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Black & Peacock Spider

Black & Peacock Spider
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Our Price:  $0.72
List Price:  $0.94
Saving Of:  $0.22 (24%)
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Fly Size:   
 
 

Fulling Mill Equivalent:  204
Part No:  EF-6020
Manufacturer:  The Essential Fly
Price US$:  $0.7
Price Can$:  Can$ 0.74
Price Euro:  €3.83
Price UK£:  £0.45
Price Swedish Krona (SEK):  3.83 SEK
Price Norway Krone (NOK):  3.83 NOK
Price Danish Kroner (DKK):  3.83 DKK
Product Type:  Fly Fishing Dealer Samples

Availability:  In Stock  In Stock

Black & Peacock Spider - Wet & Nymphs


Black & Peacock Spider

The Black and Peacock Spider is a hackled wet fly that has origins from the early days of fly tying. Tom Ivens, pioneer of modern reservoir fishing browught this pattern to light and made it popular. Some fishermen believe that the Black and Peacock Spider represents a species of aquatic snail.


Use The Black & Peacock Spider To Catch:


The Black & Peacock Spider can be used to catch Rainbow Trout

The Black & Peacock Spider can be used to catch Brown Trout



Trout Wet Fly - Black & Peacock Spider

wet flies like Black & Peacock Spider are are range of flies that imitate larva, pupa, drowned adults and Lures

The trout finds most of its food beneath the surface of the water, sometimes by grubbing around the weed-beds, at other times by rising in water to take nymphs and pupae on their way to the surface 

The wet flies which include Black & Peacock Spider fall into various categories: larval and pupal forms of various aquatic insects; drowned adults or even swamped stillborn flies; and drowned terrestrials such as beetles. Many do not represent anything in nature, but are classed as attractor flies or lures, designed to tempt the fish to take out of curiosity. A number of the silver-bodied flies can emulate small fry or minnows. Most of the dry flies have a wet-fly equivalents. The use of heavier hooks, softer hen hackles instead of cock, and in the case of winged flies a backward-sloping wing, changes the dry fly into a wet one which sinks below the sufrace of the water. Cock hackles are used for these patterns but they are taken from the very young bird where the individual fibres are very soft.

There are two main areas of wet-fly fishing. Firstly, there are the wild rain-fed rivers and streams where it is difficult to see a fish rise let alone see a minute dry fly on the surface. On such waters, wet flies are used almost exclusively upstream and down, as necessity or terrain dictates. The second main area of wet-fly fishing is on atill waters like lakes, lochs and reservoirs, where the angler uses a team of wet flies just below the surface. 

On wild streams while searching for the natural Brownie, soft-hackled wet flies like the Partridge and Orange, the Snipe and Purple, the Black Spider, a wet Coch-y-Bonddu, and many others are used.

'When do you fish a wet fly, and when a dry?' 

Always fish a dry-fly pattern when you see a trout rising during a hatch of natural insects. However, when the trout refuses to rise to a dry fly, fishing just below the surface with a wet fly can often work. When no activity is obvious, it is a case for the wet fly, pure and simple.

The soft, game-bird hackles of many wet flies have the necessary mobility in the water. They pulsate and 'kick' in the current, attracting the fish by their very movement. They look alive and edible; the two key properties for a successful fly.

Wet Fly Black & Peacock Spider fishing techniques

a technique that has stood the test of time, where the fly (e.g. the Black & Peacock Spider) is fished sub-surface and is retrieved slowly using a 'Figure-of-Eight' manipulation of the line in the hand. A floating or intermediate line can be used to retrieve the Black & Peacock Spider


Black & Peacock Spider - Fly Tying Dressing

For the more adventurous among you we have provided tying specifications for the Black & Peacock Spider. Remember at The Essential Fly we sell the Black & Peacock Spider at incredible prices with a top quality fly and service to back it up. It is certainly worth tying the Black & Peacock Spider yourself to understand the pleasure of catching a fish with your own tied fly, however at the price we sell flies it is only worth tying one or two Black & Peacock Spider as your can spend more time fishing instead of tying flies - buy volume online with us.


Hook Sizes

8 to 14

Silk Thread

Black

Body

Peacock herl

Hackle

Black hen



Black & Peacock Spider Product Keywords:

Black & Peacock Spider, Black & Peacock Spider Wet & Nymphs, Black & Peacock Spider Rainbow Trout Fly, Black & Peacock Spider Brown Trout Fly


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Customer Reviews
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Average Rating:  5 Stars5 Stars5 Stars5 Stars5 Stars

Black Spider and others
Friday, 16 October 2009  -  Rowland
Rating:  5 Stars5 Stars5 Stars5 Stars5 Stars
Very prompt service, good fly, recommended

12 of 23 people found this review helpful.Was this helpful to you?  Yes  /  No
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Available in Fly Size(s)
6.

Hackled Wet Flies

WET FLIES

A wet fly is designed to be fished below the water's surface. Wet flies vary from traditional wet flies used for over a hundred years to modern using flashabou type and other bright modern materials. The success of the wet fly often depends far more on its action than it resembling a specific insect and matching a hatch / nymph. When fish are on the feed the actual pattern is generally not important, but when the fish are preoccupied or need tempting the angler must use ingenuity to discover what the fish are feeding on and what color they are taking. When fishing wet flies, it is important to remember that the higher the wave on the water the higher the fly hook size can be, but still take into account the brightness and clarity of the water.

Trout do see subsurface insects with wings. Some flies begin to hatch below the water surface. Some up-winged flies swim or crawl beneath the surface as adult spinners in order to lay egg. Often duns & spinners are swamped by the current and forced under the water surface. Emerging duns that have been unable to get rid of their nymphal case or at the time of emerging are drowned when they float under rough water that is flowing over a large rock or ledge are also hunted by the fish. The trout on purpose lurk in slack water near eddies and small plunge pools to look out for these type of snacks. Clearly a trout does see winged insects under the surface at certain times of the year so be prepared with a selection of different colored wet flies for when the fish are not taking from the surface.

Fishing the Soft-Hackle Wet Fly

Probably the most common way to fish a soft-hackle wet fly is to cast it across and slightly downstream, letting it sink and then swing in the current, rising with the tightening line much as a natural rises to the surface before hatching. It's on this rise that fish usually strike. Another productive method is to cast the fly upstream on a short cast and then let it dead-drift back to you just under the surface (or, if tied on a light-wire hook, in the surface film). On lakes and ponds a soft hackle fly cast in front of a cruising trout and then twitched slightly can be absolutely deadly. Many soft-hackle fly anglers, especially in Europe, favor fishing two or three of these flies (of different colors and sizes) at a time.

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