Forked Tail
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Re: Forked Tail
Marvelous! I could use a whole row of these in my fly box. Lethal looking pattern.
Ray (letumgo)----<°))))))><
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"The world is perfect. Appreciate the details." - Dean
http://www.flytyingforum.com/index.php? ... er=letumgo
"The world is perfect. Appreciate the details." - Dean
Re: Forked Tail
Well done Scott. Perfect. Nice how the underbody not only gives weight, but bulks up the body in the thorax area.
Re: Forked Tail
Scott,
Like Lance, I am admiring the nice, even taper of the body from back to front accented with the silver wire! It just looks good and buggy! I wasn't aware of the history of this pattern and it's assn. with the Prince Nymph! Interesting!
Viva L'biots,
Doug
Like Lance, I am admiring the nice, even taper of the body from back to front accented with the silver wire! It just looks good and buggy! I wasn't aware of the history of this pattern and it's assn. with the Prince Nymph! Interesting!
Viva L'biots,
Doug
Fish when you can, not when you should! Anything short of this is just a disaster.
Re: Forked Tail
Scott,
Your Forked-Tail Nymph tied with ostrich is indeed handsome. A very beautiful tie! On most Forked-Tail Nymphs tied today, the white biot wings curve toward the body, but you've tied them as the Don and Dick Olsen original -- curving away from the body. Nice.
I've never read a description of how Doug Prince came to tie his namesake nymph, but I've often wondered whether he knew of the earlier Olsen patterns. I don't think those Olsen recipes were ever published, however, prior to Prince tying similar, if not identical, flies. Forked-Tail Nymphs were local favorites around Bemidji, MN, where the Olsens lived. Whether Doug Prince, who lived in Monterey, CA, knew about the Olsen patterns seems lost in history.
One thing is clear, however. Doug Prince is not responsible for the name "Prince Nymph". Prince called his nymphs "Forked-Tail Nymphs", just like the Olsen flies. Skip Morris in his book The Art of Tying the Nymph says that Prince tied versions both with ostrich and peacock herl. (Black and Brown Forked-Tail Nymphs, respectively.) The name "Prince Nymph" was given by Buz Buszek (of Buz Buszek Award fame of the Federation of Fly Fishers). Buszek owned a very successful mail-order fly business in Visalia, CA from the 1940s - 1960s. He and Doug Prince were friends, and Prince tied flies commercially for Buszek for a brief period. Prince supplied Forked-Tail Nymphs to the business.
Doug Prince described Buszek's naming of the fly on the occasion of Prince's acceptance of the 1981 Buz Buszek Award. He says that Buszek was in a rush to put together a catalog one day and wanted to include the peacock-bodied nymph that Prince had tied and fished with great success. But Buszek couldn't remember the name "Forked-Tailed Nymph". Instead, he hastily put the fly into his published catalog as the "Prince Nymph". The name stuck, because Buszek's business was quite significant nationally.
Your Forked-Tail Nymph tied with ostrich is indeed handsome. A very beautiful tie! On most Forked-Tail Nymphs tied today, the white biot wings curve toward the body, but you've tied them as the Don and Dick Olsen original -- curving away from the body. Nice.
I've never read a description of how Doug Prince came to tie his namesake nymph, but I've often wondered whether he knew of the earlier Olsen patterns. I don't think those Olsen recipes were ever published, however, prior to Prince tying similar, if not identical, flies. Forked-Tail Nymphs were local favorites around Bemidji, MN, where the Olsens lived. Whether Doug Prince, who lived in Monterey, CA, knew about the Olsen patterns seems lost in history.
One thing is clear, however. Doug Prince is not responsible for the name "Prince Nymph". Prince called his nymphs "Forked-Tail Nymphs", just like the Olsen flies. Skip Morris in his book The Art of Tying the Nymph says that Prince tied versions both with ostrich and peacock herl. (Black and Brown Forked-Tail Nymphs, respectively.) The name "Prince Nymph" was given by Buz Buszek (of Buz Buszek Award fame of the Federation of Fly Fishers). Buszek owned a very successful mail-order fly business in Visalia, CA from the 1940s - 1960s. He and Doug Prince were friends, and Prince tied flies commercially for Buszek for a brief period. Prince supplied Forked-Tail Nymphs to the business.
Doug Prince described Buszek's naming of the fly on the occasion of Prince's acceptance of the 1981 Buz Buszek Award. He says that Buszek was in a rush to put together a catalog one day and wanted to include the peacock-bodied nymph that Prince had tied and fished with great success. But Buszek couldn't remember the name "Forked-Tailed Nymph". Instead, he hastily put the fly into his published catalog as the "Prince Nymph". The name stuck, because Buszek's business was quite significant nationally.
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Re: Forked Tail
excellent history lesson on the fork tail and an excellently tied fly as well
- fly_fischa
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Re: Forked Tail
Beautifully tied fly Scott and a great history lesson. I know my prince inspired nymph isn’t historically correct but it borrows from both patterns. Thought it would be a good idea to bump your gorgeous forked tail nymph back to the top. Karsten
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Re: Forked Tail
Well done, Karsten. Since I'm not conditioned to nymphs, I had not seen this. I love history and well tied flies. This gave me both.
dd
dd
Re: Forked Tail
This is a cool thread and that's a really fine fly.
Some of the same morons who throw their trash around in National parks also vote. That alone would explain the state of American politics. ~ John Gierach, "Still Life with Brook Trout"