The PPS (Poly Prop Sherry)
An effective fake of the Blue Winged
Olive's Spinner the Sherry Spinner
·
Easy and quick to tie so saves your time
·
Low cost materials so saves your money
·
Nothing from endangered species so saves your conscience
·
Versatile, easy to match most spinners so saves your day
When this blog started we considered one
of the most satisfying methods of fishing the dry fly - fishing with a spinner
imitation to represent the dead or dying adult female Blue Winged Olive. This
is an upwinged fly that in her final stages of life, as she returns to the
river to deposit her eggs, is known as the Sherry Spinner. Looked at from above, the Sherry Spinner does
indeed seem to have a body that is the colour of sweet sherry. Looked at from below, with the light passing
through her, she actually looks quite orange.
Inspection
of many other spinners, such as those of the different flies anglers categorise
together and name "Pale Watery", has shown that orange, rather than
sherry or rusty colours is more evident when the light is behind the fly. This is why the PPS has an orange body and
can be used with great confidence when spinners of various types are on the
water and the fishes' menu.
How to fish the PPS is simply as follows:
1.
Watch the rises and find a fish eating spinners.
2.
Work out how far up from the fish to cast your PPS
to coincide with the rises of your chosen fish
3.
Make the cast and control the line so the PPS
drifts as though attached to nothing
4.
When your PPS is taken, strike without breaking the
tippet
5.
Get the fish away from the rest by using side
strain
6.
Keep hidden if possible until the fish is in your
landing net.
7.
Unhook the fish as carefully as you can to avoid
damage to the fish
8.
Release the fish quickly, carefully ensuring it is
recovered enough to swim away strongly
9.
Dry your fly and consider the next fish or move on
to another spot...
History
and Development of the PPS
For
many years your faithful blogger's spinner pattern of choice
was a traditional English dry fly called "Lunn's Particular" after
its inventor William James Lunn, a justly famous Victorian river keeper on the
Test in Hampshire, England. This fly
still works but is labour intensive to tie and to be made more effective needed
its underside hackle fibres to be completely trimmed off to get it sitting flat
in the water's surface.
A
personal decision in the 1970's to return all river fish to the water meant
that, after a little while, the trout and grayling of my local rivers became a
little more difficult to trick with this regularly seen artificial. This was made more so when the fishery began
to make the same move towards catch and release and all the fish caught were
being returned and learning from the experience..
It
was decided to try some of the other spinner designs that other innovative fly
tiers had already created. These were reasonably
effective but the trout did not always take them in the same relaxed, innocent
way that they ate the naturals.
Something extra was needed.
This
led to a decision to go back to basics and come up with a pattern that would
get that relaxed, innocent rise from trout convinced they were simply eating
one more natural spinner. Being an
angler rather than a fly dresser it was important to devise a quickly and
easily tied fly. It had to use low cost,
easily obtained materials. It had to
match whatever the trigger points were of the natural spinner to encourage that
replica rise. IT HAD TO WORK, nothing
less would do.
Over
three seasons, the first versions of the PPS were devised and used on the
limestone spring-fed rivers of the Peak District in Derbyshire. They were also used on holiday trips to other
waters, such as the chalk streams in southern England and the spate and
free-stone rivers in northern England and Scotland. Materials and colours of materials were
experimented with until the fly was proving infallible whenever deployed as
described in the "How to fish the PPS" section above. The fly stayed this way for a few more years.
A
source of concern was that the body material of this successful version was of
seal's fur dyed orange. The development
process started again and after numerous experiments with a number of natural
and synthetic dubbing materials the best results came from Antron and similar
fibres. The examples at the top and below here are of UV Frog Hair,
which has proven to be very easy to use and results in the PPS being as
effective as before.
It
was around this time that the PPS was shared with other anglers, particularly
ones met in the evenings during spinner falls.
The feedback confirmed that the fly did exactly what it was supposed to
do in the hands of folk other than myself.
It
is believed that the PPS owes its efficacy to the following features:
The size and cruciform shape are what the fish are expecting to see when spinners are on the water
The orange colour, being achieved with dubbing, is still visible to the fish despite the hook inside it
The splayed tail and wings ensure the fly sits flat on the water's surface as per the natural spinner
The splayed tail and wings also act as tiny air brakes and get the PPS to land very gently
Materials
for the New Improved Recipe:
Hooks: 18, 16 and 14 (the examples are on size 16
hooks)
Thread: Orange
Tail: Fibres from a large white cock hackle (NB
cheap Indian capes are perfectly fine for the PPS)
Wing:
Medium Dun Polypropylene yarn
Body,
thorax and head: Orange Antron dubbing or similar. The pictured flies used Orange "UV Frog's Hair"
Method
1
- Start the thread at the top of the bend and make a small but distinct bump of
tying thread.
2
- Cut off the waste thread.
3
- Take a bunch of the hackle fibres by stripping them from about half an inch
of one side of the stalk and gauge them to be about the same length as the
hook. Tie them in at the bend and take
the turns of thread back towards the bump of thread previously made. Whilst doing this, splay out the fibres to
make a fan shaped tail. This tail is
important, it suggests the splayed tail of the natural female imago (spinner), supports
the fly on the meniscus and helps it to alight gently onto the water. It also adds to the visibility of the fly
which is also important as it is mostly deployed during the evenings when the
natural spinners are on the water in great numbers.
4
- Trim the waste ends of the hackle fibres level with a point about 1/8th of an
inch back from the eye. Tie in the
trimmed waste ends with close touching turns which anchor the tail and make a bed
of thread creating a smooth base for the body and wings.
5
- Tie in the winging yarn on the top of the hook shank with two turns of the
thread at the front of the body line.
Have a short length of the yarn pointing forward over the eye of the
hook and the long length pointing towards the rear.
6
- Take the long length and while holding it towards you tie in the yarn using
figure of eight turns to lock the strands of yarn out at right angles to the
hook shank. Leave the thread dangling in
front of the wing.
7
- Dub on a very small amount of the orange dubbing yarn to make an elongated
sausage shape as per the picture.
8
- Wind the dubbed thread once in front of the wing and then make a figure eight
turn of the dubbed thread over the cross of the figure of eight wing locking
turns. Then wind the body down to the
bend making a carrot shaped (and carrot coloured) body as you go. Use the tying thread to make half a dozen
tight, open ribbing turns back to the front of the fly. Make a tiny head with a whip finish and cut
off the thread.
9
- Take the yarn wings between the first finger and the thumb of the left hand
(right hand if a Southpaw) and pull them back over the hook bend. Use scissors to cut them off at a length
level with the rearmost part of the hook bend, resulting in the finished PPS
(Poly Prop Sherry).
10
- Varnish the head and, whilst the varnish is still wet, use a hackle tip to
pull through the eye to clear it of excess varnish. Both the body, or the wings, can be trimmed at the bench, or the
waterside, with scissors if a thinner profile or shorter wingspan is required, depending on the type of spinners your fish are feeding on at the time.
Don't forget to make these in fives: one for the fish, we can all
make a mistake; one for the trees, we can all make another mistake; one for the
tippet; one for the fly box; and one for the other angler who comes over and
says "Excuse me please but I couldn't help noticing how well you are doing
tonight. Would you mind letting me know
what fly are you using?"
Regular Rod