Olive Stalker
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- Hans Weilenmann
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- Joined: Mon Feb 23, 2009 8:45 pm
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Olive Stalker
Olive Stalker
Hook: Partridge Ideal Nymph #12
Thread: Benecchi 12/0, olive
Hackle: Whiting Brahma hen saddle, dyed olive
Body hackle: Hen, dyed light olive, sparse
Rib: Fine silver wire
Tail: French partridge, dyed light olive
Abdomen: Argentinean hare, amber
Thorax: Argentinean hare, dark olive
Cheers,
Hans W
Re: Olive Stalker
I'm thinking Damsel or Ephemera when I look at this. I like the palmered light olive hen body hackle.
Aaron
Aaron
Aaron Laing, New Westminster BC
Moderator - FlyBC Flytying Forum
Stream Time Blog - Current Article: The Leggy Blond (Hawaiian bonefish pattern) (January 2011)
Moderator - FlyBC Flytying Forum
Stream Time Blog - Current Article: The Leggy Blond (Hawaiian bonefish pattern) (January 2011)
- Hans Weilenmann
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Re: Olive Stalker
Aaron,
Dragonfly/damselfly larva in my mind, but yes might be also large drakes. I would be more tempted for those to keep the pattern in the tan spectrum, though.
Cheers,
Hans W
Dragonfly/damselfly larva in my mind, but yes might be also large drakes. I would be more tempted for those to keep the pattern in the tan spectrum, though.
Cheers,
Hans W
Re: Olive Stalker
Funny how time and place "colours" one's choices (pardon the pun). In my corner of the world, I equate olive with large green drakes, and tan/ginger with immature damsels (although the olive suits many mature damsels here as well).Hans Weilenmann wrote:I would be more tempted for those to keep the pattern in the tan spectrum, though.
Aaron
Aaron Laing, New Westminster BC
Moderator - FlyBC Flytying Forum
Stream Time Blog - Current Article: The Leggy Blond (Hawaiian bonefish pattern) (January 2011)
Moderator - FlyBC Flytying Forum
Stream Time Blog - Current Article: The Leggy Blond (Hawaiian bonefish pattern) (January 2011)
- Hans Weilenmann
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- Joined: Mon Feb 23, 2009 8:45 pm
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Re: Olive Stalker
Aaron,
Your Drake nymphs are an olive?
Hans W
Your Drake nymphs are an olive?
Hans W
Re: Olive Stalker
Both light and dark olive depending on the river system (and sometimes even within the same system). I should point out that our Green Drakes are rightly Drunella and not Ephemera.
Aaron
Aaron
Last edited by skunkaroo on Tue Mar 03, 2009 12:58 am, edited 2 times in total.
Aaron Laing, New Westminster BC
Moderator - FlyBC Flytying Forum
Stream Time Blog - Current Article: The Leggy Blond (Hawaiian bonefish pattern) (January 2011)
Moderator - FlyBC Flytying Forum
Stream Time Blog - Current Article: The Leggy Blond (Hawaiian bonefish pattern) (January 2011)
Re: Olive Stalker
There are two insects in North America called a green drake. The eastern green drake (epemera guttalata) is for all intents and purposes the same as the danica. The western green drake (drunella doddsii) is considerably smaller and greener, and a crawler, not a burrower.
Bob
- Hans Weilenmann
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Re: Olive Stalker
The reason I asked after olive is that all samples (in hand, and in images) I have seen of these burrowers have been tannish in color. I do appreciate that the dun has a strong olive cast.
Thanks,
Hans W
Thanks,
Hans W
Re: Olive Stalker
My apologies, Hans. I probably shouldn't have cited the Ephemera genus initially.
Aaron
Aaron
Aaron Laing, New Westminster BC
Moderator - FlyBC Flytying Forum
Stream Time Blog - Current Article: The Leggy Blond (Hawaiian bonefish pattern) (January 2011)
Moderator - FlyBC Flytying Forum
Stream Time Blog - Current Article: The Leggy Blond (Hawaiian bonefish pattern) (January 2011)