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fshng2

March 2019 Flies From the Vise

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Who's this Evan Williams, is it a kind of hooch, or a disease? Flies look nice.

Encountered that guy and his cousin Jim Beam years ago. They are always eager to help you tie flies. :)

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G59 you usually do pretty well with the bows, is this one of the patterns you use for them?

No fshng2 this is a new pattern for me, I will let you know how it works. What are good producers for bows on the freestone river I fish are black spiders and pats rubber legs (14 to 10}.

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Who's this Evan Williams, is it a kind of hooch, or a disease? Flies look nice.

Encountered that guy and his cousin Jim Beam years ago. They are always eager to help you tie flies. smile.png

 

 

U- huh as long as they don't help too much at the reloading bench. smile.png

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G59 you usually do pretty well with the bows, is this one of the patterns you use for them?

 

No fshng2 this is a new pattern for me, I will let you know how it works. What are good producers for bows on the freestone river I fish are black spiders and pats rubber legs (14 to 10}.
Never heard of pats rubber legs.

Looked it up, it's got great reviews.

Reminds me a little like Everett's Bluegill Fly.

Thanks for sharing, I'll have to tie some up.

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G59 you usually do pretty well with the bows, is this one of the patterns you use for them?

No fshng2 this is a new pattern for me, I will let you know how it works. What are good producers for bows on the freestone river I fish are black spiders and pats rubber legs (14 to 10}.
Never heard of pats rubber legs.

Looked it up, it's got great reviews.

Reminds me a little like Everett's Bluegill Fly.

Thanks for sharing, I'll have to tie some up.

 

Your welcome, my pleasure.

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9EtTjaC.jpg



Number one: Light nymph



Tail - 3 strands from wood duck or mandarin side feathers


Body - Natural seal's fur ribbed with narrow oval gold tinsel.


Thorax - First build up some padding material such as cotton or wool yarn. If the nymph is weighted, lead electric fuse wire is used as a foundation. This is wrapped over a base of lacquered tying silk (thread) while still wet, and gone over again with tying silk (thread) after it is wound on. This extra procedure is to keep the wire base from twisting on the hook. In the case of of a weighted nymph, the fly can be reversed in the vise, and the wing cases put on what would ordinarily be the belly or the bottom of the nymph, as with a weighted fly, the hook will almost invariably turn point up in the water.


Wing Case - The wing cases in this particular nymph are suggested after the same dubbing is wound over the thorax, by two tiny eyes of the jungle cock feather.These are tied in at the front and top of the thorax so that they project at a slight angle, one to each side,


Hackle - European partridge, the more grayish feather.


Hook sizes - 10, 12, 14



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Number two: Medium color nymph


Tail - 3 short strands from the long tail feather of the cock pheasant (ring neck)


Body - Hare's ear, tied rough and ribbed with marrow oval gold tinsel. After ribbing, the dubbing is picked out between the ribs with a dubbing needle to suggest the gills of the nymph and to add a softer outline


Thorax - Same dubbing over padding or fuse wire. Before winding on this dubbing, the wing case feather is tied in at the back of the thorax, upside down and pointing to the tail of the fly


Wing Case - Bright blue feather from the wing of an English kingfisher, lacquered when in place. This feather, although exactly what I needed to suggest the sparkle of color or light on the wing case, is apt to come apart after some use. I have tried to find a proper substitute and so far the best is a bit of synthetic silk floss, of nearly the same color, heavily lacquered after tying in. It is permanent but not as bright and sparkling as the feather. My good friend, Harry Darbee, the fly tier, recently suggested that the stripped quill from a large feather such as goose or swan could be dyes and used for this purpose. It should be much more nearly permanent than the rather delicate kingfisher feather, but as yet I have not had the opportunity of trying it out.


Hackle - European partridge, either the gray or brown speckled hackle feather.


Hook sizes - 10, 12, 14, 16



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Number three: Dark nymph


Tail - A few strands of dark cochy-bondhu or dary furnace hackle barbules.


Body - Muskrat or mole fur mixed with red-brown dyed seal (same as both wet and dry fly bodies in other groups), ribbed with narrow oval gold tinsel, These nymph bodies should be rather loosely spun and tied rough, and the dubbing picked out between the ribs.


Thorax - Sam as the body


Wing Case - Same as number two (Bright blue feather from the wing of an English kingfisher, lacquered when in place. This feather, although exactly what I needed to suggest the sparkle of color or light on the wing case, is apt to come apart after some use. I have tried to find a proper substitute and so far the best is a bit of synthetic silk floss, of nearly the same color, heavily lacquered after tying in. It is permanent but not as bright and sparkling as the feather. My good friend, Harry Darbee, the fly tier, recently suggested that the stripped quill from a large feather such as goose or swan could be dyes and used for this purpose. It should be much more nearly permanent than the rather delicate kingfisher feather, but as yet I have not had the opportunity of trying it out.)


Hackle - Dark furnace or cochy-bondhu hackle. iIn all these nymphs the hackle is clipped off top and bottom and jusy left at the sides.


Hook sizes - 10, 12, 14, 16



Reference - The Fly and the Fish - John Atherton


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These are on size 10 B10S hooks.

 

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This is a size 8 Daiichi 1730

 

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Excellent work Jeff!

 

Kimo

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Great stuff Cream as always but if I used premade legs/bodies around here I would be scolded by the "purists".... I saw somewhere where somebody used a woven cord or like that for a buggy looking body. Later DL

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