Van_Cleaver wrote:
Here's a nymph pattern that is deadly during a Sulpher hatch. I think it came from Rick Meyers, who developed it on Young Womans Creek. Tail: wood duck flank (brown Z-lon works as well) abdomen: dark brown dubbing, or pheasant tail. (fine copper wire if you use PT) Wing case: tie in some yellow dubbing with black ostrich on each side. This represents the adult ready to burst from the shuck. I tie it on a nymph hook (go one size higher than the adult) with a small amount of lead in the thorax. Fish this on a short dropper under you favorite pattern. In my experience, it will almost always catch the lions share, usually 10-1 over the dry. An exception was that June night on Spring, when it was cool and drizzling, and the trout took wildly for a couple of hrs. The next evening the nymph went right back to the head of the class. Sorry this isn't a more concise pattern listing: picked this up at a TU meeting many years ago. Now I have to tie a few fresh ones up; one of these evenings I might actually get to fish a hatch!