Saturday, January 9, 2021

A '" soft hackled" fanatic and a Jack Gartside influence....

Hen hackle a under used group of feathers in the tying of soft hackle flies. Many of the books written talk of using game bird and exotic feathers in there construction of soft hackle flies and spiders. While I adore game bird feathers I want to say there is a great deal of other options available to the fly tyer. Many of these options are a lot less in cost some as much as 60%....there are a vast array of colors and natural feathers. Hen hackle wraps easily on the hook and moves with lifelike features in the water.

Above is a Whiting Brahma Hen Cape, with Chickabou. These can be purchased for about 20.00. A Partridge cape retails for near 50.00.

 

 

Here is a feather taken from that hen cape. Notice how well marked it is. It is very similar to Partridge and can substitute easily. I also like the color which is dyed golden brown.
 

These soft hackles were tied with the feathers from the cape above.
 

This is a chickabou feather that also came from the cape above. It is that section that looks like a tail at the back of the cape. It has marabou likeness and it can be used various ways including "small" streamers.
 

Here is a "small" streamer tied with the use of chickabou feathers. Three feathers were used along with a black hen feather as a collar. The black gives the fly a contrast. Krystal Flash can also be added. The hook is a Firehole 718 #12...this fly will move in the water like a live baitfish.

Jack Gartside created the soft hackle streamer which this fly is based on. Jack used turkey marabou and tied larger streamers. Anyone who has ever fished on of Jack Gartside's patterns knows they get results.
These "small" streamers  work well using the "Tiny Ten" tenkara rod.

 

12 comments:

  1. I was under the impression that Brahma hen capes had larger feathers but maybe not. I'll have to take a look.

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    1. billp
      Thanks
      Bill the feathers in smaller sizes can be found as you pick through the cape. I actually bought the cape for tying Irish mayflies and trout spey flies. Buying capes give you a variety.

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  2. Alan,
    It can become an obsession to obtain all the correct materials to match a recipe 100%. Unless you are a professional tyer one can go broke trying to do so for every pattern. I think it is more to satisfy the tyer then the fish.
    Any fish that demands 100% accuracy is way too smart for me and I will unashamedly admit defeat and go on my way looking for dumber fish.
    JJ

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    1. Beaverdam
      Thanks
      Joe going broke is a real possibility. I am frugal and will search long and hard for a bargain, which there are many out there. It's true I don't think fish can tell the difference and some of the donkey's I tie have proven that.

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  3. Nice ties Alan. I especially like the bottom one.

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    Replies
    1. Mark Kautz
      Thanks
      Mark that little streamer will get attention.

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  4. You've done it, you actually made purple on a hook look good. Those flies are gorgeous! I've always saved as much of the grouse chickabou as I can from the birds that we take; Gartside inspired small streamers work very well up here.

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    1. mike
      Thanks
      Mike may you be bending a bit on the color purple? If you have usable feathers why not save them. I have a bunch of odd partridge feathers that I might try to dye. Have never done that before.

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  5. Good little streamer pattern, with that chickabou feather, it reminds me of a "dancer" and even more if she moves a lot in the water ... even better ....

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    1. Armando Milosevic
      Thanks
      Armando marabou moves very seductively in the water. Most fish will respond to it. A lot of great streamer patterns use marabou, now we have the chickabou streamers.

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  6. Alan
    Impressed with the Hackles and the streamer----just wondering, which I think is somewhat away from the look of a traditional hackle; I'm talking about mulitcolors of thread when creating a hackle patten. Thanks for sharing

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    Replies
    1. Bill Trussell
      Thanks
      Bill thread bodies, especially silk thread possess a quality in the water that synthetic threads don't. Some when wet take on a different color. for instance some orange silk actually take on a rich brown color. They also show nicely through the movement of the soft hackles in the water. There simple construction is clear but there is complex action in the water.

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