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Hareline Triple Barred Heavy Duty Silicone Legs
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Hareline Triple Barred Heavy Duty Silicone Legs

Hareline Triple Barred Heavy Duty Silicone Legs

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From $1.75

Original: $4.99

-65%
Hareline Triple Barred Heavy Duty Silicone Legs—

$4.99

$1.75

The Story

From Hareline, Triple Barred Heavy Duty Silicone Legs are pre-tabbed silicone leg sheets featuring bold, three-tone barring that reads like natural segmentation on the water. The heavy-duty gauge is thicker and tougher than standard silicone legs, giving you a leg material that stands up to abrasive riverbeds, toothy fish, and repeated strip sets while still delivering lively, high-frequency movement. The crisp bars create contrast that shows up in dirty water and low light, and the color palette ranges from earthy bug tones to bright bass and saltwater options.

Because they are silicone rather than old-school rubber, these legs resist heat, UV, and ozone, so they won’t melt together in a fly box or crack mid-season. The tabs keep the legs aligned and easy to handle at the vise, the material takes marker well for extra mottling, and you can stretch a strand for extra wiggle or leave it full to maintain profile. Use them on foam terrestrials, stonefly nymphs, bass bugs, streamers, and crustacean patterns anywhere you want movement and mottling.


How to Use It

Keep each strand on the tab until it’s tied in, then separate what you need—this preserves alignment and speeds up production. For paired legs on dries or nymphs, tie in at the midpoint so one strand becomes two equal legs, using two to three firm wraps and a tiny drop of flexible cement to lock them without cutting the silicone. Pre-stretch slightly to reduce memory, and snip leg tips at a shallow angle for a tapered, insect-like finish. Add a single overhand knot near the tip if you want a jointed look or extra “kick.” On foam flies, pierce the foam with a needle and pull the legs through for clean placement; on nymphs, build a small dubbing bump to prop and splay the legs at the thorax.

Prevent fouling on streamers by tying legs just aft of the midpoint of the shank and using a short thread dam to flare them away from the hook bend. As a general guide: set dry-fly legs to about 1–1.5x the body length, nymph legs around 0.75–1x, and saltwater legs 2–3x depending on profile. The triple barring helps you measure consistent lengths at the vise—match bar-to-bar segments side to side for symmetry. Choose natural barred tones for pressured fish or clear water, and brighter barred options when you need visibility or a trigger in off-color water.


Example Flies

Pat's Rubber Legs (Girdle Bug): A workhorse stonefly nymph in sizes 4–10 with a tungsten bead and variegated chenille body. Use one tabbed strand to create three pairs of legs, tying the midpoint for each side and trimming to match bar segments for exact lengths. Coffee/black or olive/black triple-barred legs read as mottled, living appendages in pocket water, and the heavy-duty silicone holds up when the fly scrapes through rocks and nets multiple fish in fast current.

Chubby Chernobyl: A buoyant foam attractor in sizes 6–14 that benefits from two to three legs per side. Thread the legs through the foam with a needle to anchor them, then add a tiny knot 3–5 mm from each tip to accentuate the kick on subtle twitches. Barred tan/black or purple/black legs create a segmented look that contrasts against the foam and wing, and the heavier gauge resists tangling in the wing material during casts or mends.

Merkin Crab: A proven crab for bonefish and permit in sizes 2–6 with lead or brass eyes. Tie four to eight barred legs splayed from the body, using a short thread dam to set the angle and a small overhand knot at the tips for extra animation. Tan/black or olive/black triple-barred legs mimic mottled crustacean legs over turtle grass and sand, and the heavy-duty silicone survives repeated strip sets and coral brushes without tearing.


Why We Like It

The triple barring instantly adds convincing segmentation and contrast, which helps fish find the fly without looking cartoonish. The heavy-duty gauge strikes a sweet balance: stiff enough to resist fouling and take abuse, yet supple enough to twitch and pulse with minimal current or short strips. Silicone’s stability in heat, sun, and salt means your legs don’t turn gummy in a summer box or crack after a season on the dash.

Production tying is faster thanks to consistent tab spacing and cleanly cut strands. These legs take marker, glue, and UV resin well, don’t develop a powdery bloom, and have low static cling—handy when stacking legs around foam or dubbing. In short, they’re a durable, predictable upgrade to standard leg materials for both freshwater and saltwater patterns.


Comparable Materials

Wapsi Sili Legs are softer and generally a bit thinner, which can give more micro-movement on small dries and delicate nymphs, but they’re easier to tear and can tangle more readily; the Hareline Triple Barred Heavy Duty option is better when you need durability, splay control, and abrasion resistance on big bugs, bass, or saltwater flies. Hareline Loco Legs add embedded flash to a similar silicone base—great for stained water or bass—but the flash can be too bold in clear, pressured conditions; Triple Barred Heavy Duty offers a more natural, matte presence with strong visual banding. Traditional round rubber legs remain very lively but degrade in heat and can stick together over time, making silicone the more reliable long-term choice.



