Brookie Prospector

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tie2fish
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Brookie Prospector

Post by tie2fish » Sun Oct 21, 2012 9:59 am

If any of you are wondering what has prompted the rash of unconventional patterns I've been posting lately, there is a pile of leftover hackle feathers on my tying tying that have been accumulating for several years. These are feathers that were left over after I finished doing whatever I was using them for at the time, either surplus for the quantity needed or not the right length for the job. Anyhow, I decided the other day that they really should be put to use somehow, so I've been combining them with other bits and pieces scatttered around the general area. Today's result is totally non-realistic, but strikes me as something a wild brookie might investigate.

Hook: Daiichi 1640, Size #12
Thread: Sheer 14/0, black
Hackle: French partridge upper covert (decent waterhen sub, BTW)
Tail: Barbs from goose shoulder feather dyed orange
Abdomen: Barred turkey biot dyed gold
Thorax: LaFontaine TouchDub, black

Photo lost
Last edited by tie2fish on Wed Oct 11, 2017 11:20 am, edited 1 time in total.
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"
DUBBN

Re: Brookie Prospector

Post by DUBBN » Sun Oct 21, 2012 10:00 am

I wasn't wondering. I was enjoying! :)
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William Anderson
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Re: Brookie Prospector

Post by William Anderson » Sun Oct 21, 2012 1:16 pm

Fantastic combination. I would fish that anywhere. The trail is a nice touch. I hope there is still a pile of materials remaining. I love the experimentals.
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Mataura mayfly
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Re: Brookie Prospector

Post by Mataura mayfly » Sun Oct 21, 2012 2:11 pm

:lol: I do the same thing with left-over's...... not sure if it is to do with upbringing or my Scottish ancestry, but I hate throwing stuff out. I too have a large bag of mixed hackle. Oddball sizes and colours, uneven dye jobs, farmyard collected....... just a real bag of odd-sod's...... but it get reached into on a regular basis. Usually leads to me tying stuff I won't have cause to fish, but it is fun. Tied up some Goat's Toe's last night from the contents of that bag.

I imagine rainbow would like that pattern as much as brook trout.
"Listen to the sound of the river and you will get a trout".... Irish proverb.
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chase creek
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Re: Brookie Prospector

Post by chase creek » Sun Oct 21, 2012 2:34 pm

Hey, Bill
If you have enough scraps left, I'll take a dozen #14's. ;)
I think that'll ring the bell for Brookies up North.
Nice job of putting scraps to work.
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beauty of the biotic community. It is wrong when it tends otherwise"
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letumgo
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Re: Brookie Prospector

Post by letumgo » Sun Oct 21, 2012 3:17 pm

Bill - Lovely variation of a proven pattern. I too, find it fun seeing what can be created by the materials that one finds on their tying table.
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Old Hat
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Re: Brookie Prospector

Post by Old Hat » Tue Oct 30, 2012 1:33 pm

I missed this one Bill. I really like the materials in the pattern. It has a nice profile and contrasting texture with a hotspot. Thumbs up!
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Ron Eagle Elk
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Re: Brookie Prospector

Post by Ron Eagle Elk » Tue Oct 30, 2012 3:29 pm

I missed this one as well. Nice wee fly. I think it would do well on our resident cutthroat as well.
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Roadkill
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Re: Brookie Prospector

Post by Roadkill » Tue Oct 30, 2012 3:45 pm

tie2fish
Nice fly!

To clean up you just need to tie a few Jack Dennis Junkyard Caddis... ;) Everything that needs to be cleaned up off the tying table (hair, stems, dubbing, hackle leftovers...) gets put in a loop, spun, wound on the hook, trimmed and add a hackle...

Image
One from a 2008 cleaning to find my tabletop. :D
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