[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"learn-glossary-rs2":3},{"id":4,"title":5,"aliases":6,"body":10,"category":27,"definitionShort":28,"description":16,"disciplineTags":29,"extension":30,"meta":31,"navigation":32,"path":33,"relatedCards":34,"relatedTerms":37,"seo":42,"sourceRef":43,"stem":44,"term":45,"__hash__":46},"learn_glossary\u002Flearn\u002Fglossary\u002Frs2.md","Rs2",[7,8,9],"rs-2","rims semblance","rim's semblance",{"type":11,"value":12,"toc":23},"minimark",[13,17,20],[14,15,16],"p",{},"Rim Chung designed the RS2 (\"Rim's Semblance #2\") in the 1970s for the technical trout of Denver's South Platte. Nothing about the pattern is dramatic — a thread body, a few fibers of synthetic dubbing, a wisp of CDC or Z-Lon for the wing case — but on tailwater fish sipping in the film, it consistently outfishes more elaborate patterns.",[14,18,19],{},"Tied in sizes 18-24. Olive and gray are the workhorses; baetis-blue for BWO hatches.",[14,21,22],{},"Fish it as a dropper 12-18 inches below a small dry, or as the back fly on a two-emerger team during a midge hatch. The trick is no floatant on the body — only on the wing case — so the fly hangs in the surface tension exactly like the real emerging bug.",{"title":24,"searchDepth":25,"depth":25,"links":26},"",2,[],"fly","Rim Chung's lightweight emerger pattern — a slim wisp of synthetic fibers suggesting a mayfly transitioning out of its nymphal shuck. Tied in olive, gray, or BWO and fished just under the film.",[27],"md",{},true,"\u002Flearn\u002Fglossary\u002Frs2",[35,36],"reading-the-surface-film","reading-rises",[38,39,40,41],"emerger","surface-film","cdc-emerger","midge",{"description":16},null,"learn\u002Fglossary\u002Frs2","RS2","2eddbdmxG987p3Z0TR7SdFl6Z1iahmd6qLYg1U0jzO4"]