- ED HERBST'S ZAKHAMER EMERGER
- HANS WEILENMANN'S SIX FAVOURITE STREAM PATTERNS
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO'S WINGED PARALOOP DRY FLY
- HANS VAN KLINKEN ON HIS KLINKHAMER SPECIAL
- PETER BRIGG'S NEW WOLF SPIDER
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO'S EXTENDED BODY EMERGER
- FLY TYING COURSE
- ED HERBST'S SIX PACK OF FLIES
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO'S PALOMINO MIDGE
- GERALD PENKLER'S SMALL STREAM 6 PACK
- GERRIT REDPATH'S 6 PACK FOR RIVERS
- LEONARD FLEMMING'S TOP SIX STREAM PATTERNS
- ETHAFOAM EXTENDED BODY MAYFLY PATTERNS
- DARRYL LAMPERT'S TOP STREAM FLIES
- SIX FLIES FOR THE REST OF MY LIFE
- PETE BRIGGS TOP SIX SMALL STREAM PATTERNS
- LUCA MONTANARI'S SIX FAVOURITE STREAM FLIES
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO'S SPEEDY CATERPILLAR PATTERN
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO'S SPLIT-HACKLE DRY FLIES
- TYING ZAKS. CRITICAL SUCCESS FACTORS
- RAFFIA-BODIED MAYFLY EMERGER
- PALMER-BACK FOAM BEETLE
- THE BEST WAY TO LEARN FLY TYING
- THE GOOD DOCTOR'S BEETLE
- TYING THE RONCALLO SPECIAL
- TWISTED BODY MICRO CDC PATTERNS
- TYING AND FISHING THE MUDDLER MINNOW
- BENDING HOOKD FOR BETTER MAYFLY IMITATIONS
- BENDING HOOKS FOR BETTER MAYFLIES
- TYING THE PTN TO THE ORIGINAL PATTERN
- J BOBBIN REVIEW
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO TIES EXTENDED TUBE BODY MAYFLIES
- LA FONTAINE'S AIR HEAD
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO PARACHUTE FLY METHOD
- An egg laying mayfly imitation by Stanton Hector
- Ed Herbst on the evolution of the modern fly tying vise
- The Mirage mayfly imitation
- Luca Montanari - A yound Italian whose flies are out of this world
- Ed Herbst reviews the J Vice
- Bob Wyatt's Deer Hair Emerger
- Tying Ed Herbst's Hopper
- New dry fly - The halo-hackle RAB variant
- Tying the CdC Midge
- Tying the ND Dragonfly Nymph
- How to tie and fish the Red-eyed Damsel Nymph
- Tying the Halo Hackle Klinkhamer Emerger
- Tying the DDD
- Tying a High water RAB
- Tying the Zak
- FLY FISHING ON THE EDGE OF THE KAROO
- LATEST FLY FISHING NEWS
- CLLECTOR'S EDITION OF HUNTING TROUT
- THE RETURN OF HIGHLAND LODGE
- OPENING 2012 ON THE HOLSLOOT
- OPENING THE FISHING FOR 2012
- FISHING THE END OF 2011- PHOTO ESSAY
- THE BEST OF THISWEBSITE FOR 2011
- LIGHT LINE FISHING FOR BUFFALO
- HUNTING TROUT SECOND EDITION
- NEWS AND FEATURES COMING TOMORROW
- Ed Herbst is fishing again
- NOVEMBER 2011 NEWSLETTER
- Haernertsburg Centenary celebrations
- WHAT STREAM TROUT EAT
- BIRKHALL LAKE - A PHOTO ESSAY
- A DAY ON THE COLDBROOK
- RHODES SEPTEMBER 2011
- Fishing News
- ROCK ART ON THE SWITH STREAM
- HANDMADE LANDING NETS - THE NEW WAVE
- PHOTOGRAPHING INSECTS
- A DAY FISHING PONDS
- THE UNITY - A TRIB OF THE KARNEMELK
- FLY FISHING RHODES IN JULY 2011
- SNAKE AWARENESS COURSES
- 31 JULY 2011 NEWSLETTER
- TRAVERSING THE ENTIRE LENGTH OF THE ORANGE RIVER - A DVD
- UNDISCOVERED FLY STREAMS
- RANDOM THOUGHTS ON BAMBOO FLY RODS
- 3 July 2011 NEWSLETTER
- THE UGIE LADIES' FESTIVAL
- 12 June 2011 NEWSLETTER
- MAY 2011 FLY FISHING DIARY AND NOTES
- FLY FISHING THE RHODES AREA
- THE TITANIC TIGERFISH OF TANZANIA
- IMPRESSIONS FROM THE WILD TROUT ASSOCIATION FESTIVAL
- SNAKES IN STREAMS CAN HAPPEN!
- MARCH 2011 NEWSLETTER
- PORTRAIT OF AN ARTIST - PADDY STARLING
- Early morning hopper fishing - A photo essay
- Closed Cell Foam Strike Indicators
- Between the Storms - Reminiscences of a Fly Fishing Trip - Part 2
- Between the Storms - Reminiscences of a fly fishing trip
- Minor tactics in high wind
- Fishing with a geographer - photo essay
- A day on a mountain stream straight out of heaven
- October 2010 Newsletter
- Chris Bladen- Fly fishing in bronze
- Witels River Photo Essay
- SEPTEMBER DIARY
- The Lighter Side of Guiding
- Iceland Salmon
- Underwater Fly Fishing Photography
- Photographing Fish
- April May Newsletter and Diary
- March 2010
- February 2010
- A photo and word essay on South Island New Zealand by Gerhard Laubscher
- THE EXCITING DIEPSPRUIT RIVER
- OF GEORGE MAURER BAMBOO RODS AND WRITERS HARRY MIDDLETON AND JOHN GIERACH
