The
Pheasant Tail Nymph, tied with no other materials but pheasant tail & fine
copper wire, was developed by Avon riverkeeper Frank Sawyer, who meant it to
simulate Baetis species found in the
limestone streams of southern England . Sawyer is generally credited as originator of the design, yet interestingly, Sawyer, in his writings & interviews, never seemed to contribute to that popular mythos, instead crediting an ancient Devonshire pattern, the Pheasant Tail Red Spinner, a dry fly, as the inspiration, noting that the fly fished well as a nymph once the hackle was chewed away. Also, as riverkeeper, Sawyer worked for Brigadier Carey who was a friend of George Skues & acolyte of Skue's nymphing methods & fly patterns. George Skues, widely known as 'the father of modern nymphing', was much older than Sawyer &, at the time of Sawyer's 'discovery', was already tying & fishing a soft-hackle version of the Pheasant Tail Nymph, very similar to the one pictured above. Skues tied his version with orange silk which produced the orange head still popular in our time. We in America love to build icons & hang laurels upon them, & fair to say that in many cases laurels are deserved -- there is no question that Sawyer's simple PTN has proven one of the greatest trout flies of all time -- yet, in his own comments, Sawyer, to his credit, points toward the truth of all fly development: We stand on the shoulders of all who came before us & nothing is static.
Who was first? Well... like hare's mask, references to pheasant tail as a good body material for constructing flies date back to medieval times, so safe to say the name of the first person to catch a fish on a fly made with pheasant tail has long faded to obscurity. We are thankful nonetheless.
Who was first? Well... like hare's mask, references to pheasant tail as a good body material for constructing flies date back to medieval times, so safe to say the name of the first person to catch a fish on a fly made with pheasant tail has long faded to obscurity. We are thankful nonetheless.
Since its creation, the
Pheasant Tail Nymph has spawned quite a few variants. Probably the most popular
version on our side of the water is the American Pheasant Tail Nymph, an Al Troth creation, like Sawyer's, but with a thorax of peacock herl. The APTN is one of the most
effective patterns I know for meeting baetis hatches, & covers a lot of
other mayflies as well – march browns; PMD’s; calibaetis in lakes – the
spectrum of species exhibiting brownish
coloration, & there are many. The dark thorax coloration peacock herl
provides simulates the darkened wingcase & thorax of mature nymphs at hatch
time, making this version a good emerger pattern. Though the APTN is tied with no hackle, I’ve found it to be very effective
tied as a soft-hackle, particularly when meeting emergers.
I also tie ‘Hot Spot’
versions that work as attractor patterns, using hot colors like yellow (my
favorite), chartreuse, orange, red, purple or whatever, for the thorax. The Hot
Spot versions work well for me in winter. A #8 version makes a good steelhead
nymph. And those pursuing stocked hatchery trout in the local ponds &
brooks will find the Hot Spot variants particularly effective on those fish. Also good tied with more subdued, natural thorax colorations, try olive, tan, gray or cream.
Soft-Hackle Pheasant Tail Nymph
Hook: #12-#20
Thread: rust-brown
or dark-brown
Tail: 3 to 6
pheasant tail sword tips, about 1/3 the body length -- as an alternative, I tie some with barred bronze mallard flank to mimic the tails of natural baetis & march browns in my neighborhood
Rib: fine copper
wire wound over the abdomen & thorax
Abdomen: pheasant
tail – 5 or 6 swords for a #12 – before winding, I twist these counterclockwise
about half a dozen turns, forming a rope, which blends the colors better &
makes a stronger, more segmented body (as fibers get torn out by fish, I just
clip off the unwanted appendage & keep fishing) – they will last longer if
the swords are twisted into a rope – I’ve found the E-Z Mini-Hook hackle pliers
to be the perfect tool for grasping the bundle of swords when winding pheasant
tail bodies
Thorax: peacock
herl – 2 swords, twisted, for a #12
Hackle: one
turn of brown partridge, grouse or speckled hen, stripped on one side - I apply a bit of black dubbing in front of the hackle when tying versions to fish for baetis (PMD's), red quill, march brown, calibaetis & other species of mayfly emergers that develop a dark wingcase/thorax at maturity - &
finish.
Grasping a group of pheasant tail swords with E-Z Mini-Hook hackle pliers. |
Flyfish NE Washington with Steven Bird: http://ucflyfishing.blogspot.com