Canadian Mohair Leech Yarn
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CANADIAN MOHAIR LEECH-YARN This is the original Canadian-Brown, and hard to find. It's not our LEECH YARN FROM CANADA found in our 2006 catalog, but a different product. Finally ole' man Abox sent me a few dozen packages(he fishes most of the time now). This is the color brown that is Multi-Color-Brown. Rich, translucent brown with hints of olive. It's on a twisted thread, so it can be wrapped on the hook shank, then picked-out. HERE'S THE KILLER PATTERN: Put the proper size gold-bead just behind the hook-eye on a 2x long size-10 or 12 hook, like the DAI-RIKI #730. Tie in a short(1/2-inch) tail of sparse brown marabou, or no tail at all. Tie in a length of this Mohair leech-yarn at the end of the hook shank. Run thread up to behind the bead head. Wrap the Leech-Yarn up the hook shank in close wraps, to the waiting thread behind the bead. Tie in the Leech-Yarn with the waiting thread, and whip-finish. Now go back to the end of the hook shank, and with our F-C Curved Dubbing-Needle, pull out the Leech-Yarn that is locked under its own wraps. Do this all the way up the hook shank to the bead head. We now have a Leech Woolybugger. BUT LOOK: Off the end of the hook bend, run a Soft-Hackle DROPPER-FLY about 12-inches behind the Leech Bugger. The dropper-fly is the reason for the short sparse tail on the Leech Bugger(wont tangle with the dropper rig). Expect to kick butt with this rig.
CANADIAN MOHAIR LEECH-YARN This is the original Canadian-Brown, and hard to find. It's not our LEECH YARN FROM CANADA found in our 2006 catalog, but a different product. Finally ole' man Abox sent me a few dozen packages(he fishes most of the time now). This is the color brown that is Multi-Color-Brown. Rich, translucent brown with hints of olive. It's on a twisted thread, so it can be wrapped on the hook shank, then picked-out. HERE'S THE KILLER PATTERN: Put the proper size gold-bead just behind the hook-eye on a 2x long size-10 or 12 hook, like the DAI-RIKI #730. Tie in a short(1/2-inch) tail of sparse brown marabou, or no tail at all. Tie in a length of this Mohair leech-yarn at the end of the hook shank. Run thread up to behind the bead head. Wrap the Leech-Yarn up the hook shank in close wraps, to the waiting thread behind the bead. Tie in the Leech-Yarn with the waiting thread, and whip-finish. Now go back to the end of the hook shank, and with our F-C Curved Dubbing-Needle, pull out the Leech-Yarn that is locked under its own wraps. Do this all the way up the hook shank to the bead head. We now have a Leech Woolybugger. BUT LOOK: Off the end of the hook bend, run a Soft-Hackle DROPPER-FLY about 12-inches behind the Leech Bugger. The dropper-fly is the reason for the short sparse tail on the Leech Bugger(wont tangle with the dropper rig). Expect to kick butt with this rig.