Fly Tying

The Making of a Pheasant Tail

The Making of a Pheasant Tail
by Travis “Dr” Gillespie
Xstream Outdoors

PT

One of the all time most successful flies in fly fishing is the Pheasant Tail nymph. It works on fooling trout all over world with its mayfly appearance. I personally took a liking to it early in my fly fishing days, in fact I remember the first summer I started fly fishing on a regular basis. I was sixteen and had an old 70 Chevy truck that was my vessel to places and things I always wanted to experience. With the freedom to drive I started fishing the Lower Provo River whenever I got a chance. Since I could only tie a few flies the pheasant tail became my go to fly.  At the time I didn’t realize what it imitated, all I knew was that it caught fish and it made fly fishing fun. That summer alone, I probably tied over 200 pheasant tail flies to full fill my fishing craz and all those dang break offs.  Since those days I have expanded my fly boxes, but when the situation calls for it I don’t forget my roots. I always have a few trusty PTs to pick up some picky trout.

Nice ColorsTo me the making of a pheasant tail nymph goes a lot deeper than simply tying feathers on to a hook to imitate a small mayfly. To me its a unique experience that makes these little bugs special. The process starts ever early November as the cold weather graces us with its presence.  It is the time to bag the birds that carry the tail feathers that make up the flies name.  The ring neck pheasant is a majestic bird known for its beautiful colors and long tail feathers. It is the king of all upland game birds.

Cash warm 2A week already into the pheasant hunt and I was starting to wonder if I was going to have the chance to bag a bird and reap the benefits.  So with an open Saturday and a fresh coat of snow, I was off to try my luck.  At first things started off good as I heard a rooster chuckle, but somehow the wiley birds eluded Cash (my dog) and I.  For the next few hours Cash and I pushed through the thickest brush possible, but all we had to show for it was soaking pants, cold hands and a wet dog.  As I was about to give in, I noticed in the distance a couple pheasants walking back into the pasture where we started. I sprinted to the spot and started looking around for the birds, but again nothing.  By now I was done, I couldn’t believe they had given us the slip

Full Pheas

again.  So I started walking back to the truck, when I thought what the heck I’ll try this patch of tumble weeds on the way out. I walked through the weeds confident-less, as I approached the end of the patch aroyal ring neck erupted from my feet. I only had seconds, I brought my gun up, shot! Missed!!! I pumped in another shell this time aiming at the target that was flying away like a jet, it was getting out of shooting range, but I pulled the trigger…the bird dropped like a rock!!! Cash ran after the fallen bird and with a big dog smile, let me know our day and season was a success.

As I looked at those tail feathers today I couldn’t help but feel a longing for summer fishing and pheasant tail nymphs. Its funny as I am hunting pheasants I sometimes envision the fish that I will catch on the pheasant feathers that I harvest and make into flies.

Feathers

It is truly the purest form fly fishing that I can get when I can harvest the features from the pheasants I bag and than get peacock from a friend who raises them to make up a completely pure fly that symbolizes the reason why we all fly fish.  So to me a pheasant tail isn’t just a fly, it is a story of a bird that I bagged and a fly that I personally handcrafted to inmate a mayfly nymph that will outsmart a trout that is as wild as the pheasant that roamed the pastures. So next time you tie on a pheasant tail nymph sit back and think for a second about what its story could be, because I will.

Color & BW

25 Greatest Flies

taken from Field and Stream online magazine.

bluewingoliveBlue Winged Olive

Style: Dry Fly

The Skinny: This important dry fly comes fittingly at the end of my list. Although the naturals hatch at least intermittently all year, the most intense hatches seem to come at the end of the season in September or even October, when I’ve seen the little olive duns flying among sporadic snowflakes. The naturals are tiny, roughly a size 18 down to a miniscule 26 (depending on species). Rising trout key on them and can be maddeningly difficult to fool. Of all the common dry-fly styles I’ve tried, I keep coming back to this thorax-style tie as being the most effective. Hackle is trimmed away from the bottom to make the fly low-floating, and I think that helps. The pattern is not infallible, though, and I’m still looking for a better one.

