Re: Henwing Pupa
Posted: Mon Nov 24, 2014 7:18 pm
Ron - Agreed. The henwings style is very similar to the Glanrhos style. I think of the henwings style as a low profile wing, formed from the tip of the feather. The wing is tyed in flat across the back of the fly, and it is tied in a bit differently.
I first learned about the henwings style several years ago.
EDIT THIS INFO LATER:
Try a quick Google search on "George Schlotter henwing fly" to try to find his article. If you scroll down in the article, you can see a pattern called a "Henwing Emerger" (also known as March Brown Henwing Emerger/Pages 85 & 234/Hatch Guide for New England Streams by Thomas Ames Jr.).
If you read the article, there is a very interesting comment about how Mr. Ames fishes the henwing style fly.
In the article he writes:
"When the late afternoon hatch begins, I tie on one of George Schlotter's Henwing Emergers. By smearing floatant on the wing only, I can hang it in the surface film just like the clumsy natural, laboring to shed its shuck. Bigger fish often ignore the more exposed, high floating duns in favor of slightly submerged emergers."
I need to remember this when I get to fish these flies. I like the idea of fishing the fly as an emerger.
After much searching thru my old fly tying magazines, I found the article that described tying and fishing the hen-wing emerger. For anyone is interested, the article is in:
Flyfishing & Tying Journal (Spring 2006 Edition/Pages 62 thru 64)
the article was called "Curious George", written by Thomas Ames Jr.
A really wonderful article, which has stuck in my head even after all these years...
INTERESTING LINKS:
http://donaldnicolson.webplus.net/page140.html
http://www.sparsegreymatter.com/viewtop ... =10&t=1421
http://www.classicflytying.com/index.ph ... opic=36988
I first learned about the henwings style several years ago.
EDIT THIS INFO LATER:
Try a quick Google search on "George Schlotter henwing fly" to try to find his article. If you scroll down in the article, you can see a pattern called a "Henwing Emerger" (also known as March Brown Henwing Emerger/Pages 85 & 234/Hatch Guide for New England Streams by Thomas Ames Jr.).
If you read the article, there is a very interesting comment about how Mr. Ames fishes the henwing style fly.
In the article he writes:
"When the late afternoon hatch begins, I tie on one of George Schlotter's Henwing Emergers. By smearing floatant on the wing only, I can hang it in the surface film just like the clumsy natural, laboring to shed its shuck. Bigger fish often ignore the more exposed, high floating duns in favor of slightly submerged emergers."
I need to remember this when I get to fish these flies. I like the idea of fishing the fly as an emerger.
After much searching thru my old fly tying magazines, I found the article that described tying and fishing the hen-wing emerger. For anyone is interested, the article is in:
Flyfishing & Tying Journal (Spring 2006 Edition/Pages 62 thru 64)
the article was called "Curious George", written by Thomas Ames Jr.
A really wonderful article, which has stuck in my head even after all these years...
INTERESTING LINKS:
http://donaldnicolson.webplus.net/page140.html
http://www.sparsegreymatter.com/viewtop ... =10&t=1421
http://www.classicflytying.com/index.ph ... opic=36988