[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"learn-glossary-perdigon":3},{"id":4,"title":5,"aliases":6,"body":9,"category":26,"definitionShort":27,"description":15,"disciplineTags":28,"extension":29,"meta":30,"navigation":31,"path":32,"relatedCards":33,"relatedTerms":36,"seo":41,"sourceRef":42,"stem":43,"term":5,"__hash__":44},"learn_glossary\u002Flearn\u002Fglossary\u002Fperdigon.md","Perdigon",[7,8],"perdigon nymph","spanish nymph",{"type":10,"value":11,"toc":22},"minimark",[12,16,19],[13,14,15],"p",{},"The Perdigon (\"little pearl\" in Spanish) came out of the Spanish competition scene in the 2000s. The design priority is sink rate: a big tungsten bead, a body made of thread or quill, and a hard UV-resin or nail-polish coating that smooths the surface so the fly cuts water like a stone.",[13,17,18],{},"Most Perdigons are sized 14-18 with 3.0-4.0mm beads. The hot-spot color (pink, chartreuse, orange) behind the bead does the attraction work; the body color (olive, black, brown) suggests the bug.",[13,20,21],{},"Fish it on the point of a Euro rig when you need to be on the bottom in a deep run. Tie a softer-bodied nymph as the dropper above — the Perdigon gets you down, the dropper does the eating.",{"title":23,"searchDepth":24,"depth":24,"links":25},"",2,[],"fly","A slim, heavily weighted Spanish nymph with a tungsten bead, lacquered body, and minimal materials. Built to sink fast in heavy water — the Euro nympher's depth-finder fly.",[26],"md",{},true,"\u002Flearn\u002Fglossary\u002Fperdigon",[34,35],"euro-nymphing-101","dry-dropper-for-pocket-water",[37,38,39,40],"nymph","dead-drift","tippet","frenchie",{"description":15},null,"learn\u002Fglossary\u002Fperdigon","uXSeSgBa1F7ba_aWowq9dgBtc1f2EjfPP_m15mNBjos"]