Published Nov 11. 2023 - 5 months ago
Updated or edited Nov 11. 2023

Sillikix

I like rubber legs on dry flies. Their suggestion of something edible is the fish equivalent of ringing a dinner gong.

Sillikix
Sillikix
Nick Thomas
Rubber-legged dry fly
Rubber-legged dry fly
Nick Thomas

I like rubber legs on dry flies, they twitch and wiggle as the fly floats over ripples or if you give the leader a lift or twitch now and again. The appearance of something possibly edible helplessly kicking around on the surface is the fish equivalent of ringing a dinner gong.

The Sillikix is not a subtle imitation assembled from a few whisps of feather and fur tied to land softy and unobtrusively as thistledown on a heavily fished stream. No, this one is for wild hungry fish on the lookout for a good feed, it’s definitely more McDonald’s than Michelin. Slap it down, twitch it, dibble it up and down, in fact do whatever you think makes it look like an insect in extremis.

Silicone leg strands form both the body and legs. The round profile makes a segmented body when wound in touching turns, and if you decrease the tension as you wind you can form a smoothly tapered body. The wing of the fly is tied in forward and then folded back between the front legs which forms a prominent head and also splays out the legs for maximum twitchability.

Side, bottom, top
Side, bottom, top
Nick Thomas
Sillikix
Pattern type: 
Dry fly
Originator: 
Nick Thomas
Materials: 
Hook
Fasna F-120 #14/16
Thread
Sheer 14/0 brown
Abdomen
Get Slotted brown Silli Legs
Legs
Get Slotted yellow Silli Legs
Wing
Semperfli copper poly-yarn
Thorax
Troutline natural pine squirrel dubbing
Skill level/difficulty: 
Easy
Instruction: 
  1. Run on the thread, take around the bend in touching turns and remove the tag end.
  2. Tie in a brown leg strand and bind down up the hook. Wind forward in touching turns varying the tension to taper the body, tie in and trim off the waste.
  3. Tie in a piece of poly-yarn lying over the hook eye.
  4. Tie in a yellow leg strand on either side of the hook a little way back from the eye.
  5. Dub behind the rear legs and over the thread warps.
  6. Fold back the wing separating the front legs and tie down.
  7. Dub over the wing fold, smear the thread with varnish and whip finish.
  8. Trim the legs and wing to length.

Treated with a little floatant gel on the wing the fly is very buoyant and will pop back to the surface if it goes under in a ripple. The trick with poly-yarn wings is to apply a minimum of floatant so the fibres don’t stick together. I put small drop between a fingertip and thumb to melt, spread it into a thin film and then wipe the floatant onto wing like loading a paintbrush. Once the wing is done, pull the legs through the melted gel.

The result
Twitching a Sillikix
Nick Thomas
.

Log in or register to pre-fill name on comments, add videos, user pictures and more.
Read more about why you should register.
 

Since you got this far …


The GFF money box

… I have a small favor to ask.

Long story short

Support the Global FlyFisher through several different channels, including PayPal.

Long story longer

The Global FlyFisher has been online since the mid-90's and has been free to access for everybody since day one – and will stay free for as long as I run it.
But that doesn't mean that it's free to run.
It costs money to drive a large site like this.

See more details about what you can do to help in this blog post.