Bonefish fly patterns are a collection of artificial flies routinely used by flyanglers targeting various species of Bonefish. Bonefish frequent tidal sand and mudflats in tropical and sub-tropical latitudes to feed on benthicworms, fry, crustaceans, and mollusks.[1] Bonefish have small mouths and most Bonefish flies are tied on size 4 to 8 saltwater fly hooks.
Early records show bonefish being targeted with flies as early as 1926 and by the 1940s fly fishing for bonefish with crude shrimp and baitfish patterns was not uncommon.[2]
As described in Salt Water Flies (1972), Kenneth E. Bay[3]
Horror
Sands Bonefish fly
Solomon Bonefish
Pink Shrimp
As described in Fly Fishing in Saltwater (1974), Lefty Kreh[4]
Hybrid patterns are patterns often referred to as general attractor patterns or patterns specifically designed to imitate more than one type of prey, i.e. both shrimp and crabs.
As described in Professionals' Favorite Flies-Volume 2-Streamers, Poppers, Crustaceans and Saltwater Patterns (1994), Lefty Kreh [7]
Mini-Puff
Mother of Epoxy
Bonefish Special
Bonefish Bunny
Bend Back
As Described in Inshore Flies (2000), Jim Schollmeyer and Ted Leeson[6]
^Brooks, Joe (1968). Saltwater Game Fishing. New York: Harper & Row Publishers. p. 288.
^Bay, Kenneth E.; Kessler, Herman (1972). Salt Water Flies-Popular Patterns and How to Tie Them. New York: J.B. Lippincott Company. ISBN0397009399.
^ Kreh, Lefty (1974). Fly Fishing in Saltwater. New York: Crown Publishers Inc. p. 72.
^ ab Klausmeyer, David (2015). 101 Favorite Saltwater Flies-History, Tying Tips and Fishing Strategies. New York: Skyhorse Publishing. pp. 125–207. ISBN9781632205384.
^ abcd Schollmeyer, Jim; Leeson, Ted (2000). Inshore Flies-Best Contemporary Patterns from the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts. Portland, OR: Frank Amato Publications. pp. 51–76. ISBN157188193X.
^ abcKreh, Lefty (1994). Professionals' Favorite Flies-Volume 2-Streamers, Poppers, Crustaceans and Saltwater Patterns. Birmingham, Alabama: Odysseus Editions. pp. 135–170.