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EP Floating Crab Fly
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EP Floating Crab Fly

EP Floating Crab Fly

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From $4.53

Original: $12.95

-65%
EP Floating Crab Fly

$12.95

$4.53

The Story

The EP Floating Crab Fly is a specialized pattern that solves a difficult problem for saltwater anglers. Most crab flies are designed to sink fast and reach the bottom, but sometimes permit and other species feed right at the surface. This fly is a must-have for trips to destinations like Belize where fish often hunt for crabs hiding in floating Sargassum weed. It allows you to target fish that are looking up or cruising high in the water column. This pattern opens up new opportunities when traditional weighted flies fail to get a reaction.

What It Imitates

This pattern imitates a small crab that has been swept into the current or is clinging to floating vegetation. It mimics the natural silhouette of a crab trapped in the surface film. The rubber legs add lifelike movement that triggers strikes from curious fish.

How To Use It

Fish this fly with a stealthy approach. When you see a fish cruising near the surface or around floating weed mats, cast the fly gently to land softly near the target. Allow the fly to drift with the current if you are fishing a channel or bridge. On the flats, give it very small twitches to flare the legs, but do not strip it fast. The goal is to look like a crab that is struggling slightly or drifting helplessly.

When To Use It

Use this fly when you see permit, redfish, or tripletail feeding near the surface. It shines during the middle of the day when the sun is high, which helps cast a distinct shadow that fish can spot from below. It is also the perfect choice when fishing around thick floating grass where a sinking fly would instantly snag. This pattern is ideal for "high riding" fish that refuse to look down at the bottom.

Why We Like It

We recommend this fly because it fills a specific gap in most fly boxes. While most anglers carry heavy crabs, very few carry a floating option. It is incredibly durable due to the synthetic EP fibers and foam body. The ability to fish topwater for permit is a rare and exciting experience that this fly makes possible.

Comparisons

EP Floating Crab Fly vs EP Permit Crab

The main difference between these two is buoyancy. The EP Permit Crab is weighted with dumbbell eyes and is designed to sink quickly to the bottom where permit usually feed. The EP Floating Crab is built with foam to stay on the surface. You should choose the Permit Crab for tailing fish on the flats and the Floating Crab for fish swimming high in the water column.

EP Floating Crab Fly vs Alphlexo Crab

The Alphlexo Crab is a heavy, fast-sinking fly with a hard body mesh design. It is built to cut through strong currents and get deep instantly. The EP Floating Crab is the complete opposite, as it is designed to hover on top. Choose the Alphlexo for deep channels or fast tidal flows, and pick the EP Floating Crab for surface action or shallow water with heavy weeds.

EP Floating Crab Fly vs Merkin Crab

The Merkin is a traditional carpet-style crab fly that uses lead eyes to sink. It has a soft entry but is strictly a subsurface fly. The EP Floating Crab offers a similar profile but stays on top. If you need a standard crab for general flats fishing, the Merkin is a classic choice. However, if you see fish noses poking out of the water or feeding around floating debris, the EP Floating Crab is the better option.

Description

The EP Floating Crab Fly is a specialized pattern that solves a difficult problem for saltwater anglers. Most crab flies are designed to sink fast and reach the bottom, but sometimes permit and other species feed right at the surface. This fly is a must-have for trips to destinations like Belize where fish often hunt for crabs hiding in floating Sargassum weed. It allows you to target fish that are looking up or cruising high in the water column. This pattern opens up new opportunities when traditional weighted flies fail to get a reaction.

What It Imitates

This pattern imitates a small crab that has been swept into the current or is clinging to floating vegetation. It mimics the natural silhouette of a crab trapped in the surface film. The rubber legs add lifelike movement that triggers strikes from curious fish.

How To Use It

Fish this fly with a stealthy approach. When you see a fish cruising near the surface or around floating weed mats, cast the fly gently to land softly near the target. Allow the fly to drift with the current if you are fishing a channel or bridge. On the flats, give it very small twitches to flare the legs, but do not strip it fast. The goal is to look like a crab that is struggling slightly or drifting helplessly.

When To Use It

Use this fly when you see permit, redfish, or tripletail feeding near the surface. It shines during the middle of the day when the sun is high, which helps cast a distinct shadow that fish can spot from below. It is also the perfect choice when fishing around thick floating grass where a sinking fly would instantly snag. This pattern is ideal for "high riding" fish that refuse to look down at the bottom.

Why We Like It

We recommend this fly because it fills a specific gap in most fly boxes. While most anglers carry heavy crabs, very few carry a floating option. It is incredibly durable due to the synthetic EP fibers and foam body. The ability to fish topwater for permit is a rare and exciting experience that this fly makes possible.

Comparisons

EP Floating Crab Fly vs EP Permit Crab

The main difference between these two is buoyancy. The EP Permit Crab is weighted with dumbbell eyes and is designed to sink quickly to the bottom where permit usually feed. The EP Floating Crab is built with foam to stay on the surface. You should choose the Permit Crab for tailing fish on the flats and the Floating Crab for fish swimming high in the water column.

EP Floating Crab Fly vs Alphlexo Crab

The Alphlexo Crab is a heavy, fast-sinking fly with a hard body mesh design. It is built to cut through strong currents and get deep instantly. The EP Floating Crab is the complete opposite, as it is designed to hover on top. Choose the Alphlexo for deep channels or fast tidal flows, and pick the EP Floating Crab for surface action or shallow water with heavy weeds.

EP Floating Crab Fly vs Merkin Crab

The Merkin is a traditional carpet-style crab fly that uses lead eyes to sink. It has a soft entry but is strictly a subsurface fly. The EP Floating Crab offers a similar profile but stays on top. If you need a standard crab for general flats fishing, the Merkin is a classic choice. However, if you see fish noses poking out of the water or feeding around floating debris, the EP Floating Crab is the better option.