MS1. The Yellow Drake Mayfly Spinner













FANWING MAYFLY SPINNER DRY FLY PATTERNS. Hook size 12 16 - $US each
Yellow, Green and Brown Drakes are not
the largest mayflies of the summer hatches but they are certainly much bigger
than the early Blue Winged olive and Blue Dun hatches of early spring. They
belong to the Ephemeridae family mayflies. They have all a deserved reputation
for producing great hatches that can entice large lurker trout to leave their
lays and feed greedily on the hatching Drakes. When they do hatch their
emergence is not a subtle event. After breaking through the surface film and
their nymphal shucks these large duns struggle frantically to get off the water.
This makes them very conspicuous and easy prey for both birds and trout. They
float for long distances waiting for their wings to fill with blood. When the
wings are fully inflated and dry these duns flutter furiously as they try to
lift their large bodies into the air. This fluttering action often is the
trigger for some violent strikes.
As nymphs all three species prefer slow moving water that has a river bed of fine sand, gravels or silt. During a hatch you will find the greatest concentration in these same areas. The slow moving water gives the trout a very clear view of it's target. The Yellow Drake is the last of the three Drakes to emerge. Their hatches are normally in the middle of June and extend up to the middle of August. They can be found in freestone as well as limestone rivers. The are sometimes referred to as the 'Warmwater Drake' Summer low water conditions and rising water temperatures do not appear to upset them. they just emerge later in the day. Large concentrations are rarely seen on the water. They emerge sporadically but the trout and bass know it is Yellow Drake hatch time. Drift a Yellow Drake fly over a quiet pool in the early evening and see what happens. Be ready to set the hook.
FAN-WINGED MAYFLY SPECIALS
This fly achieves deception not only
because it looks something like the real thing, but also because it behaves so
naturally, alighting gently onto the water like an egg laying spinner or a dun
mayfly needing a second attempt to take off. Some anglers try this fly and hate
it. They are casting it wrong. It is important to cast gently and that means not
covering too much water with each cast. This pattern is deadly provided the
hatch is on but not so profuse that the trout are too spoil for choice.
A TROUT'S DIET - THE MAYFLY
Some artificial fishing flies try to imitate the fish's food
at the different stages of an insect's life. A good example is the Mayfly. They
all have upright wings and two or three long tails. There are five stages in the
metamorphosis and life of the mayfly: egg, nymph, dun, spinner, and spent.
Mayflies are commonly called 'up-winged' flies. They are recognized as being the
staple diet of the trout. They are delicate insects with cylindrical bodies and
two pairs of erect veined wings. Some mayfly species can be found at almost
anytime of the year but others emerge only during certain times between the four
month period from May to August. The term 'Mayfly' applies to all these species
and not just the flies that hatch in May.
This group of fly fishing flies is tied to imitate the natural insects of the order Ephemeroptera. If you are saying that big word sounds Greek to me you would be 100% correct. 'Ephemeros' is Greek for 'lasting a day' and 'pteron' means 'a wing'. Most adults live less than a day and in some species they survive for only a matter of minutes. There are 2,500 species in the world: 46 in the UK, 85 in Australia and 611 in North America.
In a typical stream there may be a few hundred or a few thousand mayfly nymphs per square yard/metre. Mayflies do not have any defenses against those that prey on them. What they lack in defense they make up for in numbers. They are an extremely important element of all freshwater fish's diets. There are thousands of fly patterns tied to imitate these insects at the different stages of their development. There is a lot of folklore and fishing jargon surrounding these flies that confuses the beginner. The best advice when you first start fly fishing is to ignore it all. Stop trying to match the natural insect with an exact named representation. Unlike other insect groups mayflies all look very similar and do much the same as other mayflies. Keep a range of imitations in your fly box to cover the life cycle of these insects from aquatic nymph to the spent dead mayfly floating on the water surface. Use the one that looks most like your local flies.












THE MAYFLY 'NYMPH' STAGE
After hatching from the egg the nymph lives and feeds on the bottom. Some are
eaten at this stage by foraging trout. Nymphs are also taken as they swim
towards the surface. These can be found in ponds, streams, lakes and rivers.
They vary in appearance depending on the habitat they have adapted to live in.
Most have three tails. Some have long legs for swimming whilst those in faster
moving water have short strong legs for crawling.
THE MAYFLY 'DUN' STAGE
At the surface the 'dun' emerges from the nymph stage as it sheds it's old skin.
Although winged it is not yet sexually mature, and it must cast its skin one
more time to become a spinner. Mayflies are unique in having a pre-adult winged
stage. They are the only insects that molt again after they have developed
functional wings. This stage is called 'subimago' but more commonly known to fly
fishermen as the 'Dun' stage. The nymphs can molt between 12 to 50 times and
take over 2 years before they reach the adult stage. Fully grown nymphs rise to
the surface and molt into the 'subimago' or 'Dun' stage. This is the most
dangerous time for any mayfly as they are easy prey for fish from below and
dragon flies from above. To reduce the chances of any single animal being seen
or eaten mass emergences take place at dawn and dusk. The dull colored and
slightly hairy Dun subimago can be found fluttering to nearby vegetation.
THE MAYFLY ADULT 'SPINNER' STAGE
The final molt to the hairless, shiny-winged adult form takes place a couple of
minutes after emerging or a couple of days after. The adults are known as
'spinners' and their main task is to mate in the little time they have left.
Males die shortly after mating and the females die after laying her eggs. After
mating the female drops egg masses into the water. Some species land on the
water surface to perform this function where they are sucked up by hungry
waiting trout. Other females enter the water and swim down to attach their eggs
to submerged objects.
THE MAYFLY ADULT 'SPENT' STAGE
The dead and dying mayflies are called 'spent' spinners. They are easy prey for
the trout.












