Gray-Gold Flash, Arctic Fox Tube Fly
This gold flash version of my gray minnow is more popular under overcast conditions. There are lakes where gold is the preferred color for spoons and other metal lures. For these waters this is your fly.
Additional Info
Tube Flies are not just a stand alone lure. I think of them as a part of a flexible system. You can “Stack” two or more flies to increase the length or to create a two-toned fly (chartreuse + orange + fire tiger). You can change the hook from the #2 Octopus style to a treble, tandem singles, larger or smaller. The hook can be moved farther to the rear of the fly by placing beads between the hook and the tube. One customer stacked 4 white tube flies with a #1/0 treble to imitate a mountain whitefish and landed a 20#+ mackinaw at Flaming Gorge, Utah. The best value is the 10 Tube Fly Selection, where you have a number of flies to work with.
These flies can be rigged and trolled in a number of ways. These flies can be fished “naked”, just the fly and manipulated with your rod. The Jay Fair method and ripping are a couple of ways to fish just a fly on a sinking line. Dodgers are another popular way to animate the flies. Dodgers limit the speed range for trolling without rolling the fly. The Wiggle Fin Action Disc #1 is an excellent way to animate the fly at any depth. With the #1 disc on the nose of the fly the materials will be lifted out by the turbulence produced by the disc. At 4 to 12 inches above the fly, the fly will have a narrower profile and a tighter vibration/wiggle. A Wiggle Fin Action Disc #2 makes the fly jump back and forth similar to a dodger. Some anglers have tied in swivels with a bead or the Slide Lock Bead to hold the disc up the line. A video with underwater shots of many of my flies rigged can be seen here: Fly Rigging Video.
Due to increasing inflation costs I have been struggling not to raise my fly prices. To maintain my fly prices, I will no longer be sending an Action Disc with each Arctic Fox Trolling Fly.