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March Brown
Dun (Parachute Tie)
Hook: Tiemco
TMC 100 #12
Thread: Dark
Brown 6/0
Tail:
Brown Microfibbetts
Abdomen/Thorax:
Scintilla Colour #78 Ginger
Wing:
Dark Brown Deer Hair
Hackle:
Brown or Dark Grey
| 1/ Tie
in your thread just behind the hook eye. Wind back to
a point roughly 1/4 to 1/3 along the hook shank and
towards the rear of the fly. This is the point at which
you will tie in your deer hair wing post. Use the photo
to the right to gauge exactly how far to take the thread.
Once you are happy with the way it looks proceed to
Step 2.
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| 2/ Take
a small selection of deer hair fibres to be used as
the wing post of the pattern. Measure off for length
along the hook shank, the wing should be roughly equal
in length to this part of the hook. Try to not grab
too much or it will cause the fly to fall over as will
too tall a wing.
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| 3/ Tie
in as shown. For a right handed tier as is the case here
pinch the deer hair to the top of the hook shank with
the thumb and forefingers of the left hand. Using the
right hand take several 'loose' turns hard against the
fingers of the left hand, going around the hair and the
shank, getting tighter as you move forward towards the
hook eye. We don't want the wing to flare but all hair
to the front can as it will be trimmed. |
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| 4/ Now
that you have the secure again pinch the wing flat with
the fingers of your left hand and using your scissors
in your right cut the excess deer hair as close to the
hook as possible. When done add a couple of tight turns
again to anchor it securely to the top of the hook.
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| 5/ Now
comes the easy part! Hold the wing upright/vertical
with your left hand and grab the thread with your right.
Take turns around the wing in a clockwise direction
until the wing stands up and you have a nice base of
thread in place to later wrap your hackle around. The
amount of tension to use comes through practice, but
one trick it to every few wraps around the deer hair
add one around the hook shank. |
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| 6/ Next
wrap the thread down to the rear of the hook. Select
some Microfibbetts or if you don't have them just use
brown hackle fibres. Measure off for length against
the hook shank as we did earlier and tie them in. Trim
the excess and then select some dubbing and apply a
small amount to the thread.
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| 7/ Wind
this dubbed thread forward to the wing of the fly to form
the abdomen. You can see here I have deliberately skip
wrapped sections to show through a little of the brown
underbody of thread. While the natural dun is very dark
in colour his underbody is lighter and so we use this
lighter colour dubbing as we are concerned with what the
fish sees not what we see. Remove excess dubbing and move
on. |
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| 8/ Now
select a hackle to suit the hook size and tie in. The
hackle should be tied in on the far side of the wing
and shiny side towards you. Make sure it is out of the
way of the next step which is tying the abdomen of the
fly. Wind the thread to the eye of the hook and again
select some dubbing. Dub a small amount of dubbing to
the thread again as we did in Step 6
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| 9/ Take
this newly formed rope of dubbing and begin to wind back
towards the wing post. Don't worry about the large bump
of thread as the thorax should be bigger anyway and a
small amount of dubbing over the top will give the correct
profile for this pattern. When complete remove any excess
dubbing. |
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| 10/ We
are now ready to wind the parachute style hackle. Being
careful not to break the hackle wind it around the wing
post in a counter clockwise direction. Use between two
and three turns with each successive turn beneath the
previous one. When complete take the thread and make three
horizontal turns catching the hackle feather and locking
it in place. The first over the feather, second under
and the third over it again. Pull the thread forward to
hook eye and tie off. |
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| 11/ This
is just a photo from above to give you an idea of the
amount of hackle required. This is about the perfect
amount for most parachute dun ties. Also notice the
slightly tapering body just like the real thing.
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| 12/ This
is just a photo from below to give you an idea of the
amount of the proportions required.
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The Pattern
The March Brown emergences are
largely confined to mid Spring and mid Autumn. Distinct from
most other mayflies due to their size and colour, they are
very prominent amongst fly fishers. Particularly noticeable
on the Goulburn as their peak emergences coincide with low
water conditions, they are much talked about and revered with
many anglers having specific patterns for all stages of this
sometimes brilliant hatch.
The nymph of this insect, which
will be the next Fly of the Week, is darker brown and has
a light underbody. The dun also has a slightly two toned coloration
while the spinner has the brilliant
colours obvious in the photo. Many mistake these spinners
for the rusty coloured spinners of the Kossie that appear
most evenings at this time of year although whether the fish
worry too much is anyone's guess.
To imitate this dun we have stayed
with a classic parachute tie in the correct colour and size.
The parachute dun is the most effective way to imitate the
sub imago stages of our mayfly species, its profile and correct
presentation fooling many fish every season. In this case
we have used a prominent deer hair wing which is in keeping
in line with the naturals. A lighter coloured body would at
first appear to be incorrect but we are trying to imitate
what the fish sees as opposed to what we see from above. As
the colour of the underbody is fairly light we have used,
with great success, this ginger coloured dubbing that in fact
is more a tan/brown colour. Pretty spot on in this case. While
the darker hackle could possibly give the impression that
the upper body is in fact darker we do not see this as a major
factor. The main characteristics
of size (#12), shape (low riding and prominent
wing) and colour (underbody and wing) are all met here.
As for presentation the final of the four necessaries
to consistently catch fish the fly always presents properly
unlike split wing patterns which often fall on their side
making them useless.
Fishing it
The pattern works very well when
duns are on the menu. While we could go on about this it really
is quite simple. Match the hatch. Pick a parachute pattern
in the correct size and coloration and fish it dead drift
over a fish. Also works very well in the slower glides with
a non beadhead nymph (March Brown or Brown Seal's Fur) suspended
below it and just above the bottom. Another favourite is just
on evening when these duns are hatching you will also often
find rustys and grey duns. Fishing a March Brown in tandem
with these other flies can be very rewarding with the two
choices for the fish. Often a godsend when the light is failing
and locating a #16 parachute tie is next to impossible. One
last situation of interest is blind prospecting. While many
use Royal Wulffs and Stimulators etc this more subdued pattern
can often work very well. Especially in the mid afternoon
period when in the bright light fish can become shy. For some
reason it just seems to work well this way.
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