Hook: #4 Gaelic Supreme 8xl
Thread: white 70 denier under body, black 70 denier for head
Tag: flat silver tinsel
Body: blue floss
Rib: flat silver tinsel
Underwing: blue bucktail then white bucktail
Throat: white saddle hackle
Wing: paired black saddle hackles between paired blue dun saddle hackles (slightly shorter)
Cheeks: Guinea Fowl
Eye (optional): jungle cock
Head: black thread with blue floss accent
If you're patient and cool, who knows what you'll find here (though you can be fairly certain it will relate to fly fishing, far-fetched fish tales, and/or fly tying patterns all for my own personal amusement and future reflection).
Wednesday, December 9, 2015
Kind of Blue - Rangely Style Streamer
Labels:
fly pattern,
fly recipe,
fly tying,
Rangely,
streamer
Wednesday, April 15, 2015
Soft-hackle Dry Flies
John Shaner, of Hardy fame, gave me a solid dose of the soft hackle kool-aid and since I've been thoroughly enjoying tying up traditional spiders and north-country wet flies with soft hackles, I decided to see what those materials could add to some traditional dry fly techniques.
Above, is a fan-wing style Adams which grizzly soft-hackles instead of the standard dry hackles. The middle photo is a traditional red-quill but with two turns of Hungarian partridge in front of the traditional dun dry hackles.
The bottom photo is an attempt at a March Brown which a hackle fiber tail and a gold ribbed hare's ear body. I wrapped a few turns of CDC as a thorax hackle and then a few turns of dun hen hackle in front of that.
Labels:
Adams,
CDC,
dry fly,
experiment,
fly recipe,
fly tying,
March brown,
Red quill,
soft hackle
Sunday, March 29, 2015
Rusty Spinner
Hook: Dry Fly 12-16
Thread: Rusty Brown 70 Denier
Tail: Wood duck fibers
Body: Superfine Waterproof Dubbing - Rusty Brown
Wings: Kiptail
Tuesday, February 3, 2015
Snow-shoe Hare Comparadun
Hook: #14 Dry Fly Hook (TMC 100)
Thread: black 70 denier
Tail: show-shoe hare's foot
Body: Hare's Ear dubbin
Wing: show-shoe hare's foot
Jiggy Buggers
This is just your basic wooly bugger tied on a jig hook with a slotted tungsten bead head. I decided to try these out on jig hooks to see if they snagged less while bouncing on the bottom. They might also be fun for ice fishing.
Hook: C400BL Barbless Jig Hook #10 or 12
Bead: 1/8" or 7/64" Slotted Tungsten Bead (3.3mm or 2.8mm)
Tail: Black Marabou
Body: Black Chenille
Hackle: Gray hackle
Labels:
fly pattern,
fly recipe,
jig,
marabou,
streamer,
wooly bugger
Harry Darbee's Two-Feather Fly
Harry Darbee's Two-Feather Fly
Hook: #14 Emerger
Thread: Blue Dun 70 Denier
Body/Tail: Suitable Feather (eg. short and fat hackle feather, wood duck or mallard flank, grouse for smaller sizes)
Hackle: cock hackle to match
For some detailed tying instructions, check out Davie McPhail. He calls it a "Hatchmaster" but from what I know, Harry Darbee invented it in the 50s and called it the Two-Feather. It also was simply called the "Darbee."
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