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Old 11-12-2006, 06:04 PM
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Default Picket Pin

This is the Picket Pin, a master of all trades. By using the correct materials you can fish this as a dry fly, wet fly or lure, and what’s more it excels in all three.
The stated hackle is Rode Island Red which is next to impossible to obtain, so I use a Metz natural red hackle which has a dark centre, almost like a Greenwell’s cape. If you don’t have anything similar or simply prefer it, use a red game or brown cape.
This is the lure/wet fly version. The dry is shown at the bottom of the page.
I'm having a little giggle thinking of Brennan trying to decide which section to put this one in.


HOOK – STD 10 – LS 10
THREAD – 6/0 Black Uni-Thread
BODY - Peacock Herl
HACKLE – Palmered Rode Island Red Cock or Hen. (I prefer cock on all versions, but you can use hen on the lure and wet versions)
RIB – Gold Wire
WING – Squirrel tail (Wet/Lure) Elk Hair (Dry)
HEAD – Peacock Herl

STEP 1
Attach the thread and tie in the hackle at the point shown.(approx ¼ shank)

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STEP 2
Wrap the thread to the bend, tying down the hackle stem and catching in the wire rib.


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STEP 3
Catch in 3or 4 strands of Peacock Herl on top of the hook shank and wrap the thread back up to the thorax. Then apply some varnish to the thread wraps.

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STEP 4
Twist the Herls into a rope and wrap to the hackle to form the body.

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STEP 5
Wrap the hackle down the body, then tie in with a couple of turns of the gold wire. Continue wrapping the wire through the hackle to the head. Tie off and twist the waste off. Then form a foundation for the wings. The Higher you build the foundation the lower the wing will sit.


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STEP 6
Select a bunch of squirrel tail for the wing.

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Then after aligning the tips in a stacker offer them up for length.

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Then transfer the grip, without moving the wing, to your left hand and make two or three “pinch and loops” to tie the wing in.

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As always, check your wing is parallel with the body.


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STEP 7
Lift the wing butts up and trim at an angle.

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STEP 8
Apply a generous amount of varnish to the wing roots.

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Then cover the roots with tight wraps ready to receive the Peacock Herl head.


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STEP 9
Tie in 3 or 4 Peacock Herls on top.

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Then twist into a rope and wrap to form the head, whipfinish to complete the fly.

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This is my preferred hackle for this fly.

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And here it is beside the dry version. The tying sequence is exactly the same, but using Elk instead of Squirrel for the wing.

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Old 11-12-2006, 06:14 PM
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nice step by step,nice fly

jim
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Old 11-12-2006, 06:16 PM
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Thanks Jim. A very nice fly, pulled a lot on it over the years.
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Old 11-12-2006, 10:04 PM
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Quote:
the stated hackle is Rhode Island Red which is next to impossible to obtain
When I was a child we used to have about a dozen of these in our chicken run! That was only forty years ago!

Super looking fly, I am at my vice tying some lures to (I hope) bank fish Rutland Water before it closes. I shall make one of these. Thanks!

Fly tied. I made two changes. First to make a "tag" near the hook bend when putting on the gold wire. And second, remembering what Tome ivens wrote, using a mixed "twist" of one strand peacock herl and the other strand of green ostrich herl.

It being written that together, when wet the effect has to be seen to be believed. I hope the Empingham trout believe it too.

Isn't this, without the palmering the old "Dambuster"?

Last edited by enfieldspares; 11-12-2006 at 11:26 PM.
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Old 12-12-2006, 05:37 AM
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Sounds like a good variation Enfield, let us know how it does.
Fraid I am unaware of the "Dambuster"
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Old 14-12-2006, 06:15 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by scotfly
I'm having a little giggle thinking of Brennan trying to decide which section to put this one in
You B***ard!
I have made a temporary solution but seem to have run out of space.

Nice tie by the way.

Brennan
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Old 14-12-2006, 06:54 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Brennan
You B***ard!
I have made a temporary solution but seem to have run out of space.
Hehe

Strictly speaking of course it is the Lure version I demonstrated.
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