An outside influence got me digging through my more unusual feathers this
weekend to inspire me into a personal challenge and I found a bag of Eider
feathers a friend had sent me from Denmark.   They are a really nice sub for
smaller spey flies or a classic salmon fly pattern that comes to mind.
They probably wouldn't work on the longer/larger wall hangings we're so fond
of today.

I'm not familiar with an Eider duck????    Is that a common duck?   Since my
feathers came from an overseas friend I wasn't sure if they were available
here.

I've never seen them in a fly shop.   All you duck hunters out there...
Where do these come from and are they common here?  I suppose I could google
them but I thought I would let some experienced duck hunters chime in here.
I thought it might be more interesting to hear what they have to say.

Pete, you're right the Ostrich and Rhea feathers seem a little over the edge
to me also.  Unless you're goal is to tie an artistic modern version in
"spey style".

Deb

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Peter Gramp
Sent: Monday, December 03, 2007 6:41 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [VFB] Spey Hackle?

 

Mark- 
  I apologize for misplacing your address, but if you send your snail-mail
address to me off-list, I can show you what "spey hackle" is (at least a
modern version; in the truest fashion, the coque from a special breed of
roosters around River Spey, Scotland is what was used... but those birds are
thought extinct.  We have decent 'modernizations' these days, though, as
you'll soon see :)  ) 

  The best description I've heard is "Immagine a web-less Coque Rooster-tail
feather" and one of the most confusing, yet descriptive phrases is "take an
entire Ostrich Herl plume, strip the barbs from the secondary flues, leaving
the flues as if hackle barbs, then picture a thread-thin quill, and it's a
decent representation"... but all examples I have contain a far higher "barb
count" than that second mental- picture... You'll see when I send some
examples.  :)  It used to be that Blue Heron was a substitute, but that's
illegal to use these days. The best substitute I've seen these days (that is
legal) is Eider Duck flank. Another common feather is Blue- Eared Pheasant,
which is actually shorter in quill- length and has 'stringier' barbs than
the pictures of older/ "original" hackle I have... which really isn't
original stuff, but just an artist's rendition!  heheheh- go figure.
Regardless, there's several different examples out there, and I'd love to
send some if you'd like. 

Tight wraps,
Pete Gramp
pete dot gramp at gmail dot com



On Nov 26, 2007 3:01 PM, Mark Beresford II <[EMAIL PROTECTED] >
wrote:

maybe a stupipd question, but "Spey Hackle"...

Spey Casting....Spey Hackle?? 

 

what the hecks spey hackle?? lol, thanks!

 

mark.

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