Basic pike slider
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There are lots of variations on sliders.  Pike are not always "on" surface flies, but it seems when they are the pattern does not matter a lot. Simple seems to work okay. 
Hook: Mustad 34007 4/0 or 5/0
Thread: UNI-Stretch Chinese Red

Basic directions
  • Anchor thread and lash in preferred body materials.
  • This fly has yellow "fish hair" and pearl gold mylar. Christmas tinsel for the main body.
  • A few strand of rubber legs are added to hang down in the water.
  • Anchor the body materials well onto the hook shank so it is quite thick. This will make a good base for the foam head. 
  • Wrap forward and whip finish the thread and cut off the thread.
  • Add glue to the shank and force on the foam head. 
  • This will be a slider because the 'pointy' end is forward and the fly will slide over the surface. 
  • If the foam head was reversed, this would be a popper.  See below.
  • Trim the foam head to make it "pointy" so the thread can be wrapped up on the head to anchor the head.
  • Make a few turns on the foam head and build up the thread.
  • Whip finish TWICE and glue.
  • I prefer nail hardeners for cements instead of regular tying cement.
  • This foam head was a bit too fat, so it was trimmed flat on the bottom. 
  • This gives a bit more gap.
  • I like eyes on streamers and believe they help trigger fussy pike. 
  • I don't know if they help trigger fussy fish looking at a slider.
  • Click here for a discussion about eyes.
  • This "eye" was drawn on with a black "Sharpie" marker.  
This is the final fly.
  • The top fly is a popper.
  • The head of the bottom fly  was carved from a piece of dense chartreuse foam. 
  • Both have baby doll eyes cemented to the underside.

There are ways to build your own slider foam heads.  Most of the time, I just use a home made copper tube corer and core plugs out of 1-inch thick gardening kneeling pads. They can be hand whittle to shape. The three heads on the right were "lathed" on a drill press using a sanding block. 
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