dahlbergDahlberg Diver

Style: Popper

The Skinny: Larry Dahlberg is a clever guy, and this brilliantly designed bass bug proves it. The tapered deerhair head acts as a diving plate. Twitch the bug gently, and it wiggles enticingly on the surface. Pull hard, and the head and collar force the fly underwater, after which it bobs back to the surface. This drives bass nuts, and their reaction is usually violent. Notably, Dahlberg extends the concept to so-called mega-divers and rabbit-strip divers that can be 6 inches long or more and work well for both northern pike and muskies. His basic bass bug is available in sizes 2 and 6, in a variety of colors.

deerbugDeer Hair Bass Bug

Style: Popper

The Skinny: It seems that every 10 years or so a cadre of flyfishing majordomos forecasts a renaissance for bass flyfishing. For all the periodic predictions, this has yet to happen. Bass flyfishermen are still a small minority, but they’re also still having lots of fun. Deerhair bugs like this one are the best of it–soft wiggly things that draw explosive surface strikes from bass and are just a hoot to fish. The only drawback is that deerhair bodies eventually become waterlogged, heavy, and hard to cast. You’ll want plenty of spares in your box, sizes 2 through 10. White, yellow, and black are basic, and there are numerous multi-colored versions.

spongespiderSponge Spider

Style: Terrestrial

The Skinny: Though not very popular among fly anglers at large, catching bluegills and other sunfishes is some of the greatest sport, so here’s a fly just for that. The sponge spider has been wiggling its rubber legs on the surfaces of ponds, lakes, and warmwater streams for years, but it still pulls big bluegills as well as ever. When the sponge body becomes waterlogged, fish it as a wet fly; or simply squeeze water from the body and keep fishing it dry. A size 12 will do for most sunfish, while a size 6 is big enough to draw strikes from bass.

deceiverLefty’s Deceiver

Style: Streamer

The Skinny: I may take heat for not ranking this streamer pattern higher in the list, so here’s my reasoning. Almost all major fly retailers include the Deceiver only in their saltwater fly sections. It works perfectly well for bass, trout, and other freshwater fish, but the ties you’ll find are all on saltwater hooks. And, of course, the pattern excels in saltwater for just about all big fish that eat small fish. The design, by the redoubtable Lefty Kreh, is ingenious. The long, trailing feather wing extends only from the rear of the hook, which means it won’t tangle with the hook in casting and you will thereby never waste a cast. I most often use this pattern in white, chartreuse, or all black (for stripers after dark) in sizes 2/0 to 4.

eggflyEgg Fly

Style: Wet Fly

The Skinny: By most accepted terms, this is not even a fly—just a ball of yarn on a short-­shanked hook. It doesn’t even imitate an insect, but a gooey fish egg. I know anglers who refuse to fish the things for that reason. I am not among them because they work so well. A California fly shop has trademarked the name Glo Bugs, so other outlets call them Egg Flies. They are tied on heavy-wire short-­shanked hooks, sizes 6 to 10, in an array of colors.

daveshopperDave’s Hopper

Style: Terrestrial

The Skinny: It is the quintessential grasshopper pattern for trout, created at the vise of Dave Whitlock. Larger sizes work well for smallmouths, and sunfish love the smaller ones. Picking a size for trout is tricky—most people are inclined to go large on Western rivers. The problem is that trout in those waters see lots of hopper patterns every summer day. Smaller sizes may get you more strikes. Pay attention, because trout often sip these quietly.

antAnt

Style: Terrestrial

The Skinny: Among the simplest of flies, the Fur Ant is also among the deadliest. It’s tied in sizes 12 through 20. Fish the smaller sizes dry on a 6X or 7X tippet to gently sipping trout during warm summer and early-fall afternoons. Black is usually best, although there are times when cinnamon is worth a try. In the high-tech world of modern flyfishing, basic patterns such as the Fur Ant are often neglected. The trout won’t neglect them, and neither should you.

princenymphPrince

Style: Nymph

The Skinny: A size 16 Prince Nymph with a tungsten beadhead has probably accounted for more 20-plus-inch trout for me than any other fly in recent years. One reason is because tungsten beads are heavier than brass beads of the same size, so the nymph fishes deep easily. It has the buggy look common to many successful trout flies. Smaller versions (sizes 16, 18) have always worked better for me, with or without a strike indicator.

