Woodcock and quill.
Again, with a slight variation
Robert Smith tells me that peacock quill isn't part of the North Country tradition as far as he knows.
I am wondering, when and where did it become popular in tying trout flies?
Moderators: William Anderson, letumgo
Am sure you have a very good grasp of tying history Bill.tie2fish wrote:As I have noted elsewhere, these are simply excellent ties, Tim. Re: stripped peacock herl being used as quill, my first exposure to it was on Catskill dries, but then I am historically challenged.
Ray, I've been working with a few similar patterns this season, to get here.letumgo wrote:Ooo! I love those! Nice and buggy fishing flies. (Sincere compliment)
Can you give us the recipe? I'd like to know what hook model and size you used, along with the dubbing material. Did you wrap the quill over a dubbed underbody?
You've whet my appetite there.Jerry G wrote:I would have to believe these softies would fish very well. I have been using the stripped peacock body for a few years now with mallard or starling quill wing and dun hen hackle for a sparse collar and tail to suggest some of the smaller mayfly. This I tie with the wing split and slated back at perhaps a forty five degree angle. A touch of floatant allows the fly to be fished dry. A down stream dead drift in broken water eventually sinks the fly at which time I give a few twitches and continue a down stream drift. Now I need to get busy and incorporate some wingless ties into the mix as well.
Regards, Jerry