Partridge & Olive Soft Hackle

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Cold
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2009/11/04 22:51:45 (permalink)

Partridge & Olive Soft Hackle

The soft hackle is a great example of how a simple fly can be made with an infinite number of variations. It's also a fly that you can ask 5 people to tie it, and see 5 different methods of tying what is essentially the same fly. Here's how I tie the Partridge & Olive, one of the quintessential soft hackle wet flies...

Partridge & Olive



Materials:
Hook: Tiemco 3769, Size 10. Any standard length, or short, straight-shanked nymph hook will work, in any size.
Thread: 8/0 Uni-thread, black
Body: Olive Uni-floss
Rib: Silver Ultra Wire, X-Small
Dubbing: SLF Squirrel
Hackle: Partridge

Instructions:

1. Place hook in vise. Start thread about 1.5 eye lengths behind eye. Advance thread to bend and tie in ribbing wire extending out over the back of the hook.



2. Advance thread to thread tie-in point. Tie in floss, trim tag.



3. Maintaining tension on the floss, wind onto the hook, advancing floss to the bend (where the wire is tied in). Keep the body as flat and smooth as possible, and not overlapping. Basically, you want as thin of a body as possible without having bare spots.



4. While keeping tension on the floss with your left hand, grab the ribbing wire with your right and start to wind it forward, locking the floss in place with your first wrap, which should be made tight. Though you've wrapped both the floss and the wire in the normal direction (away from you, on top of the shank), you'll still be creating a counter-wrap, because the floss was wrapped toward the bend and the rib was wrapped toward the eye.



5. Trim tag ends of both floss and wire, as close to the body as is possible.



6. Prepare a tiny amount of dubbing, and twist tightly onto the thread.



7. Dub a tiny ball of the squirrel dubbing near the head of the fly, about 1 eye length back.



8. Select a speckled partridge feather, from the front of one of the wings.



9. Prepare the feather by stripping away fibers and stroking the rest (save for the tip) back against the grain as shown.



10. Tie in feather by the tip, curvature down, at the front of the hook, just a bit behind the eye.



11. Wind the hackle 1-2 turns tie off and trim feather.



12. Whip finish. Cement if desired.



Fish this fly, really, any way you like. Drift it, weight it, grease it, swing it, strip it...there isnt a wrong way to present a soft hackle, though most agree that some combination of drifting and tight-line swinging will entice the most fish. These elegant, impressionistic flies can imitate everything from emerging mayflies to caddis pupae, to terrestrials.
post edited by Cold - 2009/11/05 22:51:45
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    harrypelles
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    RE: Partridge & Olive Soft Hackle 2009/11/05 01:29:26 (permalink)
    Excellent tutorial, Mark. I really like how you have the step-by-step pics - especially the one of the trimmed hackle and how it should look just before applying it.

    I feel confident I could do this easily from the tutorial (which is a sign not of my skill as a beginner tier, but of the quality of instruction).

    Thanks for posting!
    #2
    steely34
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    RE: Partridge & Olive Soft Hackle 2009/11/05 04:26:52 (permalink)
    Cold - Real nice buddy!! I love fishing the soft hackle and your right about there being so many variations of this time tested pattern. I can remember as a young'un, my father would swear by these - said there is no other pattern needed for trout. Kind of grew up fishin the soft hackle.  Fantastic pics! Thanks for taking the time to put this up. 

    "They say you forget your troubles on a trout stream, but that's not quite it..... you begin to see where your troubles fit into the grand scheme of things, and suddenly they're just not such a big deal anymore."

    John Gierach

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    Flyguy638
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    RE: Partridge & Olive Soft Hackle 2009/11/05 20:15:29 (permalink)
    Mark, nice job on the step by step, Slyvester Nemes would be proud of you

    Bruce
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