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Black Palmer 1839
Posted: Wed Jul 15, 2020 7:06 pm
by Roadkill
Thanks to Andrew Herd's rendition from Thomas Hofland's
The British Angler's Manual, 1839
I tied this to use as a stonefly.
Hook-Mustad 9672 #10
Thread-Black Monocord
Body- Black Ostrich
Rib-Silver Twist (counter rib)
Hackle-Black Cock
IMGP0493 by
William Lovelace, on Flickr
Re: Black Palmer 1839
Posted: Wed Jul 15, 2020 10:25 pm
by joaniebo
In Oliver Kite's book, "Nymph Fishing in Practice," he had a "Black Gnat" dressing as a dry fly also using peacock herl but with a black, dry fly palmered hackle. If I ever get out to a trout stream this summer, I need to try it again.
Re: Black Palmer 1839
Posted: Thu Jul 16, 2020 9:58 am
by Roadkill
joaniebo,
My first thought when I saw your flies was one of my go to favorites the Griffith's Gnat. Whiting 100's have made that a simple task at the vise. I am sure the black hackle will perform quite well!
Re: Black Palmer 1839
Posted: Thu Jul 16, 2020 12:30 pm
by joaniebo
I love dressings with a peacock herl body and various colors of hackle. I use a peacock body, red or black thread and a brown hackle to fish a "Red Palmer" that works quite well for the trout streams that I fish. One of favorites also is Rev. Edward Poweel's "Squashed Beetle."
- Powell's Squashed Beetle.jpg (123.55 KiB) Viewed 2377 times
Re: Black Palmer 1839
Posted: Thu Jul 16, 2020 3:16 pm
by Roadkill
Love those fat ties!! Something Randall Kaufman recommended me to tie years ago for New Zealand.
My Peacock beetle favorite is the Love's Lure with a Peacock Sword wing.
Here is one tied about 30+ years ago
IMGP0495 by
William Lovelace, on Flickr
Re: Black Palmer 1839
Posted: Fri Jul 17, 2020 11:51 am
by joaniebo
Nice fly. Are the peacock swords very durable?
Bob
Re: Black Palmer 1839
Posted: Fri Jul 17, 2020 7:39 pm
by Old Hat
Great patterns gentlemen. That simple palmer is really nice Bill. Can be fished so many ways and will cover anything small and dark. I might try it with red thread.