Select Your Currency

Once you login this will disappear and you will see prices in your chosen currency

Shipmans Buzzers Selection 16 Flies

Shipmans Buzzers Selection 16 Flies
Zoom  Zoom
Our Price:  $10.08
List Price:  $11.04
Saving Of:  $0.96 (9%)
Earn 6 Loyalty Points

Part No:  bundle36
No of Flies In Selection:  16 flies
Manufacturer:  The Essential Fly
Price US$:  $9.74
Price Can$:  Can$ 10.27
Price Euro:  €53.53
Price UK£:  £6.3
Price Swedish Krona (SEK):  53.53 SEK
Price Norway Krone (NOK):  53.53 NOK
Price Danish Kroner (DKK):  53.53 DKK
Product Type:  Fly Fishing Dealer Samples

Availability:  In Stock  In Stock

Shipmans Buzzer Selection 16 Flies

This pattern imitates another emerging chironomid midge. Though created in 1979-80 by Dave Shipman, it has become very popular in recent years with British still-water anglers. It can come in a variety of body colours.


Product Keywords: Shipmans Buzzers Selection 16 Flies, Shipmans Buzzers Selection 16 Flies Trout Bundles, Trout Selection

Customers who bought this item also bought:


Continue ShoppingTell a Friend
Customer Reviews
Write a Review and share your opinions!
Average Rating:  4 Stars4 Stars4 Stars4 Stars

First class service
Monday, 1 December 2008  -  John
Rating:  5 Stars5 Stars5 Stars5 Stars5 Stars
Good quality and excellent service.

17 of 31 people found this review helpful.Was this helpful to you?  Yes  /  No

PW
Monday, 20 October 2008  -  Paul
Rating:  4 Stars4 Stars4 Stars4 Stars
Fly's just what I wanted. Very fast service,

17 of 36 people found this review helpful.Was this helpful to you?  Yes  /  No

Shipmans selection
Saturday, 16 August 2008  -  Michael
Rating:  4 Stars4 Stars4 Stars4 Stars
Great selection although I would prefer the ends to be CDC and a little shorter. Just my feelings

22 of 46 people found this review helpful.Was this helpful to you?  Yes  /  No
Related Products

3D Mega Deep Diving Nymphs and Buzzers Selection

3D Mega Deep Diving Nymphs and Buzzers Selection$15.98   $10.80Add to Trout / Salmon Fly Fishing Basket

18 3D Glass Buzzers & Nymphs

Sandy's Blank Buster Buzzers - Sandy Dickson Buzzer Collection 28 Fly Selection

Sandy's Blank Buster Buzzers - Sandy Dickson Buzzer Collection 28 Fly Selection$26.88Add to Trout / Salmon Fly Fishing Basket

Sandy Dickson Blank Buster Buzzers Collection - 28 buzzers

The Essential Fly River Wet fly and Nymph Selection$8.80   $8.80Add to Trout / Salmon Fly Fishing Basket

12 essential river wet and nymph patterns, ranging from size 10 to 16.

Buzzers and Nymphs

Buzzers, midges, diptera or Chironomids are the names of the tiny flies found on slow flowing rivers and and lakes. Tiny Chironomid flies that inhabit lakes and slow-flowing rivers are known by their common name to us as midges or buzzers, known because of their characteristic buzzing or humming. They appear in vast swarms on most still-waters towards the evenings, often they can be completely overpowering. In Scotland when there is a midge swarm I have found it very difficult as regularly with breaths you can get them in the back of your throat - uck!. Midges tolerate relatively high levels of pollution. The good news for fly fishermen is that they congregate on the windward side of a lake and their tiny larvae and pupae are eaten in large numbers by surface feeding trout. Buzzers start life as a bloodworm and live in the soft mud found in most still waters. These blood red worms get their colour from the oxygen and hemaglobin held within their bodies. When they are getting near to hatching they lose their blood red colour and take on a more somber appearance. They then make their way from the lake bottom up through the water columns to the surface. This is achieved by a wriggly swimming action. They swim towards the surface then stop either to catch their breath or waiting for the right conditions to hatch. When they stop wriggling towards the surface they slowly sink back down before swimming upwards again. When they eventually reach the surface they hang from the surface film and hatch out in to adult buzzers or midge. It is howver on the journey to the surface that Buzzers / Midges are at their most vulnerable. The midge pupae drift gently up to the surface where the survivors struggle to break through the surface film. Many do not make it, especially if the water is very choppy or if a flat calm has allowed oily film to form. At this stage trout patrol the surface sipping in huge quantities of hatching midges.

