An Orange "Blob" or "Fritz" fly - got eaten at Rotoaira but not Big O |
I got some ages ago when I was in the UK in 2001 and they've sat in my box... I did use a red one to good effect at the Waiteti Mouth a few years ago. Now this stillwater stuff really has my interest, so I'm determined to get better.
Needing some flies, I decided to tie up a batch of superglue buzzers. But first, what is a buzzer anyway?
Buzzers / Chironomidae are midge pupa; they start life as a bloodworm living in the soft mud found in most still waters. Blood red worms get their colour from the oxygen and haemoglobin held within their bodies. When they are getting near to hatching they lose their blood red colour and take on a more sombre appearance. At this stage they then make their way from the lake bottom up through the water columns to the surface. They swim towards the surface in an wriggling action, stopping 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. Eventually when they reach the surface, they hang from the surface film and hatch out in to adult buzzers or midge.
Tying the fly itself is not all that difficult, I used both Knapek and Tiemco hooks but have a feeling I'll need more sizes. Coating the flies in superglue is a bit fiddly and I'll need more practice, somehow I think that will come.
Right, now I have an excuse to go fishing.....
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