
Tummelweed
Hook: Kamasan B175 #16
Thread: Benecchi 12/0, black
Wing: Partridge tail barbs
Hackle: Whiting Coq de Leon hen, medium pardo
Body: Mole, dyed chestnut
Cheers,
Hans W
Moderators: William Anderson, letumgo
What wing?Mataura mayfly wrote:Hans,
Mate, are you running short of dubbing?![]()
Seriously, nice minimal tie, like it even though you may get shot down for posting a winged fly.
Lance,gingerdun wrote:Great style, and materials, as usual. Definitely pushing the envelope here, Hans, in more ways than one.
Had to Google Tummel to understand the name. Clever. When we lived in Southern California in the 1950s, tumbleweeds would appear in the streets on windy days—big, delicate things, twice the size of a basketball, literally tumbling and rolling down the street. This plant reference got me thinking that your fly looks a bit like a seed, a cross between maple and milkweed. Vegetarian trout?
Me too. I continue to enjoy the education that you and others are providing on this most excellent forum.The very radical, very minimalistic Tummel style of flies is well established, but not very well understood outside the region.
I like 'm
Come on Tom, don't miss out the very present, almost prominent hackle...Izaak wrote:No abdomen. No head. (no wing) Only the thorax!