- PIKE ON A FLY FROM THE THAMES
- FLATHEAD MULLET IN GRAAFF REINET
- GARY BORGER'S SMALL STREAM FLY SELECTION
- THE PATTERNS FRED STEYNBERG RELIES ON FOR RIVERS AND STREAMS
- David Kleyn's top six patterns for rivers and streams
- FLY FISHING THE KAROO
- AD MADDOX'S FLY FISHING ART
- RETURN TO PATAGONIA
- DORADO IN BOLIVIA
- A DAY ON THE WITTE
- KRAAI RIVER GRAND SLAM
- Don Phillips - The Everett Garrison of the space-age fly rod
- Red tag fools willow grub feeders
- From an artist in wood - Steve Boshoff
- Don Phillips solid boron fly rods
- FRESH WATER BONE FISH - THE NATAL SCALY
- FISHING THE DIEPSPRUIT NEAR BARKLY EAST
- SEATTLE and the SAGE ROD COMPANY
- MAGNETIC FLY HOLDER
- CAPE STREAMS REVISITED
- THE YEAR OF THE MOUSE - BROWN TROUT HEAVEN
- RHODES - THE GUIDED EXPERIENCE
- PROFILE ON DAVE WALKER
- FLY FISHING FOR TIGERS IN THE ZAMBEZI
- Dimpling Trout by Garret Evans
- REVISED CONVEX LEADERS FOR ULTRA-LIGHT RODS
- DAVID KLEYN'S FISHING AND IMAGES
- ALL YEAR ROUND FLY FISHING ON WTA WATERS
- THE WILD TROUT ASSOCIATION
- A VERY SPECIAL BAMBOO ROD RETURNS
- TYING THE TVN NYMPH
- AUCTION OF ED HERBST RODS AND REELS
- FLY FISHING RHODES IN MID WINTER
- The EFFTEX tackle show
- Pete Brigg's July paragraph
- TARPON FROM CUBA
- SOUTH AFRICA'S FLY OF THE CENTURY
- THE SOUTH AFRICAN GAME FAIR
- NEW ZEALAND - LEONARD FLEMMING'S END OF SEASON
- PETER BRIGG'S APRIL 2011 PARAGRAPH
- ESSAY ON THE JAN DU TOIT'S RIVER
- C & F Threader and clipper
- The river Nera in central Italy
- Pete Brigg's February 2011 Paragraph
- A fly tying DVD series by Ed Herbst and Andrew Ingram
- Pete Brigg's January Paragraph
- Incidental fly fishing in Utah
- New Zealand South Island Newsletter - Leonard Flemming
- Rod Dibble furled leaders by Ed Herbst
- Pete Brigg's December Paragraph
- Ed Herbst in search of the ultimate small stream fly rod
- Pete Briggs November Paragraph
- Pete Brigg's October Paragraph
- Ed Herbst on new 'Whisper' rods
- Pete Brigg's paragraph - Third in the series
- Pete Brigg's August paragraph
- Pete Brigg's paragraph
- Ed's Column - July 2010
- Ed's Column - May/June 2010
- Ed's Column - May 2010
- Ed's Column - April 2010
- DRAGONS ON A DRY FLY
- STERKFONTEIN DAM - A DRAMATIC PLACE
- THE JDT's
- THE UPPER SAALBOOM RIVER
- READER'S IMAGES PART 15 - NEIL HAYES-HILL ON THE OKAVANGO
- VALENTINE ATKINSON'S PHOTOGRAPHY
- READER'S IMAGES PART 14 - LOTHENI AND BUSHMAN'S
- READER'S IMAGES PART 13
- A day on the Bushman's and Lotheni
- MOLENAARS RIVER - SHARLAND URQUHART
- FISHING THE KOLA PENINSULA
- Trout in North Island New Zealand, fishing in snow in Rhodes and Japanese trout streams
- READER'S IMAGES PART 11 JADE DOS SANTOS
- READER'S IMAGES PART 10
- THE WOLF - A RARE GLIMPSE OF A LOVELY STREAM
- GERRIT REDPATH IN RHODES
- TOM LEWIN FISHES AN ITALIAN CHALKSTREAM
- READER'S IMAGES PART 9
- READER'S IMAGES PART 8
- MORE OF GERHARD LAUBSCHER'S WONDERFUL IMAGES
- READER'S IMAGES PART 7
- Gerhard Laubscher - State of the art fly fishing photography
- MORE GERRIT REDPATH IMAGES
- READER'S IMAGES PART 6
- GERRIT REDPATH - ACE FLY FISHING PHOTOGRAPHER
- THE LITTLE POTT WITH GEORGE BRITS
- READER'S IMAGES - PART 5
- READERS IMAGES PART 4
- READER'S IMAGES PART 3
- READERS PICTURES 2
- READER'S IMAGES
- ORVIS BREATHABLE WADERS
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- Sage rod, Eclipse line, Rosenbauer book
- Stealth rod, Orvis reel, Marryat fly box for sal
- FLY RODS FOR SALE 2 NOVEMBER 2011
- Grizzly cape wanted in exchange for..
- OCTOBER 2011 ITEMS FOR SALE
- Secondhand Tackle and Books for Sale
How to tie and fish the Red-eyed Damsel Nymph
| Tying Sequences |
HOW TO TIE AND FISH THE RED-EYED DAMSEL NYMPH
It’s not often you can recall the night a well known pattern was first tied, but with this one I can. It was at Hetherdon, a farm littered with trout lakes in the foothills of Dargle mountains in KZN. It was around 1986. The tier was the late Hugh Huntley and I lost a serious bet that night when I promised to eat raw anything he caught on the fly he was tying. The next day between Hugh and a friend of ours, Mike Harker, they took twelve fish and started something of a craze.

