These two little flies have caught me an amazing amount of good fish this year both on the river and on the lochs.
Brown or Rainbow seem to love them and they are of course possibly the worst kept secret of the year.
However for those who missed them, let me introduce the BPP and the GPP, otherwise known as the black peacock and plover and the Grey partridge and peacock.
Fish them any way you like, whenever you like, but I have found they work best on the river - dead-drift, and on the stillwater - fished quickly and erraticly. I guess the running water imparts the motion on the river but on the stillwater you have to induce it yourself. Cast at rising fish and work the water thoroughly and by god do you get some action.
I have fished them usually as a pair with the BPP on the point and the GPP on the dropper, normally one outfishes the other convincingly (usually the GPP).
Between them I think they look like Buzzers, sedge pupa, corixa, hatching upwings, drowning terrestrials, infact food of any description. The trout think so too.
So the dressings are as follows.
The GPPHackle: Grey partridge neck feather- 2 turns.( i tried a few different types of hackle but nothing could match this)
Body: peacock herl -kept slim. (ice dub peacock is also very good- perhaps even better, it certainly lasts longer)
Rib: Gold wire.
Thread: pearsalls #20 light olive (the thread colour does seem to make a difference olive is definately far superior to any other colour and the light olive is best)
The BPPHackle: golden plover back, or starling back (black with a sheen and pale coloured tips)- 2turns
Body: black peacock ice dub (brilliant stuff)- tied slim
Rib: silver wire
Thread: Black.
This fly is basically a slim, sparse black and peacock spider but it is really great and the ice dub is great stuff to work with.
I tie both flies in 12 and 14's no need for smaller or larger and they seem to work best on B175's (or similar) on the stillwaters and TMC 103bl's (or partridge flashpoint barbless) on the river.
Hope this inspires a few folk and hopefully we can add to the list next season, but you must try them because it is a really effective and fun way to fish.
Sandy