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BUGGERS
AND LEECHES TWO
We stock 17 patterns of buggers and
leeches in several hook sizes and a variety of colors. Combined with our pricing, customer
service, and quick shipping -- a winner every time!
Given: Fish, like all species, must
gain more energy from their food than they expend in its acquisition.
Question: What's the biggest food package
available?
Answer: Aside from six-foot-long Australian
worms and critters such as mice, minnows usually offer more munching magic and considered
calories. Trout, for example, often switch from insects to minnows when they reach
18 inches or so.
Also see:
Saltwater and Bass Flies
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Page One
Sheep Creek Special --This lake pattern is most
effective when damsel nymphs are active. It was developed for and widely used on the high
desert lakes of Nevada and Idaho.
Twin Lakes Special, Black -- Twin
Lakes, on the East Slope of the Sierra Nevada Mountains produce some huge trout and this
variation of the wooly bugger is regionally popular in the lakes of the Eastern Sierra
Nevada of California. It can be hand-twisted, stripped or even trolled from a tube
or canoe.
Twin Lakes Special, Brown -- These work in streams too and in size 8 take their share of
smallmouth bass. Panfish prefer the smaller ones.
Twin
Lakes Special, Olive -- Olive patterns offer a universal appeal in both fresh
and saltwater.
Wooly Bugger Black --Doubtless
in the top ten flies of all time. Works for trout, smallmouth, panfish and most everything
else in appropriate sizes.
Wooly Bugger Brown -- A
classic top ten fly that should be in every box. Works wet or dry too.
Wooly Bugger Olive -- Perfect
for Idaho's St. Joe and streams where you float along and cast up to meadow or brush
banks.
Wooly
Worm,Black -- The traditional pattern that helped start impressionistic fly
theory. Black's especially good after dark.
Wooly Worm, Olive:
Represents a whole batch of olive creepy-crawlies and, in a pinch, can be greased up
to use as a hopper imitation.
Buggers
and Leeches Page One
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"The secret to fishing a big
streamer fly is not hurrying the lure. Big fish are often deliberate in their
feeding habits." -- A. J. McClane --
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