Pheasant Bugger Jig

Materials

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Hook Daiichi 4660 size 4-6
Thread Uni Thread 6/0 Camel
Head 5/32 Slotted Tungsten
Body Pheasant Rump Marabou
Collar Pheasant Rump Feathers
Tail Pheasant Tail Fibers with Pheasant Rump Marabou
Minnow
Minnow

Pheasant Bugger Jig

Gunnar Brammer’s Pheasant Bugger Jig is a streamer tied entirely out of pheasant. The pattern is super buggy and can be used in both stillwaters and running streams. It can be stripped, jerked, jigged, dead-drifted or swung.

Gunnar Brammer

Gunnar Brammer

Gunnar Brammer says, “This is probably my most productive pattern, period.  This is the gateway drug to streamer fishing because you can’t fish it wrong.” The small size of the pattern allows the pattern to be a possible dragonfly nymph, burrowing mayfly nymph, sculpin, or even, a crayfish. The natural mottled coloration provides a multitude of possibilities and can be fished for both warm water species and trout.

The jig hook provides a lot of retrieval methods. You can jig the pattern along the bottom as a crawdad or strip the pattern for a baitfish. The pattern can also be swung or dead drifted as a nymph.

Another somewhat similar pattern is the Sparrow, tied by Jack Gartside, in the early 1970’s. Jack also used the Pheasant Rump Marabou for the tail and the Pheasant Rump feather for the hackle. Each rump feather has an aftershaft plume and Jack utilized that feather as a collar on the pattern. The primary difference between the Sparrow and the Pheasant Bugger is that the body of the Sparrow utilized a rabbit and squirrel dubbing blend. This was one of Jack’s most popular patterns but I can imagine that he would find a lot of pleasure in seeing what Gunnar has created as well.