copperjohnCopper John

Style: Nymph

The Skinny: Created by John Barr, this wire-­bodied nymph has become a trout fishing sensation over the past 10 years. The reason is simple: It sinks rapidly and stays deep, where many of the fish are. Copper wire, lead wire, and a brass bead all add weight, while the nymph’s overall shape is streamlined to aid sinking. In smaller sizes, from 16 to 22, that fast sink rate means it’s an ideal pattern to fish under a strike indicator or high-floating hopper pattern.

haresearGold Ribbed Hare’s Ear

Style: Nymph

The Skinny: One of the bestselling nymph patterns worldwide, the Gold Ribbed Hare’s Ear is buggy-looking in the same sort of generic way as the Adams dry fly. It roughly imitates a wide array of trout-stream insects and precisely imitates nothing. The pattern is useful in sizes 20 up to 8, but sizes 14 and 16 take most of my trout most of the time. Its performance can be enhanced by roughing up its surface with a toothbrush.

marchbrownMarch Brown Spider

Style: Wet Fly

The Skinny: This is one of several old soft-hackled wet flies that underwent a renaissance in the 1970s. The concept of a small fur body surrounded by long, flexible hackle fibers is almost as old as flyfishing itself. Trout, however, still chomp these flies in thoroughly modern lust. Fish size 10 to 18 soft hackles upstream, and either dead-drift them or swing them down and across the current. These are also excellent subsurface patterns for bluegills.

rs2RS-2

Style: Emerger

The Skinny: Sure, this odd little pattern doesn’t look like much, but it’s indispensable during common small mayfly hatches. Bluewing olives, especially, emerge from spring through fall on most trout streams, and the RS-2 is the most successful olive-emerger imitation I’ve used. It was developed in the 1970s by Colorado angler Rim Chung for the trout of the South Platte (the name stands for “Rim’s semblance No. 2”). Fish it deep or near the surface, depending on the hatch.

rustyspinnerRusty Spinner

Style: Dry Fly

The Skinny: When trout are rising but you can’t see what they’re eating, they could be dining on a spinner fall. Trout usually take the flush-floating spent mayflies with gentle sips; their rise forms can be a clue. Spinners with rusty-red bodies are the most common, in sizes 10 to 22. Smaller sizes, in particular, work well for trout that are sipping intermittently. Most commercial patterns are overdressed. Thin the wings with scissors, without changing their length, to boost your score.

sparkledunnSparkle Dun

Style: Dry Fly

The Skinny: This dry traces back to Fran Betters’s Haystack, in which a wing of splayed deer hair rather than hackle holds the fly upright on the water. Caucci and Nastasi used this concept in their Comparadun series, which was further refined by Craig Matthews as the Sparkle Dun: He included a synthetic-fiber tail as generally representative of a nymphal shuck. Sparkle Duns can be tied in various colors and sizes to match the pattern of the mayfly hatch of the moment.

stimulatorStimulator

Style: Dry Fly

The Skinny: Western tier Randall Kaufmann came up with this one, which is kind of a takeoff on the Elk Hair Caddis but on a longer-shanked hook with more hackle and more buoyant hair for the wing. It’s designed to be twitched hard on the surface to elicit strikes from trout; hence the name. Generally tied in sizes 6 down to 16, in various colors, the pattern imitates a variety of stoneflies. One tip: After twitching it on the surface, pull the fly underwater and fish out the retrieve twitching it as a wet fly. You will be pleasantly surprised.

muddlerMuddler Minnow

Style: Streamer

The Skinny: Tied as a scruffy-looking sculpin imitation by Don Gapen in the 1930s, the Muddler in its present, trimmed form was refined by Dan Bailey in Montana and popularized by the likes of Joe Brooks and A.J. McClane. In a wide range of sizes, it’s deadly on trout, steelhead, and salmon, and it doubles as an excellent bass fly. Fran Betters first turned me onto so-called mini Muddlers 30 years ago on New York’s West Branch Ausable. To this day, that diminutive wet fly style is still one of my first choices for targeting trout in rough pocket water.

griffithGriffith’s Gnat

Style: Dry Fly

The Skinny: To this day there are brook trout rising in Michigan’s Au Sable River in front of George Griffith’s cabin, where Trout Unlimited was founded in the 1950s. These fish can be unbelievably picky and there, as elsewhere, this midge pattern is often what fools them. Tied with barred grizzly hackle palmered over a peacock-herl body, the fly is best in sizes 18 to 22. I can’t see it on the water, but when I see a rise where I think the fly might be, I set the hook.

