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OE Deep Diving Shrimp

Looking natural in both salt and fresh water

By Kasper Mühlbach

Oliver Edwards needs no further introduction. He has been developing flies and contributing to the scene for years now, and his considerations and explanations have attracted my attention from time to time.
In the mid 90s I bought his book Flytyers Masterclass, but when I recently saw one of his DVDs, I looked at the Deep Diving Shrimp with new eyes.

Lady of the stream, brownies, rainbows and several other species like the taste of a Gammarus. You find it in very different environments from smallest fresh water streams to salt water.
This is a pattern as all round as Red Tag. The silhouette, the speckled legs and the shell back makes it become alive both in the vice and at the end of the tippet.

Last year I tied some in two different colours. A warm orange and a pale green. This was the first super impressionistic imitation, which I dipped in salt water in hunt for the shining sea trout.

It was a bright and sunny day. Almost no wind and crystal clear water. Not perfect for fishing, but probably good for the hunting trout. I stood on a sand covered flat in hip deep water. 4-5 meters in front of me, it became deeper. A few rocks were lying at the bottom covered with bladder wrack.


Suddenly, 4 trouts patrolled along the edge. I was fishing in another direction and just below the surface. These trouts swam just above the bottom.
They disappeared as quickly as they emerged.
Five minutes later, the area was patrolled again - by two smaller trouts. That made it. I changed to the new, heavy gammarus imitation. I extended the leader and waited. And waited. Or at least I felt so. I think I waited for five minutes when 2 more cruised the area. It was like looking into an aquarium.
I dropped the fly and saw it sink. It was one feet above the bottom, when one of the trouts made a calm acceleration and sipped in the fly. I lifted the rod...


A rare experience when fishing for sea trouts which is normally done under more rough circumstances.

Now, I have tied 10 more, which will be suitable when it is cold, and when the trout become more selective. Maybe I will tie some for my friends or just send them the link to this page.

OE Deep Diving Shrimp


Materials
HookKamasan B100 or Mustad CZ Authentic Czech Nymph Size 10-18.
WeightLead free foil.
Thread8/0, color to match the dubbing.
TailBarbs of brown-grey partridge hackle.
AntennasAs tails, but smaller clump.
RibClear nylon mono, 4-6 lbs.
ShellbackFlexibody, clear.
BodyFine dubbing, like MC 14.
LegsBarbs of brown-grey partridge hackle.



  
Shellback cut into shape
 Shellback cut into shape 
Kasper Mühlbach
 

Tying instructions
  1. Add weight 6-10 wraps. Make two layers, the upper one shortest. Secure it with some super glue
  2. Tie in tail well down the hook shank.
  3. Take the thread to the eye. Tie in the antennas.
  4. Take the thread back to where you tied in the tail.
  5. Tie in the rib.
  6. Cut out the shell back. It should be oval or shaped like a long drop stretched in both ends.
  7. Tie in the shellback.
  8. Make a dubbing loop.
  9. Dub the body.
  10. Prepare 6-8 partridge hackles by removing the fluffy parts.
  11. Wax the dubbing loop.
  12. Get the hackles into the loop.
  13. Make sure they do not come out or move. Align the points and ajust them to the final lenght of the legs.
  14. Cut off the stems 1-2 mm from the dubbing loop.
  15. Spin.
  16. Take out the hackle points.
  17. Spin again.
  18. Turn the dubbing loop towards the eye in nice equal turns.
  19. Secure it at the eye.
  20. Moisten your fingers and make the fibres point down.
  21. Pull the shell back towards the eye.
  22. Secure the shell back.
  23. Whip finish.
  24. Rib the fly in nice turns.
  25. Whip finish.


















User comments
From: Kasper Mühlbach
Submitted January 21st 2008

Tom,

Flexibody is a slightly stretchable plastic material. You can It is thin and is attached to a piece of stiff paper, which is removed when cut into desired shape.

It is available in many fly shops.

Thanks for your comment and good luck at the vice.
Kasper

From: Tom Gibbons · h-s322·at·hotmail.com
Submitted January 18th 2008

Hello Mr. Muhlbach,
Thank you for this wonderful shrimp fly,and all honor to Mr. Edwards.This place is glorious.Tell me sir, what is ,#1-"Shellback,and #2-"Flexibody"?,so that I may pursue the tying part and go fish it immediatly.
Sincerely,God be with you.

From: Terry Still · Treyden·at·hotmail.com
Submitted July 16th 2007

oliver your flys are the best i one day hope to tie flys as well as you i have a book of yours that is in german and i cant under stand it but i have started tieing from the pictures in it and i think there not bad but still learning.thank because of you fly are fun to tie again. thank from the yukon.

From: tieandfly·at·postmaster.co.uk
Submitted February 9th 2007

Oliver Edwards is legend, I've seen the DVD of his prawn tieing and everything comes together, i owe many trout catches to the man.

From: Andry · andrfly56·at·mail.ru
Submitted December 7th 2006

I liked your shrimp. Fine. Thanks

From: Bill Voss · blaumax·at·tds.net
Submitted November 28th 2006

Excellent imitation! I'll be tying up a few to use around the marshes of north Florida and south Georgia. By the way, fantastic website, I've gotten better information from here than anywhere else!

From: Martin Joergensen · martin·at·globalflyfisher.com
Submitted July 9th 2006

John,

The trout that is referred to in this article is the sea run brown trout.

Martin

From: John Bradford · jbradfo4·at·bellsouth.net
Submitted July 9th 2006

You mention using this fly for salt water fishing,ie.salt water trout. Do I take this to mean
spotted weakfish, or sea run trout such as the rainbow ect.?

From: Andrew Foster · gfos1111·at·bigpond.net.au
Submitted March 25th 2006

what a great fly! in Australia we call them prawns, (ignore the Paul Hogan "throw another shrimp on the BBQ), and I'm sure that with suitable colour changes, they will work here


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