FISHING WITH MAYFLIES
Mid spring is when you start to see the first hatches of
mayflies as the temperature gets warmer. Look in the shallows as the water will
be the first to reach the correct temperature to encourage the hatch. Look for
the floating nymph drift along on the surface as it emerges and then suddenly
flies off after it’s wings have dried. This is the danger time for the insect.
If this event has caught the eye of a trout it will rise and slurp it greedily
down in an instant. Try an emerging nymph pattern, suspender buzzer, or dry fly
that matches the hatching insect in color.
If the trout are ignoring the action on the surface they may be taking the mature rising nymphs just before they hatch. This is a very common situation in the early days of the first hatchings. It is as if the size of the newly hatched insects intimidate the trout. It can take a couple of days before they start feasting on them so it is a good idea to concentrate on the rising nymph imitation rather than the emerging mayfly dun. These fish are not preoccupied with one specific insect so try a gold bead head gold ribbed hare’s ear nymph. Fish it slowly on a floating line near the area of the hatchings. The trout will see the gentle rising action on the retrieve as a nymph floating to the surface to hatch. With patience it should get a strike. Alternatively try a normal gold ribbed hares ear cast at 45% upstream and left float with the stream without any retrieve until it has swung right past your position. Hopefully this should look to a hungry trout like an insect floating on the surface just about to hatch
Why do we call mayflies, mayflies? In my experience it is June that is the best month for these insects. June flies does sound quite correct does it? (Australian, New Zealand and South American Fly fishers would call them November flies or December flies and that sounds even stranger!) In your rush to get involved early in the annual sport of Mayfly fly fishing, first stop and use your eyes. Are the trout taking the new hatching duns or are they slurping the smaller black gnats, caenis or other local insects that tend to swarm at this time of the year. Tie on the Black Gnat fly or similar imitation to match local conditions. There will be many days later in the month where a mayfly imitation would be more successful. Then again use your eyes before casting. Look in the water for the amount of discarded shucks, the old nymph skin, floating in the water. Look under the leaves of the bushes on the side of the river bank and hunt for the adult mayflies. Then select your fly that best matches them.












Here is an extract from a fishing Diary :-
"Trout can be strange. I experienced my first Green Drake mayfly hatch on the evening of the 20th May...they are huge flies! They were everywhere, I was grabbing them with my hands and taking a good close look at them. There were also several other flies hatching too. The funny thing is that the fish never fed on them on the surface. I fished from 6pm till dark and only saw two rises all evening. I tried a few different drys and a few nymphs with no luck. Finally caught a small brown on a black woolly bugger with a bit of flash in it’s tail. We had had a good bit of rain the last couple of days and I think that was why the fish were kind of screwed-up.
The next day every fish I showed a dun mayfly to went on the attack. The cloud cover gave me a 6 hour hatch, with the duns coming off the water all afternoon long. I never did see a spinner fall, evening weather was a little strange. On the third day of my long weekend fishing trip the fish were nailing emegers during the heavier rain, and dries during the calms. I got soaked, but got some beautiful trout in between soakings."
SPIDER PATTERNS (FRENCH PARTRIDGE)
Some mayflies do not make it into the air. They drown. Use a wet mayfly like our
wet green mayfly pattern or one of our spider patterns. Fish upstream and let it
just drift to imitate the dead insect. It is an easy meal for a trout. Spider
patterns are always a good standby to attract the larger trout. These
terrestrials can be swept away current as the build their webs on over hanging
riverbank plants. In the evenings of mid spring to early summer the water
surface can be littered with the fallen mature mayfly spinners. This is the time
the big trout rise to the surface and feasts
OTHER TROUT FOOD
Other groups of insects go through a similar sort of development and form part
of the trout's diet. Midges develop from bloodworm lava stages to pupa and then
adult. Caddis and sedge flies lava is encased for protection before it develops
into it's pupa stage and then into the adult. Stonefly and damsel flies nymphs
are a main trout food item rather than the adult fly stage. Other non aquatic
flies like the hawthorn and crane flies (daddy long legs) are also taken when
they flutter over or on the top of the trout's home. Terrestrials like ants and
grass hoppers are also gobbled up if they fall into the water.












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The English Fly Fishing Shop, Estate and Country Sports
Equipment Ltd,
5 Woodland Way, Morden, Surrey SM4 4DS, England (Established
1978)
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