royalwulffRoyal Wulff

Style: Dry Fly

The Skinny: Despite the name, Lee Wulff did not invent this fly. It’s based on a version of the hair-wing Royal Coachman called the Quack Coachman. It took Wulff’s renown to make his adapted Royal Wulff a huge success. In sizes 6 to 20, the Royal Wulff is a trout-stream standard not because it imitates anything in particular but because the white wings make it easy for fishermen to see. Use the larger sizes when dry-fly fishing for browns after dark in the summer. You can see it. The fish can, too.

adamsAdams

Style: Dry Fly

The Skinny: This Michigan pattern is the prototypical trout dry fly. Or it was until contemporary tiers got all wussy over things like hopped-up, semi­suspending emergers with foam-bubble hackle. Nuts to that. The old Adams with its looks-like-everything gray body and two-toned hackle still gets the job done. A great searching pattern, it also lends itself to scissor work. Trim away the top and bottom hackle to turn it into a spinner imitation. Trim more and you’ve got a nymph.

elkhaircaddisElk Hair Caddis

Style: Dry Fly

The Skinny: Here’s the one dry to have if you’re having only one. This pattern was the brainchild of the great Montana guide Al Troth, who knew his trout flies. In sizes 10 to 20, and in tan, gray, or black, this high-floating dry often works best when twitched, then dead-drifted. That motion imitates an emerging caddis trying to get off the water, and slashing strikes are often the response. They aren’t just for trout, either. Smallmouths and panfish love them, too.

zonkerZonker

Stlye: Streamer

The Skinny: This sounds like something from the menu of a Cockney restaurant, a side dish, maybe, with your bangers and mash. Such is the inelegant state of modern fly names. A formed lead-foil underbody acts as both weight and keel, keeping the fly running deep and upright. A strip of rabbit fur for a wing is what drives fish crazy. Use black, chartreuse, or white in sizes 3/0 down to 10 in fresh- and saltwater. It may be known as a trout fly, but an all-black Zonker in a larger size can be great for northern pike.

blackghostBlack Ghost

Style: Streamer

The Skinny: Something about the black, yellow, and white color combination in this venerable streamer pattern seems to make trout—especially big browns—want to kill it. Created by Herb Welch, the Black Ghost is one of the last remnants of the streamer tradition developed by Maine fly-tiers in the years before and shortly after World War II. I often fish sizes ranging from a big 2/0 giant-killer on down to a size 6. I’ve had browns come to this fly that were so big I had to sit on the bank afterward to stop shaking. Really.

buggerWoolly Bugger

Style: Streamer

The Skinny: Although best known as a streamer fly for trout, Buggers work well for bass and myriad other species in fresh- and saltwater. The basic Bugger is all black, in sizes 2/0 to as small as 12 for panfish. Historians see this pattern as nothing more than an ancient Woolly Worm wet fly with a wiggly marabou tail. Often it is tied with strands of flashy tinsel or with a heavy metal cone head for a jiglike action, but the original unweighted version is the most versatile.

clouserClouser Deep Minnow

Style: Streamer

The Skinny: This lead-eyed bucktail is the world’s best pattern because it looks and acts like a small jig when stripped through the water. Its prime color combination is chartreuse over white, and it works on everything from trout and bass to stripers and redfish, in sizes 2/0 down to 10. The best retrieve is fast. It’s also the only pattern name to have become a verb. To “Clouser” your rod means to hit and probably crack your tip with the weighted fly because of your sloppy casting.

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zonker

Custom fly tying desks

Tim Tibbals has been building custom furniture and cabinets since 1981, first learning the trade at a small shop in Redwood City, California. Through the years, he worked at a number of larger shops that produced high-end products for both the commercial and residential markets.

In 1991, Tim branched off on his own, doing much of the same work he had done for others in the previous ten years but now making custom fly tying desks. After taking a fly tying class in 2000, he recognized the need for organization and storage for fly tyers.   A simple design was created, and from that evolved a line of furniture that has been highly acclaimed by fly tyers across the country.

birdsallBeing organized as you tie flies makes you more efficient and allows you to better enjoy your craft.  Being organized and tying in the comfort of your favorite room in the house is even better! Discriminate fly tyers around the country have discovered the best of both worlds in their purchase of a desk from Tibbals’ Wood Studio.

