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Gold Heron Spey

Gold Heron Spey Fly

Syd Glasso pattern

tied by Bruce E. Harang

Materials:

Hook:                         Salmon Iron to suit (here a Partridge Bartleet Traditional code CS10/1 -- a  currently available
                                  hook close in style to the Sealey hook used by Syd Glasso is the Alec Jackson Low Water Dee
                                  hook)
Thread:                      Gudebröd 6/0, light color, here BCS 42 Yellow
Rib:                            Gold Oval Tinsel, size to suit
Spey Hackle:              Gray Heron substitute, here Whiting Spey hackle dyed Heron Grey
Body:                         Gold flat tinsel rear slightly less than half and front slightly more than half Hot Orange Seal or
                                  substitute (here SLF hot orange)
Throat Hackle:            Widgeon or Merganser flank (American Widgeon shown)
Wings:                       Bronze mallard, Widgeon or hooded merganser tied in the traditional bronze mallard
                                  tented slip wing style (here Bronze Mallard)
Head:                         Gudebröd 6/0, BCS F77 Fluorescent Orange

Tying Instructions:

1.         Mount an up eye return loop salmon hook in your vise.

2.         Attach the working thread at the rear of the hook shank just in front of the hook point. White thread is used here because silver tinsel will be used and white will help to hide any tiny gaps in the tinsel portion of the body.

3.         Tie in the flat tinsel by a tapered end and bring the thread forward to a point one flat tinsel width in front of the hook point.

4.         Tie in the Spey hackle stem on the bottom of the hook shank at the point where the second wrap of flat tinsel will start with a single turn of thread leaving a butt long enough to extent to the front of the flat tinsel body section.  Preferably your hackle is dense enough that you can strip one side of the feather. With the butt of the feather down and the good side of the feather facing you strip off the fibers facing toward the rear of the hook and then tie in with the remaining fibers pointing toward the right or eye of the hook.

5.         Tie in the oval tinsel on the far side bottom of the hook shank next to the Spey hackle tie in point and then remove the metal tinsel from the core and cut off this metal tinsel leaving only the oval tinsel core and the Spey hackle stem to be tied in.

6.         Tie down the oval tinsel core and the Spey hackle butt with the tying thread as you return the tying thread forward to the front of the flat tinsel body section.

7.        Wrap the flat tinsel forward in touching turns taking one wrap behind the Spey hackle and oval tinsel tie in points and then as the second turn of flat tinsel starts on the bottom of the hook shank cross in front of the oval tinsel and Spey Hackle feather continuing forward in touching turns to the point where the thread waits. Tie off the flat tinsel and break off the excess, do not cut with scissors. Notice that the tinsel is not deformed out of round by the hackle stem and oval tinsel core tied on the bottom side of the hook.

8.        Form a dubbing loop with the thread and wax the two thread legs of the loop, add dubbing by first spinning a small amount of dubbing on just one side of the dubbing loop, then put the rest of the sparse amount of dubbing in the dubbing loop and twist to tighten the dubbing loop. Make sure to taper the front and rear ends of the dubbing loop create a smooth transition from the flat tinsel body to dubbed body and from the dubbed body to wing mounting point. Alternatively, you can split the single strand of working thread to create the dubbing loop.

9.        Wrap the oval tinsel forward in 5 turns with the first turn crossing over the top of the Spey hackle stem to prevent the Spey hackle stem from being cut by the edge of the flat tinsel and tie off on the bottom of the hook shank immediately in front of the body.

10.       Wrap the Spey hackle forward immediately behind and tight against the oval tinsel to the front of the body, take a wrap of thread over the Spey hackle stem crossing on the bottom of the hook shank, then finish with 1 or 2 wraps of Spey hackle right in front of the body and tie off on the bottom of the hook shank. This single wrap of thread at the end spiral hackle wraps prevents the hackle from sliding back away from the back edge of the oval tinsel.

11.        Strip one side of a widgeon or merganser flank feather and tie in on the bottom of the hook shank. Take 1.5 turns of flank feather and tie off on the top of the hook shank. Tying off on the top of the hook helps provide support for the setting of the wings so that they are a bit easier to mount canted over the top of the hook.

12.        Pull the Spey hackle fibers and the natural guinea fowl flank fibers down toward the bottom of the hook so that there is virtually no hackle on the top of the hook. This helps in mounting the wing to sit low in the style and form of the traditional Spey fly bronze mallard wings.

13.        The wings are basically, two pair of matched full hackle feathers, each pair being tied in as a unit in the manner of tying in a bronze mallard wing on a traditional Spey fly . One pair is a right and one pair is a left. That is one pair will naturally arc downward when placed on the near side of the hook and the other pair will naturally arc downward when placed on the far side of the hook. . The far side pair of wing feathers being tied in first such that they are mounted on the side and tent over to the center top of the fly. The near side pair of wing feathers are then tied in similarly on the near side of the hook. This produces a wing that sits low along the body of the fly and still has a keel-like edge profile along the top edge of the wing exactly like the traditionally mounted bronze mallard wing on a traditional Spey fly. This winging method may also be found in Bob Veverka’s book SPEY FLIES, HOW TO TIE THEM.

14.        A step by step tutorial for tying this type of Syd Glasso Heron and of mounting the wings can be seen on the Black Heron Spey Tutorial page.

 

© 2008 Bruce E Harang

Contact

guide@beaucatcher.com