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Martin - martin@globalflyfisher.com

Tie a muddler

One evening when I was tying flies with a couple of friends, one of them, Nils, asked me to tie a muddler, just as a demo. I did. Luckily the other friend, Henning, was quick and caught these great pictures of the process.

11 comments

One evening when I was tying flies with a couple of friends, one of them, Nils, asked me to tie a muddler, just as a demo. And so I did. Luckily the other friend, Henning, was quick on the camera and caught these great pictures of the process.

The pictures actually came out so good that we decided to boil them down to a small article on tying a muddler. The process is not that difficult to do, but actually pretty difficult to describe in words. Pictures do a much better job.

This is just a generic muddler, but I will list the pattern in the end of this article anyway.
A notice on the deer hair, though: get good hair - the best you can find, and ask for hair for muddlers or deer hair bugs. Make sure it has as little underfur as possible, and get some natural (undyed) first. Dyed hair can be fine, but chances are the dying process has ruined its ability to flare and spin. Some dyed hair is great. Some is useless for this purpose.

And now: the picture sequence.

Happy Muddler

A generic muddler suitable for trout, bass, perch and a number of other species - probably even bonefish in a tight spot.

Wet fly
Martin Joergensen
sea trout (sea run)
smallmouth bass
Hook Kamasan B175, #4
Thread Brown 6/0
Tail Silver fox
Body Silver fox underfur
Wing Silver fox and a little golden flash
Head/collar Natural deer hair
A little difficult

Don't miss all the muddler articles.

Submitted by matt 1737246342 on

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bookmarked, gonna try this out tommorow after i get some good deer hair! been trying a muddler for so long with crappy deer hair so ima get some good stuff, and the pictures help a bunch! ive always let my deer hair spin around the hook and it never looked good at all

Submitted by john maxted on

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very good will try and tie a mudlar from your pics.thanks john.from the UK.

Submitted by dale thiel on

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ok i have a question i live in montana in the usa... and i am going to float the yellowstone river where the shields river dumps into the yellowstone and in that are there are scuplins galor and in the fall when brown trout go up to the shields river to spawn and they eat scuplins and scuplins so i was wondering what patterns you would reckamend

Submitted by Tom Danielson on

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Make my day! Last night was my first real attempt at tying a Muddler and only had some natural bucktail. After a few false starts I ended up with a "2 clumper" that actually resembled a muddler with room for improvement but it was for sure a keeper.
I fish small creeks in Middle Tn for smallmouth (and Bass in general) and have been tying a lot of Closure Minnows. I went to a favorite Greenie creek this afternoon just to get out. It gives up some of both Large and Smallies. With not much happening with my Closures I tied on my Muddler. Within 30 minutes I had released 6 Largemouth 13"-15". They took it off the top with great vigor.
I didn't know what to expect and really thought that it would sink like a rock (not sure why) but it floated better than I ever imagined. (Are they suppose to float?)
Im sure I'll be tying a bunch of these and thanks for the great tying instructions. Once I saw it spin it comes together pretty quick. I can imagine lots of variation coming. Had a blast.
Tom

Submitted by david etienne on

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this one almost had me beat but lots o deer later got it now i hope the trout like it ..

Submitted by Daniel Klonoski on

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I like to tie my muddlers with a much smaller head and longer, sparser body to pulsate when retrieved.

Submitted by horacio m. vil… on

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very nice and very effective in little streams or spring creek, for little and distrustful and astute rainbows.Size 10 to 12 long shank hook, weighted with few turns of lead 15 mm.

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