Sorry, yes they are winged, but fit our historical perspective on this site. I came across this pattern earlier this spring and tied some up. I am with reservation posting them on here. The only reason I am doing so is that this pattern has done very well for me this spring and early summer, if and where I can find fishable water, and I would like to share it. I don't really know what the pattern historically was tied for, but I fish it basically as a general searching pattern like a hare's ear. I have no picture of this pattern so it is my interpretation. It is a fairly old pattern as far as I know but I have little specifics. I posted this on another site so some of you may have already seen them, the only difference is now I can attest to the patterns catching ability. I fish these just under the surface and upstream. I have also tied up some wingless versions and fished them deeper, but

I must admit the winged upstream has out performed the wingless enough to make a difference. The one on the left has more of a down wing with all the hackle in front. The one on the right has an upwing with one wrap of hackle for and one behind the wing. Seems to be no difference to the fish, however, I prefer the upwing version. Hope you enjoy.
Devil Crook
Hook: #14-#16
Thread:Pearsall's silk grey 9A well waxed with a dark cobbler's wax
Hackle: medium partridge
Body: light hare
Wing: partridge slip
