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SJW Ball
#1
Recently I have seen the light and become a true believer in the wonders of the worm.
It other words, it was the only fly that worked.
I can see this as being a BIG GUN specially after a storm or run off when the real thing gets washed up.
In the latest issue of Fly Rod & Reel, there was a fly that caught my eye[Wink]
This thing has got to be killer on the conditions I mentioned.
Here is the SAN JUAN WORM BALL:

[inline "San Juan Worm Ball 1 400.jpg"]


I had to tie some up in different colors:

[inline "SJ Worm3 400.jpg"]

Here is the article and the inventor:

Fly Tying: The San Juan Worm BallWhat could be better than one San Juan Worm? A bunch of them.
Dan Fink
The San Juan Worm has been a standard fly pattern for years now, because it's simple to tie and it works. So I thought, Why not take it one step further? If one worm is good, a bunch must be better. And it's true. The San Juan Worm Ball is a very fishable and effective pattern no matter what the purists might say.

To mess with your more closed-minded buddies, I recommend carrying your stash of newly tied San Juan Worm Balls to the river in a plastic bait container. The

K-Mart sticker is optional, as is any sort of pre-presentation dip in stinkbait juice.

Seriously, though, this fly works quite well for trout and panfish, despite its origins during a four-foot snowstorm that I spent in the company of a bottle of good bourbon. Drift it just like a San Juan Worm, with an occasional twitch to imitate a mass of irritated, doomed nightcrawlers.
Dan Fink lives high in the northern Colorado mountains, 12 miles from the nearest power line.

Recipe:
HOOK: Mustad 37160, size 10
BEAD: 1/8-inch tungsten
THREAD: 6/0 red Uni
BODY: Thread
TENTACLES: Worm-colored Ultrachenille, both regular and micro diameter

Crimp the hook barb. Slip the tungsten bead over the hook point and slide it to the eye, then place hook in vise. Attach the red thread and wrap a smooth, thin body back to the bend of the hook, only one layer thick. Coat with head cement.

Cut three pieces out of both regular diameter and micro thin chenille for a total of six segments. The two pieces for the back are two inches long, the middle pieces are 11/2 inches, and the front pieces are one inch each.

Tie on the two long pieces of chenille at the back of the hook. Wrap thread neatly and evenly up to the middle of the hook and make some worm-like loops with the chenille. Tie off at the middle of the chenille, leaving 1/2 to 1-inch ends.

Tie the two mid-length pieces of chenille on at the mid-point of the hook shank. Wrap thread up to just behind the bead. Make more worm-like loops in one or both of the middle pieces of chenille, and tie off right behind the bead head.

Tie on the remaining two pieces of chenille right behind the bead head.

Carefully flame every protruding end of the chenille with a cigarette lighter or match, tapering the ends so they look like the ends of worms. A rotary vise will help you avoid torching parts that shouldn't be torched.
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#2
hey.. even I could do that one.. bet that would be killer on rising trout in some of the local lakes here.. [cool]

MacFly [cool]
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#3
Those are some different kinda flies.
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#4
Those are some nice looking worm balls. I can see how they would actually work since I have done the same with live bait before........Ooooop! I know I'm not supposed to use the word "Live Bait" on a fly board.

That Worm Ball can also be Confused for the San Juan Mating Season.[shocked] [laugh][laugh][laugh]
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#5
watch that blasphemous language bro.. you could end up getting banned.. [Image: bobwink.gif]

MacFly [cool]
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#6
I guess I need to show you my San Juan Nightcrawler ball. It looks so lifelike and Bass love it.[laugh]
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#7
is that the moss green one.. or is the moss green one a salt fly.. either way that fly came to mind when I saw this post..

.. my only problem would be that Id probably catch the house on fire when trying to singe the ends.. and that means the FD would have to be called.. and that would mean theyd have to use a lot of water.. and we are in a water crisis.. so maybe I should not tie this fly.. hehehhe

MacFly [cool]
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#8
The Moss Green flies that I showed you are only for one species of Saltwater fish. The Opaleye Perch.

They don't actually eat moss but they go after the clumps of it so that they can absorb the nutrients of the little critters that hide insided of the Moss.

In this case, the fly is not resembling an insect nor minnow but it resembles a common source of acquireing the desired nutrients.[cool]
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#9
That is funny you mentioned that about the flame. In the article (WITH PICTURE) it shows the last step as a ball of flame and it reads, I warned you about this in step #6.
I burnt the ends before I tied it on...made more sense.[cool]
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#10
in my case it would probably end up looking like the 4th of July.. hehehe but that does not mean I wont give it a try..

MacFly [cool]
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#11
I am including one in McLarry's care package, along with a Zug Bug and some rubber leg guys and Griffith and Renegade and Klinkhammer, and a few others.
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#12
cool... he will like that.. Im gonna do up some wooly worms.. and buggers.. and Im gonna try that hasbro recipe you sent me... that and some basic tools and he should be good to go..

MacFly [cool]
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