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I was just about to mention....squirmy material may be toeing the line with OSP per regs.From Oregon Regs:
Just spit ballin' here but IMHO rubber legs are OK. Squirmies? Hmmm? Probably OK too because you don't buy them already molded looking like a worm imitation. You buy a long piece of stretchy stuff and fashion them into a "fly". Kind of a weak arguement.
- Bait: Any item used to attract fish that is not an artificial fly, lure or attractor. Molded soft plastic or rubber imitations of worms, eggs, insects, bait fish, crayfish, etc. are considered baits. Scent is not considered bait.
- Artificial fly: A fly is a hook, dressed with conventional natural or synthetic fly tying materials. Tied in conjunction with other materials, wire (lead or other) used to weight the fly and dumbbell eyes or beads (metal, glass or plastic) may be part of the fly. A fly does not include sinkers, molded weights, spinners, spoons or similar attractors.
- Lure: An artificial device, complete with hooks, intended to attract and entice fish; excludes artificial flies or attractors. Corkies, spin-n-glos, birdy drifters, leadhead jigs, hard plastic beads, etc. are considered lures. Molded soft plastic or rubber imitations of worms, eggs, insects, bait fish, crayfish, etc. are considered baits.
BTW, I've had my license checked 4 times just this year in Central Oregon: Diamond, Metolius, Chickahominy and Billy C
strong work on getting to the bottom of this! Fish away with squirmies!OK, got a reasonable response from our local ODFW office:
"Great question! Squirmy’s are a bit unconventional as they do fall into a bit of a grey area in terms of artificial soft plastic vs fly.
If they are being fished with a fly rod and reel and have a thread, wire, and/or bead element we would consider them a fly. Same thing for a pats rubber legs and other flies with rubber or soft plastic element. A soft plastic body on a hook shank would not be considered a fly."
Indeed, good work, @Wade Rivers .strong work on getting to the bottom of this! Fish away with squirmies!
Did you get a name? I want to be able to reference this in case I get a ticket from OSP
yep, much ado about little..except for dry fly fishers of courseOK, got a reasonable response from our local ODFW office:
"Great question! Squirmy’s are a bit unconventional as they do fall into a bit of a grey area in terms of artificial soft plastic vs fly.
If they are being fished with a fly rod and reel and have a thread, wire, and/or bead element we would consider them a fly. Same thing for a pats rubber legs and other flies with rubber or soft plastic element. A soft plastic body on a hook shank would not be considered a fly."

The interpretations are a little to grey imo...From Oregon Regs:
Just spit ballin' here but IMHO rubber legs are OK. Squirmies? Hmmm? Probably OK too because you don't buy them already molded looking like a worm imitation. You buy a long piece of stretchy stuff and fashion them into a "fly". Kind of a weak arguement.
- Bait: Any item used to attract fish that is not an artificial fly, lure or attractor. Molded soft plastic or rubber imitations of worms, eggs, insects, bait fish, crayfish, etc. are considered baits. Scent is not considered bait.
- Artificial fly: A fly is a hook, dressed with conventional natural or synthetic fly tying materials. Tied in conjunction with other materials, wire (lead or other) used to weight the fly and dumbbell eyes or beads (metal, glass or plastic) may be part of the fly. A fly does not include sinkers, molded weights, spinners, spoons or similar attractors.
- Lure: An artificial device, complete with hooks, intended to attract and entice fish; excludes artificial flies or attractors. Corkies, spin-n-glos, birdy drifters, leadhead jigs, hard plastic beads, etc. are considered lures. Molded soft plastic or rubber imitations of worms, eggs, insects, bait fish, crayfish, etc. are considered baits.
BTW, I've had my license checked 4 times just this year in Central Oregon: Diamond, Metolius, Chickahominy and Billy C
Jerry George, the district fish bio in Bend.strong work on getting to the bottom of this! Fish away with squirmies!
Did you get a name? I want to be able to reference this in case I get a ticket from OSP
Are you tying them on jig hooks to? Or regular for Stillwater?having abandoned all pretenses, I tie mine on MFC Trinas Squirm material. Deadly.
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