September Fly of the Month Print E-mail
(8 votes)
Written by Phillip Fischer   
Thursday, 13 September 2007

Midge Little Yellow Stone

Midge Little Yellow Stone

One of my go-to flies when fishing the Sierra and other waters where there is an abundance of Little Yellow Stones is the “Midge Little Yellow Stone”.  This pattern is easy to tie and is very effective for several reasons: it has the red butt of the female stonefly, which imitates the eggs sack and acts as a trigger, it is tied with undersized hackles to float the fly low to the water’s surface, and has an under wing of flash sheeting.  The fly has quickly become a favorite.  I’ll often tie this fly in tandem and fish two at a time.  Or I may fish it as a dry fly dropper off a large golden stone.  When fished as a dropper with the larger Golden Stone, cousin to the Little Yellow Sally, the smaller fly usually produces two or three to one over the bigger stonefly pattern.  Give the Midge Little Yellow Stone pattern a try on you next trip.

Midge Little Yellow Stone Pattern 

Hook: Tiemco 2312 or similar in sizes 12-16

Egg Sack:  Red Floss

Body: Pale Yellow Superfine Dubbing

Under Wing:  Flash Sheeting cut to form under wing

Over Wing:  Blond Elk Hair tied sparse

Hackle:  Two Whiting Midge Saddles sized approximately 2 hook sizes undersized 

 

Tying Instructions:

  1. Tie on thread at the wing set position and wind back to the tail set position.
  2. Loop one strand of floss over the thread and pull up to the hook.  Secure with a wrap or two of thread.  Wind floss forward covering approximately 15-20 of the body.  Tie off and trim excess.
  3. Dub superfine pale yellow dubbing over the remainder of the body to the wing set position.
  4. Trim Flash sheeting to form a wing and tie in at the wingset position.  The wing should extend slightly beyond the end of the hook as shown in picture.
  5. Tie in a sparse clump of Elk Hair to form the over wing.  Trim excess.
  6. Tie in Midge Saddles .  Prepare the hackle by stripping a few barbs off the stem, with a few extra stripped off the bottom of the feather.  Tie in the hackle dry fly style....shiny side back and dull side forward.  Wind 3 to 4 wraps with both hackles concurrently to the head and tie off.
  7. Whip finish and lightly glue the head.

Last Updated ( Sunday, 23 September 2007 )
 
Discuss (9 posts)

Phil
September Fly of the Month
Sep 15 2007 01:18:41
This thread discusses the Content article: September Fly of the Month

Testing the addition of a discussion icon on the Board.
#181

G.M.
Re:September Fly of the Month
Sep 15 2007 03:46:38
Hey Phil - did you tie those for Janet at her shop? I seem to remember her talking about trying to find a good little yellow stone pattern.

-Greg
#187

Phil
Re:September Fly of the Month
Sep 15 2007 04:56:52
Nope. That is my pattern. Been tying it for a couple of years now. Great little pattern!
#199

EricW
Substitute Snowshoe for the Wing?
Sep 17 2007 06:19:27
oh sure! where were you last year?! :P

Sort of a trude style isn't it? I've been using a very similar pattern (minus the underwing). Instead of the deer hair, I've got a light dun snowshoe rabbit foot for the wing. To me, it seems to float much better, hold up to more abuse, and is more visible.
#246

Phil
Re:Substitute Snowshoe for the Wing?
Sep 17 2007 13:22:16
Very nice upgrade to that pattern!
#252

EricW
Re:Substitute Snowshoe for the Wing?
Sep 18 2007 04:55:30
just got my first foot of the stuff not long ago. Best spot for it I've found so far, though I haven't tied up any of Harry's caddis

I take it that "flash sheeting" is a purchased material. I have this sort of irridescent plastic sheet that's for gift wrapping that looks like it might work. I've never tied an underwing (or shaped plastic wings for that matter). Is it something you do on a lot of you stone immitations? What was the inspiration?
#331

Phil
Re:Substitute Snowshoe for the Wing?
Sep 18 2007 05:33:20
I do use that a lot on my stones. Frequently either that flash sheeting that I've bought in craft stores, or Krystal Flash. I like it for the flash that it brings to the wing. The inspiration came to me whie examining stoneflies streamside in Montana and realizing the wing has similar properties. It does seem to work, as this pattern has done very well for me over time in quite a number of waters. I think almost as importatnt, if not more so is the midge hackle. I can skate and move the fly tied in this fashion. Can't do that with a bullethead.
#334

EricW
What if the shony side is forward? :P:
Sep 18 2007 07:21:07
Hackle: Two Whiting Midge Saddles sized approximately 2 hook sizes undersized
Tie in Midge Saddles. Prepare the hackle by stripping a few barbs off the stem, with a few extra stripped off the bottom of the feather. Tie in the hackle dry fly style....shony side back and dull side forward. Wind 3 to 4 wraps with both hackles concurrently to the head and tie off.

Sorry to pester but... "go try it at the vice!"

I understand the stripping of a couple barbs to make the first wrap bed down easier, but why 2 of the same hackle? (2x 3-4 wraps vs 1x 6-8 wraps) I've tied 2 on an Adams but they were different colored and on a couple bushy buggers I've palmered 2.

Also, if you tie the shiny side forward the barbs sort of lay back a little bit but is it enough to make it dive? I haven't been paying that attention to that

Betty mentioned the Hornberg 1 2 3 to me last season at pyramid (really odd fly, sort of streamerish but with that hackled head). Is this one that you'd tie shiny side forward?
#346

Phil
Re:What if the shony side is forward? :P:
Sep 19 2007 00:18:29
Trick with winding two hackles at once is they have to be married together. If they refuse, wrap one at a time. Two hackles can be placed much tighter on the hook that just one and offer a more bushy result. Not critical, unless you're fishing heavy water, and then it is important! Little Yellow Stones often live in heavy water. So the extra barbs are important in my book. You probably won't be able to tie 6-8 wraps in the same space as two hackles wound 3-4 times. Takes practice!

Probably not critical to tie one way or the other (dry fly style vs wet fly style if you're using good dry fly hackles. Both will result in good floatability. But it is a dry fly so you're supposed to tie it dry fly style!

Phil
#406


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