Hook:
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14-16
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Thread:
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Green
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Body:
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Embroidery thread – DMC 987 dark forest green
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Hackle:
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Woodcock
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T. E. Pritt lists his Greensleeves, No. 48, as
an alternative to the Greentail or Grannom in Yorkshire Trout Flies (1885) and its subsequent edition, North-Country Flies (1886). In the
former, he notes that the dressing “differs little from the Greentail, and is
probably a fanciful edition of that fly, useful only on dull, sultry days,
and occasionally in the evening. Not generally dressed, but will now and then
kill fairly.” He dresses it as follows:
“WINGS.-Hackled with a
feather from the inside of a Woodcock’s wing of from a hen Pheasant’s neck.
BODY.-Bright green
silk.
HEAD.-Ditto.”
Pritt refers to the Greensleeves as a
“fanciful edition” of the Greentail. In What
the Trout Said (1982), Datus Proper defined what fanciful means in
relation to British dressings: “The term is British, and Americans are often
unaware that fancy does not mean gaudy. There is room for confusion, since
some fancy flies also happen to be gaudy. Many others are sober creations
that happen to be products of an angler’s
fancy. John Waller Hills says that a fancy fly may imitate insect life
generally but cannot be ‘connected with any particular species or genus or
group.’ By way of example, he gives Stewart’s famous Black, Red, and Dun
Spiders, which are small, drab, wet flies for upstream fishing. Hills then
distinguishes fancy flies from ‘general’ flies, which ‘imitate a genus or
group, but not an individual.’ The difference is a fine one.”
In the later edition of Pritt’s text, North-Country Flies (1886), Pritt adds
more specific information on the lineage for the Greensleeves, noting that it is
“Another form of Ronalds’ ‘Gold-eyed gauze wing,'" which Alfred Ronalds includes in the Fly-Fisher’s Entomology (1836) as No. 34, a fly dressed to match a July hatch. The Gold-eyed gauze wing, he
explains, “is rather a scarce insect upon some waters, but where it is found
affords great sport on windy days.” Ronalds dresses the fly thus:
“BODY. Very pale
yellowish green floss silk, tied on with silk thread of the same colour.
WINGS AND LEGS. The
palest blue dun hackle which can be procured.”
The name Greensleeves likely derives from
an old English folk ballad with North Country associations. The ballad “A Newe Northen Dittye of ye Ladye Greene
Sleves,” was registered by Richard Jones in the autumn of 1580. What the connection between the fly and a folk ballad might connote is any
angler’s guess.
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Wednesday, August 13, 2014
Greensleeves
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awesome fly neil well done buddy
ReplyDeleteCheers, Rich!
DeleteThat fly would fish well in our western waters for sure. Trout and Panfish would be all over that!
ReplyDelete