
Killer Bug
The Killer Bug is a simple Czech-style trout nymph that excels when fish are feeding on scuds, freshwater shrimp, sowbugs, and other soft drifting subsurface food. It is one of the best cold-water trout flies for pressured rivers, tailwaters, and chalkstream-style presentations.
Imitates: Scuds, freshwater shrimp, sowbugs, and generic subsurface food
Quick Reference
- Best Sizes
- #12-16
- Best Season
- Year-round, especially winter through spring
- Best Conditions
- Tailwaters, chalkstreams, spring creeks, clear rivers, and slow inside seams
- Water Temp
- 38-56°F
- Recommended Tippet
- 5X-6X fluorocarbon
How to Rig It
Fish it as a point fly in a two-nymph rig or on a tight-line leader where you can keep direct contact with the drift.
How to Present It
Dead-drift it near bottom with a slow natural drift. Short controlled euro-nymphing drifts are ideal.
Why It Works
Its buggy translucent body and sparse profile look alive without overcomplicating the pattern. Trout often trust that understated look in clear water.
History
Frank Sawyer made the Killer Bug famous on English chalkstreams, where its rough pinkish body and copper underbody became legendary for fooling wary trout.
Pro Tip
Do not over-weight it if fish are feeding mid-column on shrimp. Sometimes the natural sink of the fly outfishes a heavy modern version.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does the Killer Bug imitate?+
Mostly scuds and freshwater shrimp, but trout also eat it as a generic soft-bodied nymph or sowbug.
When should I fish a Killer Bug?+
Any time trout are feeding subsurface in clear water, with winter and early spring being especially strong windows.
Not sure if Killer Bug is right today?
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