Contrary to popular belief, largemouth bass do not feed entirely on minnows, frogs and crayfish. Most tackle stores have aisles upon aisles of poppers, crank baits and spinners made to imitate these larger food sources while never paying much attention to the smaller aquatic insects that also inhabit these waters. These tasty little critters make up a large portion of the largemouth’s respective diet during the summer months.
Contrary to popular belief, largemouth bass do not feed entirely on minnows, frogs and crayfish. Most tackle stores have aisles upon aisles of poppers, crank baits and spinners made to imitate these larger food sources while never paying much attention to the smaller aquatic insects that also inhabit these waters. These tasty little critters make up a large portion of the largemouth’s respective diet during the summer months.
Dragon flies are important members of lake and pond ecosystems. Dragon fly nymphs are large in size and often occur in great numbers in these fertile locations. For all intensive purposes these critters basically crawl around the bottom or near underwater structure eating everything they get can get there jaws into, leaving them atop the food chain for aquatic insects but at the bottom in a fish’s world. Dragon flies swim with a special technique that can be compared to a simple form of jet propulsion. This process of expelling water causes the real nymph to shoot forward in an irregular fashion while swimming. For fly anglers this irregular swimming action is the key to catching those large mouthed lunkers. When using dragon fly patterns such as the breathing dragon alternate the retrieve between quick strips and short pauses. This retrieve will make the fibers used to construct this fly pattern to pulse and pump as it is stripped through the water mimicking the true action displayed by these bugs in the water.
The breathing dragon has been a work in progress for the last two or so summers. Slaying bass, blue gill, trout or whatever seems to cross its path. This pattern has developed from the traditional stream fishing trout nymph to a critter that works it magic between the lilies and logs of our favorite bass lakes.
Materials Used in the Breathing Dragon
Hook: TMC 200R size 4
Thread: Uni-thread Olive size 8/0
Body: Larval Lace Olive/ Pheasant Tail Fibers
Shellback: 3 Pheasant Body Feathers
Thorax: Olive Zonker Fur
Eyes: Black Bead Chain Eyes
Legs: Pheasant Tail Fibers Knotted
Antennae: Stripped Grizzly Hackles
Underbody: Green Dubbing