Henwing Emerger (George Schlotter pattern)
Posted: Sun Jan 29, 2023 1:52 pm
George Schlotter's Henwing Emerger
Hook: Standard dry fly (in example shown below I've used Mustad R50/size 12)
Thread: Rust/orange
Tail: 3 pheasant tail barbs
Body: Blended Australian opossum
Legs/Wing: Speckled hen feather - wrapped twice as a collar, then folded back to form the wing
I first read about this pattern back in spring of 2006. There was a wonderful article called "Curious George" in the Spring 2006 edition of "Flyfishing & Tying Journal", written by Thomas Ames Jr.
For me, it was a case of love at first sight. I fell in love with the henwing style as soon as I saw the photo showing a March Brown and Hendrickson version of this emerger pattern.
I lost track of this article, but it has stuck in my memory all this time. Yesterday morning I sat on my tying room floor, combing thru old magazines until I finally found this old article so I could reread it. Once finished, I had to head to the vice to tye some of these flies.
PHOTO FROM ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Caption Read: The Hendrickson version (front/bottom) first shown by Rick Hamel, and the March Brown configuration (top/rear) that George Schlotter latter tied for Mr. Ames
TYING INSTRUCTIONS IN MAGAZINE ARTICLE:
Step-by-Step Tying Sequence:
Awesome Possum Dubbing:
Speckled Hen Hackle
Prepared Hackle
Top down view (hackle tyed in by the stem and prepared for wrapping forward)
Two forward wraps (forming legs of the fly), then tying thread advanced forward reinforcing steam and preparing to tye down the wing (hackle tip).
Draw hackle fibers (legs) and wing (hackle tip) back over the body. Wrap thread back, forming head of fly and securing materials in place.
Finished Flies:
NOTE ABOUT FISHING THIS PATTERN:
George advised to apply floatant to the wing only, to keep it just above the surface, with the rest of the fly hanging beneath, like a natural emerger. Mr. Ame's first tried it during a March Brown hatch on Vermont's Ottaquechee, "and the fish eat it like a dog eats biscuits" I (Ames) tried the Hendrickson version during an emergence the following spring on the Housatonic, when the fish refused my Catskill classic, and caught those fussy browns seemingly at will".
Certainly sounded like a pattern worth trying.
ADDITIONAL REFERENCE:
Hook: Standard dry fly (in example shown below I've used Mustad R50/size 12)
Thread: Rust/orange
Tail: 3 pheasant tail barbs
Body: Blended Australian opossum
Legs/Wing: Speckled hen feather - wrapped twice as a collar, then folded back to form the wing
I first read about this pattern back in spring of 2006. There was a wonderful article called "Curious George" in the Spring 2006 edition of "Flyfishing & Tying Journal", written by Thomas Ames Jr.
For me, it was a case of love at first sight. I fell in love with the henwing style as soon as I saw the photo showing a March Brown and Hendrickson version of this emerger pattern.
I lost track of this article, but it has stuck in my memory all this time. Yesterday morning I sat on my tying room floor, combing thru old magazines until I finally found this old article so I could reread it. Once finished, I had to head to the vice to tye some of these flies.
PHOTO FROM ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Caption Read: The Hendrickson version (front/bottom) first shown by Rick Hamel, and the March Brown configuration (top/rear) that George Schlotter latter tied for Mr. Ames
TYING INSTRUCTIONS IN MAGAZINE ARTICLE:
Step-by-Step Tying Sequence:
Awesome Possum Dubbing:
Speckled Hen Hackle
Prepared Hackle
Top down view (hackle tyed in by the stem and prepared for wrapping forward)
Two forward wraps (forming legs of the fly), then tying thread advanced forward reinforcing steam and preparing to tye down the wing (hackle tip).
Draw hackle fibers (legs) and wing (hackle tip) back over the body. Wrap thread back, forming head of fly and securing materials in place.
Finished Flies:
NOTE ABOUT FISHING THIS PATTERN:
George advised to apply floatant to the wing only, to keep it just above the surface, with the rest of the fly hanging beneath, like a natural emerger. Mr. Ame's first tried it during a March Brown hatch on Vermont's Ottaquechee, "and the fish eat it like a dog eats biscuits" I (Ames) tried the Hendrickson version during an emergence the following spring on the Housatonic, when the fish refused my Catskill classic, and caught those fussy browns seemingly at will".
Certainly sounded like a pattern worth trying.
ADDITIONAL REFERENCE: