. The 1970 edition is divided into five chapters: Nymphs, Regular Flies, Steelhead Flies, Argentine Flies and British Columbia.
As crude as the book seems by today's standard of professionally printed fly fishing books, in its day it was considered a mainstay for fly fishers in the greater Northwest and beyond, and that lasted well into the late 70's.

The book
The book
Patrick's Fly Shop

I acquired my first copy

in the mid 70's. It was great, as it listed so many patterns, many that I heard of, but a great deal more I never knew about. I tied up a number of the patterns and found that they produced well for me in my fishing of the day. The trout I targeted in the Sierra Nevada liked many of the patterns, and nearer my home in Los Angeles I found that the bass and bluegill in Malibu State Park (where the TV series “MASH” was filmed) loved many of the patterns as well. It was a handy book to have then – and it still is today.

I'm following a tradition

first started on Raske's Streamer page prior to its merger with the Global FlyFisher. There Raske wrote an article about converting traditional and popular Atlantic salmon patterns into streamer form. This “converting” theme continued after joining GFF with an article about converting Ray Bergman wet flies into streamers. I thought it would be fun to convert a number of the patterns featured in the “Regular Flies” chapter of the above mentioned book into streamers.

The patterns I chose

are all called Wetflies in the book, The patterns I selected are mostly hairwings, a couple have Saddle Hackle or Marabou wings. I choose not to tie any pattern where the original called for a quill wing, and I switched it to a hair wing or saddle hackle wing. I did take the liberty of switching to Bucktail or Squirrel tail if the pattern called for calf tail or polar bear. I did do simple changes in materials to keep a slimmer profile on some of the patterns.
The hook listed is the streamer conversion choice, thread choice is my personal preference. Other than those changes, I stayed as true to the original dressings as possible.

In no particular order

here's the 10 patterns I converted to streamers:

Ebb Fly

Ebb Fly
Ebb Fly
Dean Endress

Ebb Fly

Streamer
Hook Mustad 79580, sizes 6 thru 12
Thread Danville 70 Denier (6/0) Flymaster Plus, black, waxed
Body Peacock herl, medium to full
Wing Red bucktail over equal amount of white bucktail. The wing should be almost 2 times shank length


The pattern is listed as good for Rainbows and Cutthroats.

Black Wag

Black Wag
Black Wag
Dean Endress

Black Wag

Streamer
Hook Mustad 3665A or Daiichi 2340, sizes 6 thru 12
Thread Danville 70 denier Flymaster plus, black waxed
Body Fine or medium black chenille, depending on hook size
Hackle Black saddle, 4 turns
Wing Black marabou plume, body length


Designed by Leon Wagner of the Washington State Flyfishers, for Lenice lake in eastern Washington. A leech type pattern (but works well even with no leeches around). Said to be good for rainbows (and I can add browns and bass).

Pass Lake

Pass Lake
Pass Lake
Dean Endress

Pass Lake

Streamer
Hook Mustad 3665A or Daiichi 2340, sizes 4 thru 10
Thread Danville 70 denier Flymaster plus, Fl. Fire orange , waxed
Tail Yellow hackle fibers
Rib Flat silver tinsel, fine or small
Body Fl. fire orange floss, slight taper
Hackle Yellow saddle hackle, 4 turns
Wing White marabou, full plume


Designed for Pass lake, Washington State. Pass Lake was the first fly-fishing only lake in the state. An interesting note: the dressing lists the hackle prior to tying in the wing, yet the crude drawing shows the hackle looking like a collar tied in after the wing. I have always tied my Pass Lakes with the collar version. The photo shows the collared version.

American Lake

American Lake
American Lake
Dean Endress

American Lake

Streamer
Hook Mustad 3665A or Daiichi 2340, sizes 4 thru 10
Thread Danville 70 denier Flymaster Plus, Black, waxed
Tail Red hackle fibers
Body Peacock herl , with a red floss center a la "Royal Coachman"
Wing White saddle hackle, 2 each side
Hackle Yellow saddle, 4 turns, fibers longer than normal


Perfected at American Lake in Washington state, though it works elsewhere. Basically a Royal Coachman streamer with a Yellow hackle collar.

