Jeremy Hunt Posted February 15, 2008 Posted February 15, 2008 Sac Fry Recipe: Hook: Tiemco 2457, size 12 Thread: White Monocord 3/0 (or UTC 140) Body Tubing: Ultra lace or stretch tubing (tan or clear) Egg Sack: Glo yarn ( your choice of color) Eyes: 3D Stick ons (silver prismatic) Epoxy: 5-minute or Devcon Tying Instructions: Step 1. I’m using stretch tubing from Wapsi in a size small. Medium is ok, but a little oversized. Cut about an inch and a half of tubing. Grab some small mono. I’m using tying mono in .006, but 6x tippet will do the trick as well. It needs to be long enough to fold over and put the two tag ends through the hole in the stretch tubing. If you notice in the picture I’ve created a hole with the mono to put some angel hair in. Make sure you make it large enough to slip it through. Step 2. Once you slide the hair through pull with the tag ends until the angel hair is through the ends on both sides. Grab the mono and remove away. You’re going to cut the ends, but wait until your ready to tie it on the hook. This is the end that was pulled through. The other end will have a bunch of uneven ends and that’s the end that will be tied down. Step 3. Attach the thread at the front of the hook. Just make a few turns and cut the tag end off. Step 4. Tie the end that has the loose ends. Make sure you tie both down, the loose ends and the tubing. You’ll need to give a little tension while tying the tube down or it will still be loose enough to shift to either side of the hook shank. Notice where the stopping point is and don’t tie too much of the tubing down. Step 5. Cut about an inch of glo yarn and split it evenly into two separate pieces. You’ll only need one of the pieces that you split in half to do this step. Step 6. Fold the piece in half and measure it to go a little past the hook point. Trim the excess off and don’t let go of the ends that you’ll be tying in or this step will get frustrating to you. You’ll also need to turn the hook upside down to get it to tie down right. Notice I measure the ends to NOT go past the eye of the hook. You really don’t want to trim any after you tie it in. Measure it to butt up to the eye and tie all of it in. This will also create some build up for you to have a foundation for the eyes to stick to. Step 7. Make a nice head that will be round and big enough for the eyes to lay flush with the head. What I mean by this is if you notice the eyes sitting higher than the thread base then you’ll have problems with the epoxy settling right and it will sink down into the yarn. Whip finish and you're ready for the epoxy. Go light on the first coat and apply the second coat once the first coat dries. Step 8. Attach the eyes on each side and you’re ready to add the epoxy. If the eyes don’t stick you can add a small drop of zap-a-gap. When I apply epoxy I put it in the center in between the eyes where it needs it the most and do the underside the same. Then do the sides and rotate it till you cover it all the way around with epoxy. Another trick I do is point the hook down a little so it doesn’t settle in the yarn as I rotate it. Here’s another one I did in yellow, they seem to like this color better at Taneycomo. Accept the drift.....<>>><flysandguides.comVisit my blog
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