Home » Fly Patterns » Baetis Cripple

Baetis Cripple

Created by Bob Quigley


HOOK: 1X Fine wire, Standard shank, Turned-Down eye; e.g., TMC 100 or equivalent; sizes 16-20


THREAD: Brown

TAIL: Pheasant tail fibers


ABDOMEN: Wrapped pheasant tail fibers


THORAX: Olive or brown Superfine dubbing


WING: Tan deer hair


HACKLE: Olive grizzly

 

Mouse-over for alternate views: Side    Top    Front


Uses

"Cripple" patterns represent mayflies that are either just emerging or that got stuck in the shuck while emerging. In either case, the insect isn't going anywhere soon. Trout recognize this vulnerable condition and feed eagerly on cripples when they see them. When you're confronted with a blizzard hatch, where your fly is one small speck among hundreds or thousands of natural insects, a cripple pattern is a great way to induce trout to take your fake.

This dressing is in the "Quigley" style and represents a crippled blue-winged olive (Baetis) mayfly.

Variations

Blue-winged olives come in body colors that range from olive to brown. Choose a color that matches the insects available to trout when and where you are fishing.

How to Fish

Dress the front half of the fly (only) with floatant and use standard dry fly presentations.

Fly Views

Click thumbnail for enlarged version

side view

Side View

top view

Top View

front view

Front View


logo photo
Home Forums Fly Patterns Entomology Articles Basic Skills Reviews Blogs Classifed Ads Photo Gallery Links Buy Westfly Auctions  
IDAHO MONTANA OREGON WASHINGTON

Advertising Partners

Click here to advertise