Peacock Streamer

Peacock Streamer
Peacock Streamer
Dean Endress

Peacock Streamer

Streamer
Hook Mustad 79580, sizes 4 thru 12
Thread Danville 70 denier Flymaster Plus, black, waxed
Tail Brown hackle fibers
Body Peacock herl, medium size
Hackle Brown saddle, 4 to 5 turns
Wing Peacock sword, 10-12 fibers tied over back
Easy


A neutral pattern that works well. Good for rainbows and cutthroat. Browns like it as well.

Black Demon

Black Demon
Black Demon
Dean Endress

Black Demon

Streamer
Hook Mustad 3665A or Daiichi 2340, #4 thru #10
Thread Danville 70 denier Flymaster Plus, black, waxed
Tail Golden pheasant tippet fibers
Body Hot Orange yarn (I use Uni Yarn Orange)
Hackle Hot orange saddle, 4-5 turns
Wing Black bucktail or black squirrel
Cheeks Jungle cock


Said to work great for large trout in lakes or rivers.

Dorris Special

Dorris Special
Dorris Special
Dean Endress

Dorris Special

Streamer
Hook Mustad 3665A or Daiichi 2340, #4 thru #12
Thread Danville 70 denier Flymaster Plus, black, waxed
Tail Golden pheasant tippet fibers
Hackle Black saddle, palmered over body
Body Flat gold tinsel, medium or small depending on hook size
Wing Natural brown bucktail


Apparently first used on Oregon’s Deschutes River, but effective in other rivers and streams. Resembles the Picket Pin patterns a good deal.

Little John

Little John
Little John
Dean Endress

Little John

Streamer
Hook Mustad 3665A or Daiichi 2340, sizes 6 thru 12
Thread Danville 70 denier Flymaster plus, black, waxed
Body Medium or small flat gold tinsel
Wing Red squirrel tail
Cheeks Jungle cock (not called for in the book, but I like them)


A very simple pattern, but very effective. I’ve caught browns, rainbows, brooks, bass and quality bluegill on this pattern. I will often omit the jungle cock and paint eyes (yellow iris/black pupil) on the thread head. Either method is good.

Yellow Hammer

Yellow Hammer
Yellow Hammer
Dean Endress

Yellow Hammer

Streamer
Hook Mustad 3665A or Daiichi 2340, #4 thru #10
Thread Danville 70 denier Flymaster Plus, yellow, waxed
Tag Flat silver tinsel
Body Yellow chenille, fine or medium
Hackle Red hackle, 4 wraps
Wing White bucktail


Originated by Everett & Mary Bundt of Arlington, WA. Designed for Stilliguamish River sea run cutthroat.

Thunder Mountain

Thunder Mountain
Thunder Mountain
Dean Endress

Thunder Mountain

Streamer
Hook Mustad 3665A or Daiichi 2340, sizes 6 thru 12
Thread Danville 70 denier Flymaster Plus Black, waxed
Tail Red hackle fibers
Rib Flat silver tinsel, medium or small per hook size
Body Red floss, medium taper
Hackle Red and black, 2 turns each
Wing White bucktail


Recommended for fast streams. Effective on rainbows and cutthroats.

Submitted by Jerri Bullock on

Permalink

I've done this for years and it's a lot of fun to convert flies from one usage to another. One of my favorite sources of inspiration was the book "Fly Patterns of Alaska" , a compilation of the Alaska Fly Fishers from Amato Publications. Many of those salmon ad saltwater patterns can be tweaked into wonderful, down-sized largemouth bass streamer patterns for Pennsylvania lakes.

Since you got this far …


The GFF money box

… I have a small favor to ask.

Long story short

Support the Global FlyFisher through several different channels, including PayPal.

Long story longer

The Global FlyFisher has been online since the mid-90's and has been free to access for everybody since day one – and will stay free for as long as I run it.
But that doesn't mean that it's free to run.
It costs money to drive a large site like this.
See more details about what you can do to help in this blog post.

The Global FlyFisher has recently been updated to a new publishing system, and there may be a few glitches while the last bits get fixed. If you meet anything that doesn't work, please let me know.
Martin - martin@globalflyfisher.com