Found this interesting. Stewarts 1st winged fly called for a wood cock wing with a Hackle of landrail and a body of yellow silk. I subbed American Woodcock over covert feather rolled for the wing and the reddish undercovert feather for the called for landrail hackle along with the yellow silk for th...
Tom [/quote] According to W.C. Stewart in his book, The Practical Angler ( worth owning in my opinion ) Stewart says; The Red Spider should be made of the small feather taken from the outside of the wing of the landrail, dressed with yellow silk, and is deserving of a very high rank, particularly in...
Just my interpretation. Nobody really knows. I have seen Starling,landrail,dotterel listed by others. A pattern that works and no one knows how to correctly tie it!
Another way of saying as Darbee did. The wing is set back at the expense of a shortened body leaving a clean neck at the eye of the hook so that the fly floats better. Turle knot,clinch not,or whatever you use has nothing to do with how the fly floats. The stiffness of the tippet material would,espe...
Sorry had to leave the meeting early last night as I have just had my hip replaced a while back and the pain was getting to me. Also sorry about missing the discussion on Catskill style flies. Most of what is shown in today's social media are not quite what I would call true Catskill style but are m...