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#1
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I picked up a Hungarian partridge patch a few days ago to tie some soft
hackle flies. I'm having issues with getting the feather to, well, do anything, I guess. I tie it in, flare the barbules, remove them from one side, and then wrap. I end up with crap. Am I using the wrong stuff? Is it purely operator error? Any suggestions would be great. Thanks, Dan |
#2
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![]() "Daniel-San" wrote in message m... I picked up a Hungarian partridge patch a few days ago to tie some soft hackle flies. I'm having issues with getting the feather to, well, do anything, I guess. I tie it in, flare the barbules, remove them from one side, and then wrap. I end up with crap. Am I using the wrong stuff? Is it purely operator error? Any suggestions would be great. It would help to know what result your looking for and what you are getting. Wolfgang |
#3
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The only things that you did not cover is...
Did you tie it in by the tip? When you strip one side, did you remove the side that points foreward for the direction yo intend to turn? When you finished, did you stroke the fibers backward and tie them so they had to stay backward? |
#4
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I asked this a day or two ago but it never got there!
Did you tie it in by the tip? ie. with a few feather barbules at the point of the feather? A Yorkshire Lad Remove spam filter to reply "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... "Daniel-San" wrote in message m... I picked up a Hungarian partridge patch a few days ago to tie some soft hackle flies. I'm having issues with getting the feather to, well, do anything, I guess. I tie it in, flare the barbules, remove them from one side, and then wrap. I end up with crap. Am I using the wrong stuff? Is it purely operator error? Any suggestions would be great. It would help to know what result your looking for and what you are getting. Wolfgang |
#5
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![]() "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... "Daniel-San" wrote in message m... I picked up a Hungarian partridge patch a few days ago to tie some soft hackle flies. I'm having issues with getting the feather to, well, do anything, I guess. I tie it in, flare the barbules, remove them from one side, and then wrap. I end up with crap. Am I using the wrong stuff? Is it purely operator error? Any suggestions would be great. It would help to know what result your looking for and what you are getting. Wolfgang Yep, s'pose that would be helpful info. Kinda hard to diagnose problems without symptoms. Anyway, I was tying up a buncha hare's ear nymphs and thought to add a soft hackle to a few. I'm tying it in by the barb (after stripping one side and flaring), and then wrapping. I'm getting a result that looks like I tried to remove each barbule and tie it in individually. A lumpy, horrible hackle. Does not lay on the shank, has "ridges" in it, and generally looks like crap. Am I using the wrong part of the feather? I wondered this and clipped about half a feather and tied in as above. Results were better in terms of the way the hackle laid on the hook, but now the barbules are far too short. Thanks for the help..... Dan |
#7
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Norman Greenwood wrote:
I tie a lot of what we call "North Country spider pattern" in the UK. The basic rule is to tie all "Game" feathers in by the tips, after separating the feather barbules to a point where the correct hackle length exists at the tie in point.i.e.. at the separation point A Yorkshire Lad Remove spam filter to reply "Daniel-San" wrote in message m... "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... "Daniel-San" wrote in message .com... I picked up a Hungarian partridge patch a few days ago to tie some soft hackle flies. I'm having issues with getting the feather to, well, do anything, I guess. I tie it in, flare the barbules, remove them from one side, and then wrap. I end up with crap. Am I using the wrong stuff? Is it purely operator error? Any suggestions would be great. It would help to know what result your looking for and what you are getting. Wolfgang Yep, s'pose that would be helpful info. Kinda hard to diagnose problems without symptoms. Anyway, I was tying up a buncha hare's ear nymphs and thought to add a soft hackle to a few. I'm tying it in by the barb (after stripping one side and flaring), and then wrapping. I'm getting a result that looks like I tried to remove each barbule and tie it in individually. A lumpy, horrible hackle. Does not lay on the shank, has "ridges" in it, and generally looks like crap. Am I using the wrong part of the feather? I wondered this and clipped about half a feather and tied in as above. Results were better in terms of the way the hackle laid on the hook, but now the barbules are far too short. Thanks for the help..... Dan Where abouts in Yorkshire Norman? I am in Huddersfield -- Charles |
#8
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![]() "Daniel-San" wrote in message m... "Wolfgang" wrote in message It would help to know what result your looking for and what you are getting. Wolfgang Yep, s'pose that would be helpful info. Kinda hard to diagnose problems without symptoms. Anyway, I was tying up a buncha hare's ear nymphs and thought to add a soft hackle to a few. I'm tying it in by the barb (after stripping one side and flaring), and then wrapping. I'm getting a result that looks like I tried to remove each barbule and tie it in individually. A lumpy, horrible hackle. Does not lay on the shank, has "ridges" in it, and generally looks like crap. Am I using the wrong part of the feather? I wondered this and clipped about half a feather and tied in as above. Results were better in terms of the way the hackle laid on the hook, but now the barbules are far too short. "Soft hackle" is a pretty indistinct term. There are a number of ways to apply body feathers to achieve various effects in soft hackle patterns. Probably the most common, if that's what you're after (and I think so.....but I'm still not certain), is to have the base ends of the bards tied in at or near the hook eye, flaring back at a fairly shallow angle with the tips pointing back toward the bend, and evenly distributed around the hook shank. Since body feathers have many small barbules and micro-barbules whose function is to hold the barbs together, they do not separate cleanly and individually like good dry fly hackle......they tend to clump together in more or less random numbers. I assume this is what you mean by looking "lumpy". If so, this is normal.....it's what it is supposed to look like. As for technique, there are a number of ways to manipulate the feather and still achieve pretty much the same effect. Neither stripping nor clipping is necessary. I hold the feather by the tip with hackle pliers, trying to get just enough to be able to tie in with. I then stroke all of the barbs toward the butt end of the feather. At this point, all the barbs not held by the pliers have separated into clumps, the center lines of which point roughly perpendicular to the shaft of the feather. Holding the feather on top of the hook shank with the tip end toward the eye and the butt end toward the bend (making sure that the concave side....the side closest to the bird's body in situ.....is down, thus forming a hill shape) and tie in just behind the eye with three or four wraps. I then take from one to three turns with the feather and again tie off with a couple turns of thread. Then, after stroking the barbs toward the back and holding them in place against the hook shank, I take a few more turns against the tied in butt ends of the barbs.....as many as it takes to keep them lying at the desired angle. Looking back at your description just now, another interpretation of it occurred to me. Is it possible that the lumps and ridges you refer to are the result of holding the barbs against the hook shank and then wrapping back over them? If so, you've gone too far. In the last step I described above, the thread should be pushing the tied in ends of the barbs back......it should not extend far enough back to cover them. Wolfgang |
#9
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Daniel
Go to flyfisherman.com, then their bulletin boards, and select the bulletin board on fly tying. There is a similar d iscussion there with a demo on tying in softhackle. "Daniel-San" wrote in message m... I picked up a Hungarian partridge patch a few days ago to tie some soft hackle flies. I'm having issues with getting the feather to, well, do anything, I guess. I tie it in, flare the barbules, remove them from one side, and then wrap. I end up with crap. Am I using the wrong stuff? Is it purely operator error? Any suggestions would be great. Thanks, Dan |
#10
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![]() "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... "Daniel-San" wrote in message m... "Wolfgang" wrote in message It would help to know what result your looking for and what you are getting. Wolfgang Yep, s'pose that would be helpful info. Kinda hard to diagnose problems without symptoms. Anyway, I was tying up a buncha hare's ear nymphs and thought to add a soft hackle to a few. I'm tying it in by the barb (after stripping one side and flaring), and then wrapping. I'm getting a result that looks like I tried to remove each barbule and tie it in individually. A lumpy, horrible hackle. Does not lay on the shank, has "ridges" in it, and generally looks like crap. Am I using the wrong part of the feather? I wondered this and clipped about half a feather and tied in as above. Results were better in terms of the way the hackle laid on the hook, but now the barbules are far too short. "Soft hackle" is a pretty indistinct term. There are a number of ways to apply body feathers to achieve various effects in soft hackle patterns. Probably the most common, if that's what you're after (and I think so.....but I'm still not certain), is to have the base ends of the bards tied in at or near the hook eye, flaring back at a fairly shallow angle with the tips pointing back toward the bend, and evenly distributed around the hook shank. Since body feathers have many small barbules and micro-barbules whose function is to hold the barbs together, they do not separate cleanly and individually like good dry fly hackle......they tend to clump together in more or less random numbers. I assume this is what you mean by looking "lumpy". If so, this is normal.....it's what it is supposed to look like. As for technique, there are a number of ways to manipulate the feather and still achieve pretty much the same effect. Neither stripping nor clipping is necessary. I hold the feather by the tip with hackle pliers, trying to get just enough to be able to tie in with. I then stroke all of the barbs toward the butt end of the feather. At this point, all the barbs not held by the pliers have separated into clumps, the center lines of which point roughly perpendicular to the shaft of the feather. Holding the feather on top of the hook shank with the tip end toward the eye and the butt end toward the bend (making sure that the concave side....the side closest to the bird's body in situ.....is down, thus forming a hill shape) and tie in just behind the eye with three or four wraps. I then take from one to three turns with the feather and again tie off with a couple turns of thread. Then, after stroking the barbs toward the back and holding them in place against the hook shank, I take a few more turns against the tied in butt ends of the barbs.....as many as it takes to keep them lying at the desired angle. Looking back at your description just now, another interpretation of it occurred to me. Is it possible that the lumps and ridges you refer to are the result of holding the barbs against the hook shank and then wrapping back over them? If so, you've gone too far. In the last step I described above, the thread should be pushing the tied in ends of the barbs back......it should not extend far enough back to cover them. Wolfgang Thanks! -- that worked perfectly. Well, as perfectly as I'm capable of, anyway. Much appreciated. Dan |
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