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video - Iron Blue Dun
Posted: Wed Jan 09, 2013 1:46 am
by Hans Weilenmann
Iron Blue Dun
Hook: Umpqua U203 #14
Thread: Danville Flymaster 6/0, scarlet
Hackle: Partridge, grey
Body hackle: Hen, grey
Tail: Hen hackle barbs, grey
Body: Muskrat
Butt: Tying thread
Video here - please view in HD, if able:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DQH_CroTxCA
Cheers,
Hans W
Re: video - Iron Blue Dun
Posted: Wed Jan 09, 2013 2:48 am
by Donald Nicolson
I like that a lot Hans. I think this fly 'Iron Blue' has been long overdue for modernisation of its materials and layout. A very, very good recipe and pattern.
Re: video - Iron Blue Dun
Posted: Thu Jan 10, 2013 2:11 pm
by Stendalen
Agree with Donald. Lovely pattern.
A couple of questions if I may:
Is it only the female dun that have this scarlet colour?
I would guess you use this pattern for other may flies. What would be the colour in a baetis variant Hans?
/Martin
Re: video - Iron Blue Dun
Posted: Thu Jan 10, 2013 3:18 pm
by Hans Weilenmann
Stendalen wrote:Is it only the female dun that have this scarlet colour?
I would guess you use this pattern for other may flies. What would be the colour in a baetis variant Hans?
Martin,
The IBD really is a bit of an oddball pattern. I have never managed to find even a glimmer of red in any of the naturals I have seen, male and female. The traditional colors for our imitations are the grey and red I used. I consider it more an attractor than a true imitation. That said - it is a color combination which has endured, and it only endures because it works
The pattern/video demonstrates a generic design, as well as a specific IBD pattern.
As you may note the design lends itself to many color combinations - with either grey or brown partridge in front, and a variety of colors in body hackle, body dubbing and thread.
Yellow thread, brown partridge for hackle, hare's ear body,a dark ginger or cree body hackle and you will have a sterling March Brown.
In tan thread, brown partridge, cree hackle over warm brown dubbing a Baetis Rhodani, our Large Dark Olive.
Cheers,
Hans W
Re: video - Iron Blue Dun
Posted: Thu Jan 10, 2013 3:29 pm
by Stendalen
Yes that is an oddball Hans. Thanks for the info.
I find fishing soft hackles in the film very likeable, as I guess all of you. It is very much like dry fly fishing but something that my dry fly purists friends never seem to understand
Thanks
again Hans
M
Re: video - Iron Blue Dun
Posted: Thu Jan 10, 2013 4:58 pm
by William Anderson
Hans, this is a wonderful tie, as usual. The Iron Blue Duns most often described in the states (at least of the recipes I'm most familiar, are of a dark claret or burgandy silk and are show more mole or muskrat dubbing over the body (ala Leisenring). I understand the naming predates fly-fishing in the states, and the adaptations vary widely, but I haven't seen such a brightly composed version. And I understand your version is a more stylized tie, but I'm curious about the origins of the nearly cardinal red body. It's a beautiful fly, as I said.
w
Re: video - Iron Blue Dun
Posted: Fri Jan 11, 2013 8:58 am
by Otter
Lovely tie as usual Hans. Have you fished this pattern sucessfully during IB hatch ?
Re: video - Iron Blue Dun
Posted: Fri Jan 11, 2013 9:18 am
by Hans Weilenmann
Otter wrote:Lovely tie as usual Hans. Have you fished this pattern sucessfully during IB hatch ?
Not yet
this specific version, Otter, with the grey partridge in front. To date I have been using the more conventional grey hackle in front of mole and red butt - with success, yes.
This new&improved(?) version will get its proper testing as soon as the season opens again
Cheers,
Hans W