Q&A

What does a Royal Coachman fly imitate?

What does a Royal Coachman fly imitate?

Today, the Royal Coachman and its variations are tied mostly as dry flies and fished floating on the water surface….

Royal Coachman
Type Dry fly, Wet fly, Streamer
Imitates Attractor
History
Creator John Haily

Who invented the Royal Wolf fly?

Lee Wulff

Royal Wulff
Imitates Attractor
History
Creator L.Q. Quackenbush, Lee Wulff
Created 1929–30

What does the renegade fly imitate?

It is thought that it represents a variety of insects or small terrestrials: things such as midge clusters, beetles, crickets or flying ants. It could imitate cripple or dead insects as well. The Renegade is a fly pattern developed by John Hagen – a fly fisherman, guide and fly tier who lives in Colorado.

What is blue dun?

The Blue Dun is a classic dry fly pattern that was originated to imitate the early mayfly hatches. The Blue Dun is a classic dry fly pattern that was originated to imitate the early mayfly hatches. This dry fly works for a number of hatches including the Blue Winged Olives, Hendricksons, Blue Quills and Quill Gordons.

What is a Trude fly?

Trude flies are characterized by a down wing, slanting back over the body, usually made of animal hair and most recently calf tail hair, often white.

How do you tie a Fat Albert?

Fat Albert

  1. Start the thread right behind the eye and make a thread base at least partially down the bend of the hook.
  2. Tie the brown foam strip to the hook up near the eye and wrap back over it to the bend.
  3. Cut a strip of tan foam that is about as wide as the gap of the hook like you did for the brown foam.

What kind of fly is the Royal Coachman?

The Royal Coachman is a versatile attractor fly, still very popular today with origins in England. This classic pattern can be tied and fished as a dry, wet, nymph, or streamer. It is typically used for trout and grayling, with larger sized streamers used for steelhead.

When did John Haily make the Royal Coachman?

Designed for night fishing, like most flies of that period it was fished as a wet. The first Royal Coachman wet fly variation was first tied by American John Haily, in 1878. He wrapped red silk around the middle of the Coachman to prevent the otherwise brittle peacock herl from unwraveling.

Who was the First Coachman for the British monarchy?

A little bit of history – the original Coachman (without the red “royal” body) was tied by an Englishman named Tom Bosworth starting in 1830. Not only a 19 th century flytier and angler, he was actually a coachman for 3 British monarchies.

When did Lee Wulff invent the Coachman fly?

Lee Wulff introduced the next major variant in the early 1930’s. He wanted still further buoyancy, and used deer hair for both wings and tail. The Royal Wulff may be the most used of the coachman flies today. It stays afloat, is easy to see, and trout readily take it.