

Manitoba, Canada
THis is my
THis is my bio. THis is my bio. Blah BLah Blah.
THis is my
THis is my bio. THis is my bio. Blah BLah Blah.


















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Size 8 October caddis. Great for when those big orange caddis start bumbling around camp.



njk

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not a double bunny














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A test

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The Woolly Bugger is an artificial fly commonly categorized as a wet fly or streamer and is fished under the water surface. It is a popular and widely used pattern for both freshwater and saltwater game fish and is generally listed as one of the top patterns to have in any fly box. John Gierach, a noted fly fishing writer, discussed the Woolly Bugger first in his chapter on streamers in Good Flies.[2] Woolly Buggers are typically fished in streams, rivers, ponds, lakes, and tidal flats. Today, Woolly Buggers are tied in a wide variety of styles and colors to imitate a wide range of game fish prey.
The Woolly Bugger is so effective, it should be banned from some watersheds. I suspect its effectiveness is due to its resemblance to so many edible creatures in the water—nymphs, leeches, salamanders, or even small sculpins. Its tail undulating behind a fiber, bubble-filled body is just too much for most fish to resist. It just looks like a meal!
— Bill Hunter, The Professionals' Favorite Flies[3]

dwq

lame

add some more detail come on

So fancy

frog

It’s hard to improve upon an original, but articulating the butt monkey did just that. This fly measures in at just under five inches long, and swims like a demon under water. Galloup’s articulated butt monkey features a marabou tail, cactus chenille body, twin magnum rabbit strips, and a wool head. Needless to say, the articulated butt monkey pushes a lot of water, and is sure to get the attention of that monster brown you’ve been looking for.

The Double Bunny was created by Scott Sanchez in the early 90’s, and was truly a ground-breaking streamer pattern for its time. This pattern proved so deadly in the Jackson Hole One-Fly for three straight years that they changed the rules in 1995 so that the largest hook one could use was a 3X long #8, essentially banning large streamers from all future competitions.

Big ol ugly leech

Streamer

frog

Big ol ugly leech

The Woolly Bugger is an artificial fly commonly categorized as a wet fly or streamer and is fished under the water surface. It is a popular and widely used pattern for both freshwater and saltwater game fish and is generally listed as one of the top patterns to have in any fly box. John Gierach, a noted fly fishing writer, discussed the Woolly Bugger first in his chapter on streamers in Good Flies.[2] Woolly Buggers are typically fished in streams, rivers, ponds, lakes, and tidal flats. Today, Woolly Buggers are tied in a wide variety of styles and colors to imitate a wide range of game fish prey.
The Woolly Bugger is so effective, it should be banned from some watersheds. I suspect its effectiveness is due to its resemblance to so many edible creatures in the water—nymphs, leeches, salamanders, or even small sculpins. Its tail undulating behind a fiber, bubble-filled body is just too much for most fish to resist. It just looks like a meal!
— Bill Hunter, The Professionals' Favorite Flies[3]

Sweet fly