I see some dragonfly nymphs tied with a short tail and some without.
Ive seen pics of a dragon and they dont have tails,so why are they included in a pattern?
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I see some dragonfly nymphs tied with a short tail and some without.
Ive seen pics of a dragon and they dont have tails,so why are they included in a pattern?
it depends on the species, some dragon fly nymphs have a bit of tail, that does move.
Google "dragon fly nymphs, images" and have a look at all the different species of nymphs, quite interesting.
The "tail" is to give movement. All dragonfly nymphs propel themselves by expelling water out their anal vents.
http://www.troutnut.com/specimen/356
Since they have a torpedo shape, they can also be copied by a fur-strip, as in the papa roach. This also has movement.
Remember. Movement = LIFE = food for trout.
I dont want to hijack the thread but I have a question.
Has any one ever tied and fished dragonfly nymphs as weighted controll flies? With or without tails....
A tungsten-beaded Prince nymph imitates a dragonfly nymph (or stonefly nymph), as does a tungsten Copper John.
Depending upon the waters being fished, this can be an ideal control pattern.
This applies more in countries such as the USA & parts of Europe where a control STONEFLY is good choice.
Less so in SA.
A dragonfly nymph imitation with a tail that catches fish doesn't necessarily mean that the fish sees the fly as a dragonfly per se.
Depends whether you want to catch fish with a fly that works or imitate a nymph that also works.
Here is a dragon fly pattern that incorporates movement and shape http://truttablog.com/2013/03/24/the-fmd/#more-588
Dry:
http://truttablog.files.wordpress.co...pg?w=312&h=235
Wet:
http://truttablog.files.wordpress.co...pg?w=294&h=312
An easy tie if you use a dubbing loop or split thread