Fly Pattern

Half & Half

Lefty Kreh & Bob Clouser

The best of both classics. Marry a Clouser's weighted, jigging head to a Deceiver's long, breathing body and you get a bigger baitfish fly that swims with life, a proven big-striper pattern.

When two of the most important saltwater flies ever tied get combined, you get the Half and Half. It grafts the weighted, jigging head of the Clouser Minnow onto the long, flowing profile of the Lefty's Deceiver, the result is a bigger baitfish fly that both sinks with an enticing jig and breathes with life on the pause.

What it imitates

The Half and Half shines when fish are on larger baitfish, herring, small bunker, mackerel, where a plain Clouser is too small and a plain Deceiver rides too high. The long saddle-hackle body gives it a substantial silhouette, while the dumbbell eyes get it down and impart the wounded-baitfish jig that triggers strikes.

How to fish it

Fish it like a Clouser with more presence: a strip-pause retrieve that lets the head dip and the body pulse, working current seams, rips and structure for striped bass. Vary the strip until you find whether they want it jigged aggressively or swung slow.

Tip Let the pause do the work. The moment you stop stripping, the weighted head dives and the long hackle flares, imitating a dying baitfish, most eats come right then, so stay in contact and be ready on the drop.

Sizes and colors

Tie it in the same baitfish palettes as the parent flies: chartreuse over white, olive over white, all white, and gray or blue over white to match herring and bunker. Scale the hook to the bait, larger for bunker and herring, smaller when the fish want a more modest profile.

From the page to the water

Learn it here, land it out there

Reading is a great start. The fastest way to get good is a day on the water with someone who does it every day.

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Note: fishing regulations (size limits, bag limits, seasons, permits) change often. Always confirm current rules with the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries (saltwater), MassWildlife (freshwater), or NOAA Fisheries (offshore/HMS) before you keep a fish.