I’ve started flipping rocks at my local stream and I’ve struggled to find information about aquatic insect identification and what patterns I can tie on to mimic the forage I find.

Posted by caleb_oackes

6 Comments

  1. ProfessionalPopular6 on

    Get a hatch book for your region. I think you have stone and mayfly nymphs.

  2. DaweeOnTheBeat on

    You don’t have to identify the insect. Flip some rocks like you didn’t and open your fly box and see what resembles most

  3. Ok_Feedback4200 on

    1st and 4th images are stoneflies (you can tell it’s not mayfly because it has a double, not a tripple tail)
    2nd and 3rd seems to be mayflies, similar to Baetidae.

    The goal is to match the size, color and roughly the shape of them. Little details like how detailed your legs are, are 2nd importance.

    Pheasant tail should work great for mimicking these mayflies.

    For stonefly, here’s a cool pattern you could try: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BjUShsxq4wU](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BjUShsxq4wU)

  4. PeaceInMoscow on

    Prince nymph/gold ribbed hare’s ear for #1. Pheasant tail/copper John for #’s 2&3. Pat’s rubber legs for #4.

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