Swisher and Richards Floating Nymph

This week’s Throw Back Thursday Fly is the Swisher and Richards Floating Nymph.

Floating Nymph | www.johnkreft.com

I was searching my fly fishing and fly tying library for a little inspiration on what fly to feature this week. I decided to pull out Mike Lawson’s Spring Creeks (2003) book and thumbed through it. After several chapters, I thought I should leave the book out and reread some of the chapters!

Lawson presents several flies he uses for fishing spring creeks, including his home waters, the Henry’s Fork of the Snake River. I found a few flies listed in his book that I’ve highlighted in previous TBT posts, including the Caddis Emerger, the Spent Partridge Caddis, and his EZ Caddis.

I found the Floating Nymph on page 270 of his book. He provides a brief description and he states in part “Doug Swisher and Carl Richards first described this pattern in Selective Trout (1988).

Beside Lawson’s book, I found the Floating Nymph in Ed Engle’s Tying Small Flies (2004). Ed sent me a book after meeting him on the Metolius River back in 2016 as he was fishing with an acquaintance I knew who lived in the Willamette Valley.

It’s funny, I’ve looked at that book many times, but didn’t really pay attention to Chapter 12 – Floating Nymphs! Sure enough, it’s listed there. Ed also details a variant where a parachute wing is added for more floatation. He writes he carries both versions of the fly.

It’s a relatively simple fly to tie, but a little knowledge about how to create the round ball for the wing might need practice.

Many natural nymphs float in the surface film as they struggle to free themselves from their nymphal shuck. This makes them easy pickings for trout.

I bet this will work on my home waters!

Enjoy…go fish, stay safe!

Similar Posts

  • Woes of a Fly Tyer

    This is a story about the woes of a fly tyer I thought you might enjoy. I’ve been tying flies for our upcoming trip to Argentina and Chile and the next fly on my list was Swisher’s PMX Royal. For those of you who don’t tie flies, you might enjoy this as well because it…

  • Salmonfly Season

    I’ve heard it’s time. The first few big bugs are just beginning to hatch. Salmonfly season is here! These are the biggest bugs of the season (I tie flies as large as size 4 to imitate them) and this hatch is much anticipated by many fly fishers. The image above is of an adult breaking…

  • Copper John

    John Barr’s Copper John is this week’s TBT fly. He completed the fly design in 1996 after three years of development. The Copper John is such an effective fly design, John Barr ties it in many colors and variations. The original fly is tied in sizes 10 – 18. But in his book, Barr Flies, he…

  • Girdle Bug

    This week’s Throw Back Thursday Fly is the Girdle Bug. Frank McGinnis of Anaconda, Montana is credited with developing the Girdle Bug, sometimes call a McGinnis Rubberlegs. The fly was first fished on the Big Hole River in the 1930’s and 1940’s. You might recognize this fly if it used a variegated chenille body and…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *