A great summer dry fly
The Bomber dry fly was originally designed as a commotion fly for fishing in the headwaters of the Miramichi River in New Brunswick. Allegedly, it was Mr. Elmer Smith who tied the first Bomber. Initially intending the fly to be fished sub-surface, he later recognized its potential as a salmon dry fly and created various versions of it. Today, the Bomber is the number one salmon dry fly for most anglers, tied in multiple colors and sizes.
Legend has it that Mr. Smith got his inspiration for the Bomber fly after seeing a salmon rise to the cigar butt he had just thrown into the river.

Bomber Single Hook Fly – Olive #8
- Body Length: 18 mm (approximately 0.71 inches)
- Total Length: 40 mm (approximately 1.57 inches)
Unlike most of our other Bombers, this fly is tied on a hook. It features a high-quality, chemically sharpened Partridge CS42/R ring-eyed Bomber Dry Fly Hook.
The Bombers tied on Partridge Bomber Dry Fly Hook
Dry flies on hook
Dry flies on hook
Dry flies on hook
Dry flies on hook
Dry flies on hook
Dry flies on hook
Dry flies on hook
Dry flies on hook
Dry flies on hook
All of our Bombers
Bombers and other salmon & steelhead dry flies
Bombers and other salmon & steelhead dry flies
Bombers and other salmon & steelhead dry flies
Bombers and other salmon & steelhead dry flies
Bombers and other salmon & steelhead dry flies
Bombers and other salmon & steelhead dry flies
Bombers and other salmon & steelhead dry flies
Bombers and other salmon & steelhead dry flies
Bombers and other salmon & steelhead dry flies
Bombers and other salmon & steelhead dry flies
Bombers and other salmon & steelhead dry flies
Bombers and other salmon & steelhead dry flies
Bombers and other salmon & steelhead dry flies
Bombers and other salmon & steelhead dry flies
Bombers and other salmon & steelhead dry flies
Bombers and other salmon & steelhead dry flies
More about Bomber dry flies...

Body from deer hair attracts salmon and steelhead
All our Tube Bombers are tied with US whitetail deer hair. The material is buoyant but not hollow as often mentioned in books and magazines – in fact, the hair contains a spongy material that keeps the deer well-insulated during winter – More importantly, these hairs are great fish attractors. There is no real explanation for this other than salmon and steelhead don’t mind snacking on animals with pelts.
Read the Fishmadman Newsletter on the subjects: Deer hair and how you prepare your deer hair flies.

A unique dry fly
The big Fishmadman.com page on the immaculate Bomber dry fly
Visit the page on Fishmadman.
Learn how to tie a Tube Bomber
If you feel inclined to try to tie the Tube Bomber – we have the page to guide you – and also a kit with all the material needed to succeed.
Visit the page on Fishmadman.Short YouTube video on how we tie on all our dead-drift dry flies
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