The life cycles of the buzzer can be imitated with a good degree of accuracy, they hatch out on virtually every day of the year. Some of the hatches will be localised and may not be spotted unless fishing in that area. Buzzer hatches can be spotted, by either looking for the adult fly, or finding the spent pupa bodies (shucks) in the surface film. 

Buzzer and Nymph Designs

Over the past decades there has been vast changes in fly fishing, from the development of the slim epoxy buzzers imitations that sink quickly. The most popular predecessor of this type of fly was Arthur Cove's Pheasant Tail Nymph. Brown in color its midge pupae like shape and the fact that it is fished deep and slow on a long leader made it extremely effective. Skinny buzzers had been around for sometime before the Pheasant Tail but had not gained the same popularity. In the 1920's Dr Howard Alexander Bell developed some extremely good slim buzzers as an imitation of the midge pupa for fishing on Blagdon water. Onbuzzers wing buds were added to the side on some patterns and on others the white breathing filaments.

Sandy Dickson's Blank Busters 

Our own Sandy Dickson has designed incredble slim buzzers through his own brilliant tying techniques, Sandy's Blank Busters are being released in 2009 and in tests have been amazing, catching 50 fish in one outing! Sandy was even sued by one fisherman (unsuccessfully!). The nameless fisherman was using Sandy's Blank Buster Buzzers tying them on a 20' leader from a boat, he tied the point fly and dropped it in the water and started tying the dropper, a trout took the point fly almost immediately and dragged the dropper straigt into the fishermans hand, these flies are brilliant.

Shipmans Buzzers

Dave Shipman's buzzers are extraordinarily versatile. He invented the pattern in the late Seventies for surface feeding trout on Rutland Water reservoir, when the fish were preoccupied with taking adult buzzers struggling in the surface film. The original was a combination of teased out fiery brown or green seal's fur and white breathers that proved deadly. This pattern is that it does not normally need floatant. Shipman's buzzers will attract the most suspicious of fish. The scruffier the pattern the better it seems to fish, often I rough up my Shipmans buzzers with velcro!.

Spotting Buzzer / Midge Activity

One of the best indicators of recent buzzer activity is to look for floating shucks or adult buzzers on or near the water. Certain areas will hold fish and buzzers, these being the obvious places to start. It is important to find the right spot. Mud or silted areas with a reasonable depth of eight to fifteen feet of water are usually good places for buzzer fishing. On a large lake or reservoir try to find a point or headland where a depth of eight to ten feet is within casting range. Try and choose a location where the wind is behind or if from the side it is light. If there is too strong a crosswind it is difficult to keep the flies moving nice and slow. On breezy days, selecting areas with some shelter can produce well. They warm up first and thus encourage insects to hatch. Cold winds always slow down hatches. Many fishermen often blank on buzzers because they do not unserstand how to fish with them, if trout are wary then great techniques include extending the leaders, I use leaders up to 20' and for very wary fish may fish a 12' to 20' leader with a single buzzer on the point!

A strong breeze will push the middle of the fly line around quickly and thus keep the buzzers high in the water. This is okay on an overcast day when the trout are feeding in the upper layers but not on a sunny day when they are feeding in the cooler depths. This problem can be overcome if the cast is made at a much shallower angle to the wind. The wind has less effect on the line and the team of buzzers will fish much deeper and more slowly

Our Recommended Amazon Books
Trout Wet Flies
Trout Buzzers & Nymphs
Trout Dry Flies/Emergers
Trout Lures & Streamers
Sea Trout Flies
Salmon / Salmo Salar or Steelhead Flies
Pike / Muskie Flies
Saltwater Flies
Special Trout/Salmon Flies
Fly Fishing Gift Vouchers
Essential Fly Bundles
Latin Fly Matches
Fly Lakes & Dealers
Other Store Departments
Our Specialist Tyers
Competitions
Our Microsites
Information