The choice of red chenille for the eyes of the damsel nymph that night was not the product of any great piscatorial vision by the way. It was born out of plain necessity. Hugh had run out of the black chenille he’d been using. Now, thanks to the research of people like Gary La Fontaine and many others, and with the wisdom of hindsight, the red probably added a significant trigger. The rest of the pattern stayed unchanged but it was remarkable how the catch rate improved with red chenille. And I don’t think it was our imagination either, because in no time we’d all got rid of our black chenille and were tying nothing but Red-eyes.

Stomach content of a large lake trout - damsel nymphs!
(Photo per kind permission of Fred Steynberg)
Damsel nymphs lend themselves to suggestive patterns because they have so many prominent triggers – big eyes, well-defined thorax, long, slender abdomen and a writhing way of swimming someone once said was a lot like as like a belly dancer swimming. In lakes, damsel nymphs mainly confine themselves to weed beds and reeds. In early summer when lake bugs are getting active, I sometimes lean over the front of my float tube to watch the insect traffic. There will be the occasional snail going nowhere, midge shucks floating by (often by the hundred and sometimes as long as your thumb nail), small drab mayfly nymphs, the occasional somewhat ridiculous looking caddis larva in its caravan made from shreds of weed, the odd dragonfly nymph (though we know there lots there, just that you don’t see them that often) and then plenty of elegant-looking, mostly bright green damsel nymphs. You soon get to understand why Stillwater fly fishers like damsel nymph patterns so much – the naturals are abundant, very vulnerable and easy to imitate. You can’t ask more than that of a lake bug.
What you will need to tie this fly
A size 12 nymph hook. (At present I use Grip’s model 13021. It has a 1X long shank on 1 X heavy wire, so its strong enough for big fish, but not too heavy.)
6/0 or 8/0 tan, grey or olive thread
Red chenille (Medium or fine Tuff Chenille or a thin version of standard chenille),or Stretchy Nymph Rib or Vinyl Rib in bright red. The advantages of Nymph Rib and Vinyl Rib are the material transmits light and is easy to work with.

