Fishing Report,    Flies,    Upper Sacramento

The Beetle Bug

By Tom Chandler 5/20/2006

Work wrapped its sticky fingers around me yesterday afternoon and kept me away from the misleadingly named "Longshot Lake" (though with rain falling all afternoon, all evening, and most of the morning it's not clear I missed a lot).

The river itself spiked over 8,000 cfs – an astonishing number for this time of year. As the river flows remain at largely unfishable levels, boredom creeps in and drives us to do things we might not normally do. Wayne proved this theory true by fishing the raging Upper Sac for an hour yesterday, actually landing a fish and losing two others.

Others engage in even more desperate behavior, like whipping up a Beetle Bug and photographing it (first fly photo ever) so his readers will know what the hell he's talking about all the time. I get a couple e-mails every time I mention the oddly mis-named Beetle Bug, and while it's hardly a magic fly, it is a very effective attractor pattern that's fast fast fast to tie. This is my rough water parachute tie (I would tie a sparser pattern with a thinner body for slower water), and it's equally effective as a Catskill tie with white hair wings.

The Beetle Bug Fly
Your basic Beetle Bug; easy, fast, and hot (which - if you think about it - is how most of us like our women)

The basic recipe is Moose body tails, bright red Hares Ear dubbing, turkey flat parachute post (white goat body hair for the Catskill), and Coachman brown hackle (though I use Cree hackle).

That's all for today. The Lovely Talented Nancy flies home today from a weeklong business trip, and between the bruised rib, the rampant sickness, and our end-to-end trips, I'm looking forward to actually spending some time with her. With everything running high, there's no better time... See you, well, you won't see me... TC.


AuthorPicture

Tom Chandler

As the author of the decade leading fly fishing blog Trout Underground, Tom believes that fishing is not about measuring the experience but instead of about having fun. As a staunch environmentalist, he brings to the Yobi Community thought leadership on environmental and access issues facing us today.

Dave Hughes, FYI is from Oregon. Dave states that the fly was originated by Audrey Joy in Portland Oregon. The fly was originaly tied with white calf hair or buck tail wings as well as the floss body and often reffered to as a "beetle bug coachman" It is often used for summer steelhead as well as trout on the west coast. I was just stating that IMO your creation was unique enough to recieve a different ... more name.
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Better take it up with Dave Hughes, who spells out the Beetle Bug's lineage in his book "Trout Flies." He cops to the originals using a floss body, but says Bob Borden started tying this variant of it in the 1970s, and he uses the name interchangeably.
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Sorry, not even close to a real beetle bug. I'm from Oregon where it was originated, think of it as a royal wulf minus the peacock, you should name your unique creation something new.
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I do like parachutes as a matter of course (plus they're so damned easy to tie). I think they're probably more emerger than dry fly (hatched bugs tend to hold their bodies off the water), but in rough water the Catskill style seems to hold up a little better.
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Interesting Beetle bug. I've never tied it as a parachute myself, but almost all dries really seem to sit better as such. I fish emergers so much I only pull the Beetle Bug out to fish undercut banks or under trees.
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