This is what i call swap fly #14 or the golden furnace soft hackle. I tied it using collins hen saddle hackle furnace. The neck is furnace and saddle is a great molting to it. The hen sets from collins is great deal.
The little ball of dubbin in the thorax is uv high test.
Fly fishing the north east can seem very difficult. Not sure what fly to tie for those picky trout? Well here you can find the flies proven to catch those picky trout!
Monday, November 28, 2011
Sunday, November 27, 2011
Going small on the ultra egg and the swap fly.
size 20 ultra eggs. Tied on dai-riki 125 |
I have been twisting up some tiny ultra to fish for on some small streams in my area. I figure the small trout will like them. Who knows, they may see it and say "awww eggs again!" haha. Not likely. Not because trout dont think like we humans do, but because an egg is just to easy and nutritious of a meal for a trout to pass up.
When you go small on the ultra just use less yarn and of coarse follow the cardinal rules for tying small flies. Small thread and the least amount of wraps possible. Follow those two rules and you can tie extremely small, that is if you can see it! In next couple of months i will show a quite a few midge patterns that i tie small. Some as small as a 28. I tell ya, there's nothing like landing a 18"+ wild brown on a size 28 hook. Landing them on size 20 is cake compared to the 28!
Im in a swap on Pa fly Fish , It's a swap for soft hackles. There is my fly for the swap. I call it......Swap Fly #14. As this is my 14 swap i ever did and the fly i tied doesnt have a name. Does it work........You bet your britches it works. Its tied on a..... well i will do post about it. I hope to get out in the mid morning as i indicated before. Will do a full report as usual.
Friday, November 25, 2011
Wickham's Fancy and a tutorial
The Wickham was originally intended as a dry fly for the clear chalk streams of southern England. This is an old pattern. Dating back to the late 1800's. Its believed that Dr. T.C. Wickham created the fly. However there are records which disagree with this belief. Records from 1884 state that George Currell was the first professional to have tied it. I have little doubt that the henryville special was based from this pattern. We all know how deadly the henryville is, But i will attest that the wickhams is equally effective. Its also great fun to tie. I could tie tons of these.
The wet fly variation is a great diving egg laying caddis or sedge pattern. The hackle will trap air giving the fly a life like shine. When i tie wickhamss, I tie them with all different shades of brown. The one on the left i did with a furnace ginger hen hackles. The hackle is collins "greenwell" hackle. As the name suggests its the right color for greenwell's glory.
The wet fly variation is a great diving egg laying caddis or sedge pattern. The hackle will trap air giving the fly a life like shine. When i tie wickhamss, I tie them with all different shades of brown. The one on the left i did with a furnace ginger hen hackles. The hackle is collins "greenwell" hackle. As the name suggests its the right color for greenwell's glory.
Lets twist one up. This one will be the dry version.
Materials
Hook- Daiichi 1170
Thread- Mtfc black 8/0
Tail- brown/ ginger hackle fibers
Body- Gold tinsel/ Holographic
Body hackle- Brown/ginger saddle hackle palmered
Rib- Gold wire/or French tinsel
Wing- Mallard wing slips
Front hackle- brown/ginger. Neck hackle
Hook in vise, start your thread and lay down a nice even layer of thread, back to just before the barb. |
Take 8-12(a small bunch) fibers of hackle for the tail. Tie them on with one turn. |
Tie in the tinsel with one turn. This turn should be in front of your last. |
Tie in the wire or french tinsel and bring your thread to the eye and back about two hooks length. Be sure to make nice touching turns. You want even body. |
Wrap the tinsel, make each turn touch the previous one. Tie it off and trim the excess. |
Tie in the saddle hackle by the butt. |
Palmer the hackle back to the rear of the fly. |
Catch the hackle with the wire. |
Bring the rib up through, tie it off and trim the excess. Break off your hackle . Roll your fingers over the hackle, stroking it back. |
Get your self two slips of mallard wing. One from the left another from the right. |
With the tips lined up, and the "good side" sides of the slips facing out, measure the wing length. It should be just a wee shorter than the tail. |
Switch hands, now pinch the slips, be sure they are as close the shank as possible. |
Pinch and loop. Draw the thread down slowly. Be sure to keep your pinch on the slips. Pinch and loop twice then take a couple of tight turns. Check your wing. You can always go back at this point. |
Take a couple more tight tuns and then trim the butts. Nice and close. |
Tidey up. |
Tie in the hackle by the butt. |
Wrap the hackle. Stroking the fibers back with each turn. |
Trim the hackle butt and form a neat head. |
Whip finish. |
Coat the head with your favorite varnish. You now have a great fish catcher. The Wickham's Fancy. |
Thursday, November 24, 2011
Tying Utah's Fat Partridge.
This wetfly/flymph is what i call the Fat Partridge. Everything besides the tag, rib, hook and thread are partridge. I do the tag/rib three different ways with this pattern. One is with just the body ribbed, two is with just the tagged ribbed and three is the tag and body ribbed. I also tie it dark and light. The dark is tied with a Now for the tutorial. I will tie the ribbed tag and body dark Fat Partridge.
Hook in vise, start your thread at the eye and wrap back to just before the barb |
Tie in the silver holographic tinsel at the bend and wrap back down the bend. |
Tie in the mtf midge body thread on the way up the bend. Stop the thread at the start of the bend |
counter wrap the tinsel up to your thread |
Rib the Midge body thread up. Tie off. |
Tie in the partridge tail. It should as long as the entire hook shank. Trim the butts the length of the body. |
Tie down the partridge butts |
Tie in a new piece of midge body thread, wrap back to the tail tie in point. |
Select a partridge marabou quill from the rump of the skin. |
Tie in the feather by the tip. Dont worry if your body is uneven. The feather will hide all of it. Bring the thread to the front. |
Twist the feather and wrap it up the shank. Dont worry about the shaggy nature. Tie it off and snip the excess. |
Trim off the long strands, but dont go nuts and trim it down. |
Bring the rib up, Wrap in between the feather wraps. Bring it all the way up, and tie it off. |
Tie down the wing tightly. Snip the butts and clean up |
Select a partridge feather. Take one from the back shoulder area. This area has dark colored feathers. Tie it in by tip. |
Wrap the feather. Have the hackle fibers sweep back. |
Form a neat head, whip and snip the thread. |
Varnish the head and its all done. Tight wraps everyone. |
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