Fine or medium copper or gold fuse wire
Kristal Flash (or equivalent)
Olive marabou. (In some quarters, brown and even black marabou is more popular than the traditional olive green)
I never add weight to this pattern so you won’t find any lead wire or beads here.
Tying steps
If I had ten bucks for every Red-eye I’ve tied over the years I’d be booking a guided trip through

Chenille eyes don't glow as much as the V-Rib eyes below
Dress the front third of the hook then tie in the eyes. Cut a piece of chenille or V-Rib about 6 centimeters long, hold it at an angle against the top of the hook shank and trap it in the middle with a couple of turns of thread. Possible mistakes here are tying the eyes too far from or, worse, too close to the eye of the hook. You want a gap of around 3mm between the hook eye and the V-Rib or chenille.

Take a few figure of eight turns to anchor the material well. Loop the material back on itself to produce two narrow loops that will form the eyes on your pattern.

Now dress the hook shank to the bend. Select a marabou plume and tear off a few fibres for the tail. These should be soft fibres, the ones nearer the base of a marabou plume rather than near the tip. Tie in the bunch (not too dense) so that the fibers are a little longer than the hook shank. A long, sparse tail extracts all the movement you want, but it does mean spending a bit of time unraveling tail fibers that wrap around the bend of your hook.

Tie in the copper wire at the tail and leave it to one side.
Now tear off another bunch of the more spiky marabou fibres as close to the stem as possible. Choose a section where the fibres are longest. You don’t want much. Hold the bunch by the butts and moisten the tips with saliva so that they clump together.

Tie in the tip end of the bunch just where the tail of the fly begins, then take your tying thread to the thorax area.
Grab the end of the marabou in hackle pliers and twist the marabou, but give it no more than one or two turns. Wind this ‘marabou rope’ to the thorax. Holding the marabou butts in hackle pliers makes the ‘rope’ go further as you wind up the shank because your fingers are out of the way. And it makes tying off a lot easier and more precise too. The aim is to get the abdomen done with one bunch of marabou.
Now rib the body with the gold wire, tie off and trim. (Optional is to use Kristal Flash (or equivalent) for the rib, but then you sacrifice the added strength wire lends the soft-fibred marabou body. Or you can use both, but if you do, twist them together).
As a rule, the abdomen on the Red-eye should end as far behind the eyes as the eyes are behind the eye of the hook. If it sounds Irish, just read it again slowly.


