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Thoughts of spring emerge as anglers learn to tie flies

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Phil Johnson, right, shows Doug Anderson how to attach feathers to a fly during a class at Superior Fly Angler in Superior, Minnesota. (Photo by Clint Austin/Duluth News Tribune/MCT)

(MCT) — SUPERIOR, Wis. — Doug Anderson leans in to watch as Phil Johnson wraps the auburn feather from a rooster’s breast around a long-shanked fishing hook. It’s a Saturday morning in January at the Superior Fly Angler shop in Superior, and Anderson is at his second fly-tying class.

In a quiet alcove away from the fly rods and waders, Johnson is teaching Anderson, of Superior, how to tie a pheasant-tail nymph. The fly shop is offering fly-tying classes for beginners every Saturday morning for the next several weeks. On this particular Saturday, Anderson was the only student. Two others had to cancel at the last minute, Johnson said.

Anderson, 43, had graduated from the previous week’s class on tying the simpler Wooly Bugger pattern.

“This one definitely has a few more steps than last week’s,” says Anderson, who sells computer networking equipment.

“This is graduate school,” says Johnson, a retired English teacher who works part-time at the fly shop.

Johnson, a longtime fly-fisher who also builds bamboo fly rods, seems the ideal fly-tying instructor — low-key, thorough, patient, non-judgmental.

In this Internet age, a budding fly-fisher can go online and watch videos of fly-tying, but the video wouldn’t give Anderson a slow-motion replay of how to use a whip-finishing tool. And a video can’t look at the dubbing of synthetic fur on Anderson’s pheasant-tail nymph and say, as Johnson does, “That looks good. I’d maybe put even a little more dubbing in there.”

So, Anderson twists a bit more of the fur onto the gossamer thread, until the body of his nymph looks just right.

Later in the process, Anderson learns how to wrap fibers from a pheasant wing onto the shaft of his hook to resemble the wing casing of a nymph, which is the stage of a mayfly’s life when it is still under water, before it has emerged to the surface to dry its wings, fly away and mate.

Anderson makes the three wraps with his thread to anchor and finish off the wing case.

“Now, I’m just going to trim this off,” he says.

“Then you’ll have a pheasant-tail nymph,” Johnson says.

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