Re: Hidy Style March Brown
Posted: Thu Jan 30, 2014 3:02 pm
Thanks for the encouraging comments, everyone.
Ray, I'll try to answer your questions as best I can. Unlike the commonly recommended practice of tying tail fibers in halfway down the hook shank and then covering the butts with thread wraps back to the rear of the body, I tie mine in right at the back. This allows me to crimp the tail fibers to the shank immediately adjacent to the final body thread wrap, and this by itself tends to tilt them up. Also, on Hidy's flies, he normally took a couple wraps of either the tying thread and/or the ribbing material directly under the tail fibers, further propping them up. And finally, I have discovered that it is important to maintain the relative positions of the individual barbs as you strip them from their source feather. I try to maneuver my grip on the selected barbs so that not only are they in the same order that they came off the rachis, but that their naturally curved shape is facing up when I position them over the hook.
The orange-brown wool that I blended with the hare's poll is from a small coil of yarn that I got in one of those material-sharing frenzies in Roscoe. I'm pretty sure it came from either you or William, as I can picture you guys wrapping little bundles of yarn around your fingers and passing them around the table. Anyhow, I cut the pieces in roughly 1/4" - 5/16" lengths and separate the strands before throwing them into a little coffee grinder and pulsing it until they are completely frizzed. I found that this material did not mix well with the hare's poll in the coffee grinder, possibly because of the large difference in densities. So, I put both materials into small jelly jar with a good sealing top, added a drop of hair conditioner and lukewarm water, closed it up and shook it for several minutes. Then I poured the result into a tea strainer, rinsed it under running water, shook off the excess, and plopped the whole mess out onto a folded newspaper to dry overnight. Just like the result when you process hare's ear clippings in this same manner, the next day I had a nice wad of perfectly blended dubbing.
Ray, I'll try to answer your questions as best I can. Unlike the commonly recommended practice of tying tail fibers in halfway down the hook shank and then covering the butts with thread wraps back to the rear of the body, I tie mine in right at the back. This allows me to crimp the tail fibers to the shank immediately adjacent to the final body thread wrap, and this by itself tends to tilt them up. Also, on Hidy's flies, he normally took a couple wraps of either the tying thread and/or the ribbing material directly under the tail fibers, further propping them up. And finally, I have discovered that it is important to maintain the relative positions of the individual barbs as you strip them from their source feather. I try to maneuver my grip on the selected barbs so that not only are they in the same order that they came off the rachis, but that their naturally curved shape is facing up when I position them over the hook.
The orange-brown wool that I blended with the hare's poll is from a small coil of yarn that I got in one of those material-sharing frenzies in Roscoe. I'm pretty sure it came from either you or William, as I can picture you guys wrapping little bundles of yarn around your fingers and passing them around the table. Anyhow, I cut the pieces in roughly 1/4" - 5/16" lengths and separate the strands before throwing them into a little coffee grinder and pulsing it until they are completely frizzed. I found that this material did not mix well with the hare's poll in the coffee grinder, possibly because of the large difference in densities. So, I put both materials into small jelly jar with a good sealing top, added a drop of hair conditioner and lukewarm water, closed it up and shook it for several minutes. Then I poured the result into a tea strainer, rinsed it under running water, shook off the excess, and plopped the whole mess out onto a folded newspaper to dry overnight. Just like the result when you process hare's ear clippings in this same manner, the next day I had a nice wad of perfectly blended dubbing.