Mighty Myakka Minnow
- This topic has 17 replies, 8 voices, and was last updated Jan 29, 2009 at 12:28 am by
dusty montgomery.
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Jan 18, 2009 at 4:06 pm #6495
stevegibson
MemberHere’s a fly that works great when fish are feeding on minnows. It was designed for bass and panfish, but has produced lots of fish. In fresh water, the MMM has taken largemouth bass, bluegill, speckled perch, shellcracker, stumpknocker, barramundi, oscar, Mayan cichlid, gar, brown trout and rainbow trout. In the salt, it has produced spotted seatrout, snook, redfish, jack crevalle, ladyfish, mangrove snapper, little tunny, Spanish mackerel and tarpon.
For most fresh water applications, I tie it on a No. 10 hook. But I tie it on hooks ranging in size from No. 2 to 3/0 when fishing salt water.
Oscar on MMM:

Mayan cichlid on MMM:
Jan 19, 2009 at 12:51 am #56898dusty montgomery
MemberWell done, but tell me about the Oscars if you can. I have had freshwater aquariums in the past, and I had Oscars and Tiger Oscars. I always thought they were aquarium fish, but I guess they are local for you? I think they are S. American Cichlids, so I guess I don’t understand how you would be catching them in your neck of the woods. Are they indigenous fish?
D.
Jan 19, 2009 at 1:51 am #56899Neal Osborn
MemberThanks Steve, that looks like a very effective warm water pattern. Nice pattern, thanks for sharing.
I hope you don’t mind, but the link below describes the recipe for others to follow the instructions. Are you Southern Steve on that board?
http://www.theflyfishingforum.com/forums/f40/mighty-myakka-minnow-3822.html
Do you use Epoxy to finish the fly?
Jan 19, 2009 at 5:16 pm #56900lee church
MemberI have an oscar at home and I’ve often though about flippin an adams in the tank.
Jan 20, 2009 at 11:21 pm #56901regan c. kenyon jr.
MemberThey’re invasives that the good people of Florida let go from their aquariums into the glades and canals to give their pets a better life, screw things up a bit more, and also give the local anglers another target species.
Jan 21, 2009 at 11:47 am #56902keith b
MemberI am pretty sure I caught one of those in Hawaii, in a small stream, or it was something related to it. I did not think it fought well at all.
Jan 21, 2009 at 10:11 pm #56903regan c. kenyon jr.
MemberThose peacocks probably screwed things up pretty good as well.
Jan 22, 2009 at 5:11 am #56904stevegibson
MemberThanks Steve, that looks like a very effective warm water pattern. Nice pattern, thanks for sharing.
I hope you don’t mind, but the link below describes the recipe for others to follow the instructions. Are you Southern Steve on that board?
http://www.theflyfishingforum.com/forums/f40/mighty-myakka-minnow-3822.html
Do you use Epoxy to finish the fly?
Yes, I am Southern Steve on that forum. And, yes, I use epoxy to finish the fly.
Jan 22, 2009 at 5:13 am #56905stevegibson
MemberWell done, but tell me about the Oscars if you can. I have had freshwater aquariums in the past, and I had Oscars and Tiger Oscars. I always thought they were aquarium fish, but I guess they are local for you? I think they are S. American Cichlids, so I guess I don’t understand how you would be catching them in your neck of the woods. Are they indigenous fish?
D.
Oscars trace their roots in Florida back to 1954 when an aquarium owner dumped his/her fish into the backyard pond or canal.
Florida fisheries biologists dislike them (and other exotics), but they’re here to stay.
Jan 22, 2009 at 5:14 am #56906stevegibson
MemberThey’re invasives that the good people of Florida let go from their aquariums into the glades and canals to give their pets a better life, screw things up a bit more, and also give the local anglers another target species. Kinda like the giant goldfish that scare the crap out of me from time to time here.
Steve- Do you get rio grandes too?
No Rio Grandes as far as I know.
Jan 22, 2009 at 9:57 pm #56907regan c. kenyon jr.
MemberThe Rios are pretty.
Jan 22, 2009 at 11:23 pm #56908stevegibson
MemberThose peacocks probably screwed things up pretty good as well. You might have caught a tilapia. I think they have a lot of them in HI.
It’s interesting, though, that peacock bass were stocked in South Florida waters by the state in 1984.
Jan 23, 2009 at 2:54 am #56909Gary Sundin
MemberYeah, FL resource managers put the peacocks there on purpose and consider them to be valuable.
Jan 23, 2009 at 3:51 pm #56910Grant Wright
MemberThe Rio Grande perch are fun to catch….they are beautiful fish.
Jan 24, 2009 at 7:57 pm #56911stevegibson
MemberYeah, FL resource managers put the peacocks there on purpose and consider them to be valuable. Most of the guys that target them are pretty hard core about C&R. They provide a great backyard/golf course/urban fishery for south Floridians. I’ve always wanted to make a south FL trip focusing on all exotic spp. Recent posts have really re-kindled that interest.
G
One of my favorite things to do is drive a couple of hours south to The Everglades and fly fish for the exotics. On one trip the Holiday Everglades Park last May, we got 59 largemouth, 47 peacock bass, a dozen large oscar, 20 Mayan cichilds, several bluegill, shellcracker and speckled perch.
I used a popper and dropper for a short while and actually caught two peacock bass at the same time!
It’s a very amazing fishery.
Jan 27, 2009 at 6:12 pm #56912dusty montgomery
MemberSteve,
What are you using to build up the body before putting on the mylar?
D.Jan 28, 2009 at 7:17 pm #56913stevegibson
MemberSteve,
What are you using to build up the body before putting on the mylar?
D.I use Bodi-Braid.
Here’s a link to the recipe:
http://floridaflyfishing.ning.com/forum/topics/tying-the-myakka-minnow
Jan 29, 2009 at 12:28 am #56914dusty montgomery
MemberThanks Steve. I tried some out last night, only I used chenille to build the body. This was not the best way to go about it as the chenille poked out through the mylar tinsel I was using. Your way seems much more efective!
Dusty
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