Y'all are absurdly kind. The bluegill, on the other hand, may well turn up their snoots and say, "Come back, boy, when you have something with black chenille and rubber legs." Or, maybe purple will be the new black.
Skunk hair. Dyed with hoof rot medicine . . .
You sure know how to sweet talk a feller, don't ye. (Good thing I didn't tell you the hen is a FORD—found on roadside, dead.)
I'd like to see what a real tier (such as any of the respondents on this thread) could do with the unruly skunk tail as body material. I suspect this material would shine on a smaller hook . . . smaller than the 10-iron I hauled out (yet can scarcely see in focus without a low-power telescope).
That's quite the inventive material combo.
There's a fella on the internet showing some somewhat twisted,
Twisted Bodies, Herls, Quills and Misc. Soft Hackles. Maybe he has been a bad influence. I'd like to think my purple is unruly along the lines of the
Twisted Three-Horsetail body, Bison thorax and Grouse. ("William's Nonfavorite" was considered for a name but rejected as overly familiar.)
I sat here several minutes studying the construction and materials of this fly.
Looking, no doubt, for a logic that never existed. Bet you'd like to have those minutes back.
Swellcat is showing good thread control in his tying.
This thread is also labeled "70 denier", but I'm thinking that it's mostly that the head is angled away from the camera so as to better show the body. (Had I used silk, there probably wouldn't have been room for anything else on the hook.

)
Thanks for taking tying seriously, yet still allowing it to be fun.
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