Honey dun
Moderators: William Anderson, letumgo
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- Posts: 247
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Honey dun
I'm finally making some progress and starting to get the look I want without being upset that my flies aren't an exact copy of Lance or Carl. Finding my own style I guess. I still need the firs few wraps after the tail to be more sparse or a shorter staple length so it has a little better taper but I think it's still going to fish just fine. I build a new spinning block so once I get familiar with it I'll make some marks on it to help correct that issue. Anyway....
Hook: mustad forged wire, viking bend, up eye not sure the number code
Tail: chocolate dun hen hackle Whisks
Body: cheek from a hares mask dyed a light dun over natural mixed with some gray squirrel spun on ramen colored kimono
Hackle: chocolate dun hen
Working thread: ramen #376 kimono silk
Hook: mustad forged wire, viking bend, up eye not sure the number code
Tail: chocolate dun hen hackle Whisks
Body: cheek from a hares mask dyed a light dun over natural mixed with some gray squirrel spun on ramen colored kimono
Hackle: chocolate dun hen
Working thread: ramen #376 kimono silk
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- Posts: 436
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- Location: Midwest City, OK
Re: Honey dun
Personally, I would be thrilled to receive your fly in a swap! Also, your photography skills make me green with envy and how imaginative to stick the fly in the wax.
Tight Lines- Ken
Tight Lines- Ken
- Ron Eagle Elk
- Posts: 2818
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- Location: Carmel, Maine
Re: Honey dun
I once saw a friend take his dubbing in a pair of long tapered tweezers. He trimmed the dubbing off with a pair of scissors along the tweezer edges. Laid that in his Clark Block, twisted it up...perfect taper every time. Some might call that cheating, but not me. He's a much better fly dresser than I.
The title of your post reads "Honey dun". I was expecting a conversation about the different shades of honey dun hackle. Maybe we could get the title changed to "Honey of a Dun" to reflect the quality of that sweet, sweet fly.
The title of your post reads "Honey dun". I was expecting a conversation about the different shades of honey dun hackle. Maybe we could get the title changed to "Honey of a Dun" to reflect the quality of that sweet, sweet fly.
"A man may smile and bid you hale yet curse you to the devil, but when a good dog wags his tail he is always on the level"
Re: Honey dun
I have done well with a similar dubbing mix I made for a couple patterns.
Well done.
Well done.
Re: Honey dun
what ffm1955 said... great fly, great photo,
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- Posts: 247
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Re: Honey dun
Yeah I'm not really sure why I called it honey dun when I used a chocolate dun hackle lol. I bought a pair of long tapered tweezers to trim the taper but I was hoping to slip them over the rope and trim when it was about half spun, then spin it a little more to finish. The silk gets in the way of this tho. I'll try trimming the dubbing itself but I was reluctant because I still struggle with knowing how much to use. That's for the kind words on the fly and photo!
- hankaye
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Re: Honey dun
Terrestrial12, Howdy;
Check the SBS forum there are a few (2?), in the "pegged" section
on the first page that others have found helpful. YMMV.
hank
Check the SBS forum there are a few (2?), in the "pegged" section
on the first page that others have found helpful. YMMV.
hank
Striving for a less complicated life since 1949...
"Every day I beat my own previous record for number
of consecutive days I've stayed alive." George Carlin
"Every day I beat my own previous record for number
of consecutive days I've stayed alive." George Carlin