Current Works

Guided Fly Fishing Trips in Northwest Michigan with guide Ted Kraimer

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Tying The Thing-A-Ma-Hex


 

Hex fishing at night can be difficult for some just to know where the fly is let alone if it’s on target and drifting drag free to rising fish. Glow-in-the-dark fly lines help with its non-intruding glow characteristics, but that doesn’t show you the fly at the end of the leader.  

 

The “Thing-a-ma-Hex” uses a miniature, glow-in-the-dark strike indicator (expensive word for bobber) as it’s post to keep track of the fly once on the water while it helps to keep  the fly landing properly and floating on the water.

 

Charge the uni-bobber with a bright flashlight being careful not to shine the light on the water and fish you are targeting – that assuredly will put them down. The amount of glow is very subtle so it doesn’t spook fish while providing an idea of where it’s located on the water.  If you are looking for a bright beacon, this is not it. You will want to dress your fly with fly floatant before hand and as with any dry fly, keep it out of the water until you are ready to cast. Have fun tying and good luck on the water! 

 


Recipe:

 

Hook:           TMC 2313 #6

Thread:         Flymaster Plus – Brown

Tail:              Pheasant Tail

Body:           Deer Hair

Hackle:         Brown & Grizzly Rooster Neck or Saddle

Post:            Uni-Bobber – Glow-In-The-Dark

 


 

 

Step 1. Put the hook in the vise and wrap a base layer of thread from behind the eye to above the hook point. Slip the uni-bobber over the eye of the hook about ¼ inch behind the eye and attach to the hook with figure-8 wraps so it is upright. Make enough wraps and tight enough to keep it there.


 

Step 2. Trim off a 4-5 pheasant tails fibers and tie in behind the uni-bobber so the tips extend 1½ times the hook shank.


 

Step 4. Select two large hackle feathers. Trim some of the barbs to stubs at the base of the feather to provide some grip and prevent the feather from slipping out. 


 

Step 5. Tie in at the base of the uni-bobber with the underside/convex side of the feather facing you.  After tying in, wrap horizontally up the base of the uni-bobber.


 

Step 6. Select a long clump of deer hair that is at approximately the diameter of a pencil. Clean the under-fur and short hairs, then use a hair stacker to even it.  Pull out by the base of the hair and remove the short hairs, while trying to get the proper thickness for the body which should be aprox. 2/3 of a pencil’s diameter. Tie in the deer hair between the uni-bobber and hook eye so the tips extends beyond the hook half the length of the shank.  The pheasant tail fibers should extend  beyond the tips making for a tail.


 

Step 7.  Even the hair so it is on both sides of the hook shank.


 

Step 8. Gently wrap the thread backwards while holding the extended deer hair with your opposite hand.  Make for even spaced wraps falling ¼” from the tips.  


 

Step 9. At the end, make two or three wraps a little more pressure, then advance the thread forward again with increased pressure, crisscrossing the wraps and ending  between the uni-bobber and hook eye.


 

Step 10. Trim the butts of the deer hair and tie down the head covering any deer hair that is exposed.


 

Step 11. Take both the feathers at the same time and wrap them under the bulbous uni-bobber and make a heavy parachute style hackle. Tie off and whip finish.  Be sure to out head cement on both the head of the fly and the wraps at the end of the extended body.


 

 

The end result!

 


 

The idea for this fly was borrowed from a fly called a Thing-A-Ma-Bug which uses non-glow in the dark uni-bobbers as the post to assist with floatation and easy identification on the water.


 

 

 


Ted Kraimer
 Current Works, LLC
PO Box 333
Traverse City, MI 49685 
231-883-8156