| 
Hook: | 
12-14 | |
| 
Thread: | 
Rust brown | |
| 
                       Rib: | 
Peacock herl | |
| 
Rib 2: | 
Vintage, fine gold twist wound along front edge
  of peacock herl rib | |
| 
Palmer: | 
Ginger cock hackle slightly smaller than front
  hackle | |
| 
Body: | 
Orange hare’s mask | |
| 
Hackle: | 
Ginger cock hackle with a faint, medium dun list,
  slightly larger than the palmer hackle | |
| 
James Leisenring includes the Doctor Lyte Palmer
  in The Art of Tying the Wet Fly & Fishing the Flymph (1941)
  that he has “found at times very deadly.” It was originally dressed by one of
  his “fishing companions, an expert flytier, Dr. H. W. Lyte of Allentown,
  Pennsylvania.”  Leisenring's dressing of the Doctor Lyte Palmer calls for: 
“HOOK  13,14 
SILK  Orange. 
HACKLE  Pure honey
  dun of rich color and medium stiffness—two turns. 
RIB  Fine peacock
  herl of the sword feather—one of the very long, thin fibers. 
RIB #2  Very narrow
  gold tinsel wound right alongside of the peacock herl rib and in front of it. 
RIBBING HACKLE 
  Pure honey dun hackle slightly smaller than the front hackle. 
BODY  Dingy-orange
  worsted wool.” 
Sylvester Nemes leaves Doctor Lyte Palmer out of
  the dressings he included in his coverage of Leisenring’s Art of Tying the Wet Fly from his Two
  Centuries of Soft-Hackled Flies (2004), but it is likely the sort of fly Joe Humphrey had in mind in
  his phenomenal textbook, Trout Tactics (1981), in his
  observations on fishing  the wet fly, particularly in his Pennsylvania
  limestone home waters:  “When caddies hatches are heavy in April or
  early May, try this: fish only heavy, broken pocket water—forget the flats.
  Use a short line and work downstream and fish only the pockets in behind
  boulders and breaks. Use a well-dress palmered #10 or #8 wet fly, and bounce
  the flies in the pockets. A long rod of nine feet or better can be an
  advantage when trying to hold wet flies in one specific area. Heavy riffs or
  currents push through the middle of a line and drag your flies out of
  productive water at edges of the currents. The trout never get a good look at
  your fly or refuse them as they drag; a longer rod can hold them there since
  there is less line on the water.” 
Leisenring’s Doctor Lyte Palmer recalls one of
  the four palmer flies, the Golden Palmer, that Richard Bowlker included in his
  1757 edition of The Art of Angling,
  but which his son Charles excluded from his own 1774 edition: “His body is
  made of orange-coloured silk, ribbed down with a peacock’s harle and gold
  twist, with the red hackle of a cock wrapt over the body: The hook, No. 5, or
  6, according to the water you fish in.”  | 
Wednesday, August 2, 2017
Doctor Lyte Palmer
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That's a new one to me but I really like the way it looks. Nice job Neil
ReplyDeleteThanks, Mark - it's more involved than care for, but I imagine I could put them on the bank with it in the Smokies.
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