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).
Showing posts with label March brown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label March brown. Show all posts
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
Tuesday, June 10, 2014
CDC March Brown Emerger
Hook: #12-14 dry or emerger
Thread: rusty brown 70 denier
Tail: natural Hungarian partridge
Body: thread
Rib: round gold tinsel
Thorax hare's ear
Wing case/wing: CDC dyed wood duck (I left the trimmed butts exposed for a buggier cripple look)
Labels:
CDC,
dry fly,
emerger,
fly pattern,
fly tying,
hare's ear,
March brown,
partridge
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