Description

From Hareline, Triple Barred Heavy Duty Silicone Legs are pre-tabbed silicone leg sheets featuring bold, three-tone barring that reads like natural segmentation on the water. The heavy-duty gauge is thicker and tougher than standard silicone legs, giving you a leg material that stands up to abrasive riverbeds, toothy fish, and repeated strip sets while still delivering lively, high-frequency movement. The crisp bars create contrast that shows up in dirty water and low light, and the color palette ranges from earthy bug tones to bright bass and saltwater options.

Because they are silicone rather than old-school rubber, these legs resist heat, UV, and ozone, so they won’t melt together in a fly box or crack mid-season. The tabs keep the legs aligned and easy to handle at the vise, the material takes marker well for extra mottling, and you can stretch a strand for extra wiggle or leave it full to maintain profile. Use them on foam terrestrials, stonefly nymphs, bass bugs, streamers, and crustacean patterns anywhere you want movement and mottling.


How to Use It

Keep each strand on the tab until it’s tied in, then separate what you need—this preserves alignment and speeds up production. For paired legs on dries or nymphs, tie in at the midpoint so one strand becomes two equal legs, using two to three firm wraps and a tiny drop of flexible cement to lock them without cutting the silicone. Pre-stretch slightly to reduce memory, and snip leg tips at a shallow angle for a tapered, insect-like finish. Add a single overhand knot near the tip if you want a jointed look or extra “kick.” On foam flies, pierce the foam with a needle and pull the legs through for clean placement; on nymphs, build a small dubbing bump to prop and splay the legs at the thorax.

Prevent fouling on streamers by tying legs just aft of the midpoint of the shank and using a short thread dam to flare them away from the hook bend. As a general guide: set dry-fly legs to about 1–1.5x the body length, nymph legs around 0.75–1x, and saltwater legs 2–3x depending on profile. The triple barring helps you measure consistent lengths at the vise—match bar-to-bar segments side to side for symmetry. Choose natural barred tones for pressured fish or clear water, and brighter barred options when you need visibility or a trigger in off-color water.


Example Flies

Pat's Rubber Legs (Girdle Bug): A workhorse stonefly nymph in sizes 4–10 with a tungsten bead and variegated chenille body. Use one tabbed strand to create three pairs of legs, tying the midpoint for each side and trimming to match bar segments for exact lengths. Coffee/black or olive/black triple-barred legs read as mottled, living appendages in pocket water, and the heavy-duty silicone holds up when the fly scrapes through rocks and nets multiple fish in fast current.

Chubby Chernobyl: A buoyant foam attractor in sizes 6–14 that benefits from two to three legs per side. Thread the legs through the foam with a needle to anchor them, then add a tiny knot 3–5 mm from each tip to accentuate the kick on subtle twitches. Barred tan/black or purple/black legs create a segmented look that contrasts against the foam and wing, and the heavier gauge resists tangling in the wing material during casts or mends.

Merkin Crab: A proven crab for bonefish and permit in sizes 2–6 with lead or brass eyes. Tie four to eight barred legs splayed from the body, using a short thread dam to set the angle and a small overhand knot at the tips for extra animation. Tan/black or olive/black triple-barred legs mimic mottled crustacean legs over turtle grass and sand, and the heavy-duty silicone survives repeated strip sets and coral brushes without tearing.


Why We Like It

The triple barring instantly adds convincing segmentation and contrast, which helps fish find the fly without looking cartoonish. The heavy-duty gauge strikes a sweet balance: stiff enough to resist fouling and take abuse, yet supple enough to twitch and pulse with minimal current or short strips. Silicone’s stability in heat, sun, and salt means your legs don’t turn gummy in a summer box or crack after a season on the dash.

Production tying is faster thanks to consistent tab spacing and cleanly cut strands. These legs take marker, glue, and UV resin well, don’t develop a powdery bloom, and have low static cling—handy when stacking legs around foam or dubbing. In short, they’re a durable, predictable upgrade to standard leg materials for both freshwater and saltwater patterns.


Comparable Materials

Wapsi Sili Legs are softer and generally a bit thinner, which can give more micro-movement on small dries and delicate nymphs, but they’re easier to tear and can tangle more readily; the Hareline Triple Barred Heavy Duty option is better when you need durability, splay control, and abrasion resistance on big bugs, bass, or saltwater flies. Hareline Loco Legs add embedded flash to a similar silicone base—great for stained water or bass—but the flash can be too bold in clear, pressured conditions; Triple Barred Heavy Duty offers a more natural, matte presence with strong visual banding. Traditional round rubber legs remain very lively but degrade in heat and can stick together over time, making silicone the more reliable long-term choice.