Trailer Hitch

JG63

Active member
Joined
Mar 7, 2013
Messages
707
THIS same idea as the mono loop i posted - only these are for subsurface - loop is made by twisting some wire on a bodkin, cutting it to length, and attaching it firmly to the (jig style) hook body with GSP thread and coating it with your favorite UV resin - tie a simple nymph over top and you have a strong tie in point for that Yong Special or #18 Sawyer style PT
 

Attachments

  • P9090010.jpeg
    P9090010.jpeg
    60 KB · Views: 27
  • P9090012.jpeg
    P9090012.jpeg
    59.5 KB · Views: 29
Benefit of this over just tying a double surgeons or triple? Swear I am not being snarky, just genuinely curious.
 
Benefit of this over just tying a double surgeons or triple? Swear I am not being snarky, just genuinely curious.
I’m allergic to tying a dropper on to the bend of the hook - often times my knot is tied poorly (thanks to fading eyesight) and will slip off the barbless hooks before tightening them properly - then have to remove some of the curled dropper and start over - with a solid ring to attach, a good clinch knot works well for me and two inches of twisted tying wire is cheaper than a tippet ring - I use the jig hook because the extra weight of the added wire to the “top” of the hook shank helps the fly ride point up - I’ve even done some floating nymphs with a tiny styrofoam ball to “suspend” in the drift above the level of these flies - I used to be able to track my drifts pretty well in clear water with that type of rig - I still fish a single fly rig about 98% of the time as it’s easier to present a single nymph, dry, wet, streamer - and I’m not breaking off entire rigs in the trees or stream bottom. I sometimes load these trailer hitch flies with extra weight and use them in lieu of split shot - so there’s that
 
1748385197882.png


tippet ring
 
I’m allergic to tying a dropper on to the bend of the hook - often times my knot is tied poorly (thanks to fading eyesight) and will slip off the barbless hooks before tightening them properly - then have to remove some of the curled dropper and start over - with a solid ring to attach, a good clinch knot works well for me and two inches of twisted tying wire is cheaper than a tippet ring - I use the jig hook because the extra weight of the added wire to the “top” of the hook shank helps the fly ride point up - I’ve even done some floating nymphs with a tiny styrofoam ball to “suspend” in the drift above the level of these flies - I used to be able to track my drifts pretty well in clear water with that type of rig - I still fish a single fly rig about 98% of the time as it’s easier to present a single nymph, dry, wet, streamer - and I’m not breaking off entire rigs in the trees or stream bottom. I sometimes load these trailer hitch flies with extra weight and use them in lieu of split shot - so there’s that
Again… not being snarky, just conversing, but why not a surgeons knot with the tag as a dropper. I never tie off the bend of a hook.
 
And I misread the intention behind the ring. I thought it was to add sections to articulate a fly, not realizing you're using it as the anchor for the bottom half of a 2 or 3 fly rig. ( gotta get used to that part, some of the waters I've fished out west don't allow "more than one hook per line, dropper rigs included")
 
Again… not being snarky, just conversing, but why not a surgeons knot with the tag as a dropper. I never tie off the bend of a hook.


I’m not taking it as snarky - if I want a right angle in the rig, I can use a tag as a dropper - this fly keeps the leader in a straight line with the dropper off the back - I’m not tight lining with a long rod when fishing these - I use this rig when “shotgunning”upstream holding current seams and shorter pocket water casts with no indicator - my leaders are usually shorter (8 feet or so) in faster water - I use this type of fly in specific circumstances
 
I’m not taking it as snarky - if I want a right angle in the rig, I can use a tag as a dropper - this fly keeps the leader in a straight line with the dropper off the back - I’m not tight lining with a long rod when fishing these - I use this rig when “shotgunning”upstream holding current seams and shorter pocket water casts with no indicator - my leaders are usually shorter (8 feet or so) in faster water - I use this type of fly in specific circumstances
Thanks for the explanation!
 
Back
Top