Cicada Pattern

MD_Gene

Active member
Joined
Jan 28, 2007
Messages
676
Can anyone point me to a recipe for a cicada? See my post on the General Board: The Cidas are Coming. Thanks in advance.
 
I used a pattern ftom George Daniel and a pattern from Paul Weamers book Pocket Guide for New York Hatches which is a Greg Hoover pattern. I dont recall where I saw Daniel's pattern. They both are similar and seem to work. The few times I used cicadas when they were around the fish went on a feeding spree. I doubt they were selective to pattern.
 
You can tie a cicada pattern that's basically like a Letort Cricket but tied entirely with deer hair.

The body is spun and clipped deer hair. I use mostly black deer hair, with a small amount of the wings tied with orange-brown deer hair.

It floats very well and is durable.
 
I recommend picking up a copy of Cicada Madness by Dave Zielinski. It has around 60 cicada patterns in it. Good info all around on fishing with cicadas. Very informative book. The pattern he fishes and ties the most is the 17 Year Itch Cicada Pattern. His book contains a step by step with pictures. i can't find a tying video online.

You can hear Tom Rosenbaur interview Dave on a recent Orvis Podcast here.
 
I tie a simple pattern (for good reasons) that consists of a body made of folded over black sheet foam, red plastic bead chain eyes and orange Krystal Flash for a wing. It takes about a minute or two to tie, floats great and is durable.

I keep it simple because the fish are not particularly selective when they are on them. Another reason is the hype and "emergence" maps can be very misleading and you can spend way too much time tying an imitation of a bug that won't show up where you are fishing...
 
I tie a simple pattern (for good reasons) that consists of a body made of folded over black sheet foam, red plastic bead chain eyes and orange Krystal Flash for a wing. It takes about a minute or two to tie, floats great and is durable.

I keep it simple because the fish are not particularly selective when they are on them. Another reason is the hype and "emergence" maps can be very misleading and you can spend way too much time tying an imitation of a bug that won't show up where you are fishing...
lol, yeah. I'm hearing from people tying a dozen of these already. I still have one of the three I tied last time (darn trees). I never lost one on a fish. Remember, you only use them every 17 years. Any leftover this year I'll try on smallmouth. They will hit anything.

back to the topic, I tie a slightly modified version of the Hoover caddis
 
Professor Daniels has a relatively simple pattern he's featured recently. I like it a lot!

 
True story... I had models for my one & only cicada pattern:

During 2004 Brood X emergence there were no cicada around my (previous) home but a gazillion about 9 miles away. I drove down, grabbed two from the top of a car in an Enterprise car rental lot and headed back home with them on the front passenger seat.

They were well behaved on the ride back to my house. When I moved them indoors, they sat pretty much motionless on a shelf behind my fly tying desk while I came up with a pattern to imitate them detailed in post #5 above.

After the modeling session, I released them in the back yard although I assume they were pi$$ed because I probably screwed up their pleasures in pursuit of my own... 😉
 
I tie a simple pattern (for good reasons) that consists of a body made of folded over black sheet foam, red plastic bead chain eyes and orange Krystal Flash for a wing. It takes about a minute or two to tie, floats great and is durable.

I keep it simple because the fish are not particularly selective when they are on them. Another reason is the hype and "emergence" maps can be very misleading and you can spend way too much time tying an imitation of a bug that won't show up where you are fishing...
You get extra credit if you post a picture.
 
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