It is currently Tue Apr 23, 2024 6:15 pm

All times are UTC - 5 hours [ DST ]




  Page 1 of 1   [ 2 posts ] New Topic Add Reply
Author Message
PostPosted: Sun Nov 30, 2008 7:17 am • # 1 
User avatar
Newbie

Joined: 11/28/08
Posts: 32
Image

The Mighty Myakka Minnow was born out of frustration. I'm sure you've been there.

Imagine a day on the water with fish busting minnows throughout the morning. But after several hours, you still have nothing to show for your efforts. You cast into the spray of minnows, but your offering is ignored repeatedly. The fish are so keyed into the tiny minnows that they ignore everything else.

Although the scenery is nice and weather gorgeous, it sure would be nice to feel the tug of a largemouth bass or hand-sized bluegill.

This happened to me several times while fly fishing on the Myakka River.

After one unproductive outing, I decided to try and come up with a fly that would imitate the minnows that the fish were so excited about.

I knew that the fly had to be no more than an inch long. It had to look like a minnow. It had to sink. It had to have large eyes.

After a few hours of trial and tribulation, I came up with a workable prototype and couldn't wait to give it a try.

Next time out to the river, I had several Myakka Minnows in my box and one tied on my 4-weight. It didn't take long to realize that I'd hit a home run. I picked up bass, bluegill, stumpknocker and tilapia while blind-casting. I kept my eyes open for scattering minnows. When I saw bass or bluegill busting minnows, I'd cast the Myakka Minnow into the fray.

Success is so sweet!

Over the years, the fly has worked very well and achieved a national reputation of sorts. It's a pattern that the Flymasters of Indianapolis featured in its Intermediate Fly Tying Class last spring. I've had email inquiries about the fly from interest anglers all over the country. I've even sold hundreds of them.

The fly isn't a magic fly. But it does work very well when small minnows are the main food source. Then, it seems to be magic.

In fresh water, the fly has produced bass, bluegill, shellcracker, stumpknocker, redbreast sunfish, speckled perch and tilapia. Rick Grassett caught a nice brown trout on the Myakka Minnow in Montana. I caught barramundi on it. You can tie it on larger hooks and go after saltwater fish. It has resulted in spotted seatrout, snook, redfish, mangrove snapper, jack crevalle, ladyfish, Spanish mackerel and little tunny.

It's a fun fly to fish and an easy fly to tie.

I'm sure there are similar flies out there somewhere, but the pattern was born in my head. I've never seen a fly like it in any shop or catalog.

Tie and few and see what you think.

What works best for me is to cast it out, let is sink for a couple of counts, then work it in erratically. I like a couple of 2-inch strips and a pause. But you'll figure out what works best for you.

Good luck!

Myakka Minnow

Hook: No. 12 1560 Daiichi Nymph hook

Thread: Fine mono

Tail: Clipped marabou

Weight: 6-8 turns of .20 lead wire

Body: Bodi-Braid by Spirit River

Eyes: 3D Prism Stick-On

Coating: Devcon 2-Ton Epoxy

Instructions

Put hook in vice and attach thread on the hook shank near the point of the hook. Tie in a small amount of marabou and clip to about ¼ inch. Tie in .20 lead wire and wrap 6-8 turns. Tie in Bodi-Braid at the hook point and wind up to just behind the eye of the hook. Wind back to about mid-shank, then forward again, building up a minnow-like body. Whip finish. Add eyes, coat with epoxy and allow to dry.



Top
  
PostPosted: Sun Nov 30, 2008 8:01 am • # 2 
User avatar
Jr. Member

Joined: 11/19/08
Posts: 56
They look even better in person!!! That's means more tasty to fishiesImage

Keep 'em coming, Steve


Top
  
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  

  Page 1 of 1   [ 2 posts ] New Topic Add Reply

All times are UTC - 5 hours [ DST ]



Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 7 guests


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum

Search for:
Jump to:  


- OurBoard Support -