Historical Pattern Question (February Red - circa 1496)
Posted: Sun May 18, 2014 11:49 am
I've been doing some research on old fly patterns, in hopes of finding something VERY old to share for my swap flies. As I went thru my books, I came across a reference to a pattern called a "February Red", which is listed in "The Treatise of Fishing with and Angle (circa 1496).
According Syl Nemes book (Two Centuries of Soft-Hackled Flies/Introduction - page ix), the "February Red. This is the Treatise's 'dun fly, the body of dun wool and wings of the partridge. That is the dressing in 1496. It is the same today. The Partridge and Orange, dressed with a partridge hackle and a body of orange silk, is the imitation most commonly used between the Tweed and the Trent and kills hundreds of trout every year. So that fly has not changed at all in four centuries and a quarter. The Partridge and Orange was the first soft-hackled fly I [Nemes] ever fished, on the Pere Marquette in Michigan around 1970.
Later in Nemes book (page 127), he shows a fly called a February Red. The pattern is listed as such:
February Red
Hook: 14
Body: Red tying thread with orange dubbing.
Hackle: Blue dun hackle.
I am confused!
I thought the body was should be tyed with dun (gray) colored wool, and the hackle would be partridge hackle. Yet in the later reference the hackle is blue dun hen, with orange dubbing on red silk body. Does any one know the true original dressing for the February Red?
I'd love to tie and fish a pattern this old, but at this point may simply switch over to a Partridge & Orange, since it also seems to date back just as far.
WOULD THE HISTORIANS AMONG US PLEASE HELP!
According Syl Nemes book (Two Centuries of Soft-Hackled Flies/Introduction - page ix), the "February Red. This is the Treatise's 'dun fly, the body of dun wool and wings of the partridge. That is the dressing in 1496. It is the same today. The Partridge and Orange, dressed with a partridge hackle and a body of orange silk, is the imitation most commonly used between the Tweed and the Trent and kills hundreds of trout every year. So that fly has not changed at all in four centuries and a quarter. The Partridge and Orange was the first soft-hackled fly I [Nemes] ever fished, on the Pere Marquette in Michigan around 1970.
Later in Nemes book (page 127), he shows a fly called a February Red. The pattern is listed as such:
February Red
Hook: 14
Body: Red tying thread with orange dubbing.
Hackle: Blue dun hackle.
I am confused!
I thought the body was should be tyed with dun (gray) colored wool, and the hackle would be partridge hackle. Yet in the later reference the hackle is blue dun hen, with orange dubbing on red silk body. Does any one know the true original dressing for the February Red?
I'd love to tie and fish a pattern this old, but at this point may simply switch over to a Partridge & Orange, since it also seems to date back just as far.
WOULD THE HISTORIANS AMONG US PLEASE HELP!