At this point, hold a 5 centimeter piece of Kristal Flash at an angle to the hook shank and tie it in at its midpoint right behind the eyes. Now lift both ends, pull them backwards (towards the tail) and using your tying thread, trap them so they are permanently fixed facing backwards down the body by wrapping tying thread over them moving backwards towards the tail. Trim each strand to about 1.5 to 2 centimeters long.
Wax your thread well. Take a fresh marabou plume and hold it over a sheet of plain white paper. Begin shredding it into tiny pieces with your fingers. When you have a small pile of shreds, lift a pinch in your fingertips and dub them to the thread until you have covered around 4 centimeters. Now begin wrapping this around the hook shank, covering the chenille eyes with repeated figure of eight wraps to build up this area. But don’t overdo it. End about 1.5 mm behind the eye of the hook.



Wax the thread again. Break off five of six spiky marabou fibres roughly at their midpoint. Dub these onto the thread, using the usual finger-rolling movements, but dub the butt ends to the thread. The result is a centimeter of ‘dubbed’ thread with long, trailing, pointed ends!

Just wrap the dubbed thread once or twice around the hook shank as near to the eye as you can and suddenly ‘legs’ appear. If any are facing forward, hold them back and secure them in place with one or two more wraps of thread. Now add more marabou dubbing to the thread and finish the thorax.

Tie off and add a drop of head cement.
Fishing the Red-Eyed Damsel
Here’s a subject you could write a book about. It’s hard to know where to begin, other than to say both floating and intermediate lines work, but that the floater is probably more fun if slightly less effective. Use a long leader and a long tippet and vary the sink time you allow. Always fish this pattern dead slow and remember if you aren’t picking up the odd bit of weed you are probably not fishing in the right place or at the right depth!
Because you are fishing so proximal to weeds you don’t want lead in this fly. Apart from ruining the fly’s action in the water, you are going to have to retrieve it too fast to keep it from snagging weeds. And the last thing you want with a damsel nymph imitation is a fast retrieve.
This is largely a summer pattern and you will get best results from around 10:00 in the morning once the sun has warmed the water.

Note where I am standing - in weed - and the fish is jumping in the clear water just off the weed bed where it was hooked

Again, Ed Gerber is perfectly positioned to fish a Red-eye. Tiffendell Lake, Eastern Cape
It’s a great pattern to fish from the bank standing in weeds and casting over them into open water because (1) you are retrieving your fly towards the edge of the weeds where the fish patrol and (2) standing waist deep in weed beds offers you some cover. Often all you need to present into the clear water is the leader. Of course you can set up much the same position from float tubes.


The point to remember, though is that in lakes weeds and damsel nymphs are almost synonymous.
The Red-eye is also a marvelous fly to intercept cruising fish during the day no matter whether there are weeds nearby or not. In fact, unless a fish is rising, this is my pattern of choice for cruising fish in shallow to mid-depth water. If you can lead the fish and give the fly time to sink, they will even work on fish in deep water.
There are days when I notice someone hooks a fish using a damsel nymph imitation on a quick retrieve. Mainly they will be fishing in deep, structureless water, using a fly that’s too bulky to imitate a true damsel nymph. I find many commercial Red-eyed damsels are way too bulky. What these fish are more likely doing is taking the fly for a fleeing minnow.

This newly hatched damsel crawled onto my rod
At rare times you will be lucky enough to find yourself in a damsel fly hatch. It’s happened to me on a few occasions and it’s electric! Most hatches take place off platforms of floating weed in shallow water in warm weather. The insects hang around drying their wings for a good ten minutes, safe other than for hawking swallows. But when they are swimming out to hatch they are highly vulnerable because it seems that just prior to hatching they are less agile. The incidence of cripples is also high and the occasional cripple will get blown off the weeds into the deep water where trout take them with the same slow, head and shoulders rise you commonly see when they are taking hatching midges.

All the materials featured in the tying of the Red-eye are available from:
Frontier Fly Fishing in Johannesburg (www.frontierflyfishing.co.za) or from StreamX in Cape Town (www.streamx.co.za)
***