Each desk is handcrafted per order from selected woods and is made with the utmost attention to detail. The design is simple yet provides an ample workspace with storage for materials, spools of thread and wire, and all your tools.

Fully assembled at the shop, the desk is “knocked-down” and carefully packaged for shipping. Upon arrival, your desk is easily re-assembled with complete instructions.

The standard wood used is Alder, which is beautifully finished in a “Shaker Cherry” stain. The finish is an environmentally friendly, water-based polyurethane that provides an everlasting, durable finish.

Other woods such as oak, cherry, walnut and hickory are available. Custom stain colors are available as well. You can visit the “FAQ” page for more details.

____________________________________

You can contact Tim at Tibbals’ Wood Studio:

Via E-mail- tim@tibbalswoodstudio.net

Via Telehone- (970) 412-8145

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Wanting to know everything about the sport

Ralph Watson, right, watches instructor Jay Buchner tie the beginnings of what will become a small crab fly for salt-water fishing during a fly-tying class on Jan. 22 at High Country Flies in Jackson, Wyo.

Ralph Watson, right, watches instructor Jay Buchner tie the beginnings of what will become a small crab fly for salt-water fishing during a fly-tying class on Jan. 22 at High Country Flies in Jackson, Wyo.

Taken from the Billings Gazette online

Jay Buchner’s hands, worn from decades of fly-fishing, work carefully and methodically around the silver vise in front of him. The contrast between the tiny fly on the stand and his large hands seems almost comical, yet Buchner’s dexterity makes up for the difference.

Grasping several feather tips with his fingers, he places the curved tufts on the back of the hook, wraps them tightly at the stems with a translucent piece of line, ties it off and sits back in his chair.

“Now it’s got those pincers that crabs use when they go about their business,” Buchner says, mimicking snapping crustacean claws with his hands.

His audience watches and listens intently, for though the comment may seem silly, few in the world of fly-fishing know the sport quite like Buchner.

He is a former Fly Fishing Team USA member and founder of High Country Flies in Jackson. He has been casting, reeling and tying since his youth, traveling all over the world in the process. He even fished Africa’s Zambezi River.

But at High Country Flies’ weekly fly-tying class, the 40-year Jackson resident gets to teach from that experience – and learn more himself.

“Oh, it’s a learning experience all the time,” he said. “That’s one of the fun things about teaching the class, that it’s never the same, and lots of the time you get great ideas from guys in class who do something a different way.”

For Buchner, who started High Country Flies in 1974 and has since sold the business to Jimmy Jones and Howard Cole, fly-tying is the art of making a seemingly realistic product – such as a small crab or a bonefish-magnet shrimp – by understanding the nuances of the process.

“What you’re trying to create is an illusion,” he says, “and detail is of great importance.”

And Buchner certainly knows his detail.

“The great thing about Jay, is that he’s such a good entomologist. He can explain what you’re doing and why,” Jones said.

In fact, Buchner is considered an expert in local entomology – the branch of zoology that deals with insects, also known as fish food – in the waters surrounding the Snake River watershed. His fly-tying patterns and techniques have appeared in articles in Fly Fisherman, Fly Tyer and Backpacker magazines.

Ever considerate of detail, he makes a point of trimming the fly to streamline it, a trick to hide its man-made reality. Yet, Buchner also offers general advice that pertains more to self-preservation than fly effectiveness, and these tips can be equally as useful.

“If you’re not used to tying with the hook up,” he said during the shrimp fly demonstration, “then you might stab yourself several times. I’ve done this many times, and I’ve even managed to stab myself just now.”

Despite his knowledge and experience, Buchner acknowledges that he’s always improving as a fisherman.

He takes the approach of wanting to know everything about the sport, and some of that growth comes from teaching.

“With the classes, you have a much more informed person who knows the difference between a good fly and a poorly tied fly,” Cole said. “It automatically makes you a better fisherman because you never look at flies the same way again. It’s kind of completing the circle by creating something that you can catch the fish on after you’ve gained all the other skills.”

“And sharing everything you can put your hands on,” Buchner said, “is what this is all about.”