Tying the Beastmaster General
The instructions given above are for a chartreuse/white
Beastmaster General but I tie this up in many colors. Among my other
favorites are all-white, all-black, blue/white, yellow/white, yellow/red,
red/white, and chartreuse/grizzly. While I tie this fly mostly using
wide neck hackle I also tie versions of it using narrower saddles
as well. I should also point out that if you tied this fly without
the deer hair head and collar and added a collar of mallard in front
of the forward marabou hackle you would then have a fly known simply
as the Beastmaster.
step 1-2
Tie in Tail wing and overlay of flash. Trim excess.
Tie
in two white blood marabou feathers and wind them together taking two
or three turns around the shank just in front of the tailwing. Trim
excess.
Tie
in six-seven strands of Glimmer (you may use another sturdy body
material if you don't have Glimmer) and wind forward to form a body.
Stop your winding approximately 1/3 the hook shank's length back from
the eye of the hook.
Tie
in three chartreuse blood marabou feathers and wind them together
taking two or three turns around the shank just in front of the
tailwing, being sure to leave plenty of room for your deer hair collar
and head. (It's important to remember your head will in general be
approximately one-third of the hook shank.) Trim excess.
Take
a small clump of white deer hair (approx. 3" long), clean it with a
brush, and tie it in on the far side of the shank just in front of the
marabou hackle, being sure to make the collar points approx. two inches
long. Take another clump of the same size, clean this, and tie it in on
the near side of of the shank so that these points are about the same
length as those on the opposite side. When both sets of hair are tightly
secured, push the remaining forward strands of hair back and take a few
turns of thread in front of them to keep them in that position (this
will now become the rear of your head).
Move
your tying thread forward three or four turns in front of the deer hair
butts. Now take a larger clump of white deer, clean it with brush or
comb--very important!--and tie it in on top of the shank with the butts
facing the rear of the fly. With thread pressure move this clump now to
the bottom of the shank. Tighten thread with a tap or two of your
fingers on the bobbin and then with tight windings to the rear
distribute the hairs around the shank of the hook to form the rear
portion of the head. Now wind thread forward--again tight turns--until
hair is evenly distributed around the hook shank all the way up to the
eye of the hook. For more detailed instructions on my unique method of
turning hair into hackle, see my book Scratching the Surface.
Trim deer hair head to desired shape.
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... angling for two of the more challenging piscatorial predators in the Garden State.
Monday, September 30, 2013
Tying the Beastmaster General by Jack Gartside
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