Tying a Feather Winged Parachute (Ginger Quill) by Davie McPhail

Loading...

Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon
Upgrade to the latest Flash Player for improved playback performance. Upgrade now or more info.
26,179
Loading...
Alert icon
Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon

Uploaded by on Jun 28, 2009

Tying a Feather Winged Parachute (Ginger Quill) by Davie McPhail

Category:

Sports

Tags:

License:

Standard YouTube License

  • likes, 4 dislikes

Link to this comment:

Share to:

Uploader Comments (DavieMcPhail)

  • Another quick Q for you... Will the B175 be too heavy for this fly??

  • Hi vickaid,

    You could get away with it in the smaller sizes like a 14 but any bigger you would need a lot more hackle to keep it up..

    All the best Davie

  • Where do you get your mallard quills from?? I'm having touble some down. Also what do you mean by ginger quill?

  • Hi vickaid,

    You will easily find Mallard wings in most tackle shops that stock fly tying materials but I bought mine from the Glasgow Angling Centre. The fly is simply named after the materials used, ginger hackle and the peacock quilled body.

    All the best Davie

see all

All Comments (22)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • Hi Davie,

    Thank you very much for your videos. I really like it and is very helpfull to me, because I am learing a lot.

    I am from Brazil, and I am certain that your flytying videos is the best in internet.

    Regards,

    Tílio

  • Hi Davie, I am hoping to start fly tying/dressing in the next 7 days, I find your videos really helpful and i'm sure will learn a lot from you..

    Thak you so much for sharing your talent with us

    Chris

  • Wonderful!!!

  • thank you very much i am having trouble tying flies with that kind of wing..now that i've seen your video, i am able to make one.. :)

  • wow...first class fly! looks very good. thank you.

  • Hi Davie. beautiful looking fly, those wings look pristine, what a great idea pulling the waste back to form a post, great lesson in tying. Regards Alan

  • @FrankB1191

    The hook`s methal is slippery indeed, but ive never had problems with my flies last 5 years. I normaly attatch the thread at the middle of the hook and make a base of thread where im going to use materials. Like a sbs "basemaking". I do never attatch my thread at the hook eye anymore.

    Im not trying to tell what`s the best. Davie is an exelent flytyer who know hes work. He can feel free to tye the way he likes, and i will tye the way i prefer

    Cheers Magnus

  • @fluebinder

    The hook's metal is slippery, and laying down a base of thread keeps the materials from sliding around. With some flies, this isn't as critical as others, but Davie's technique is not uncommon. Some tyers even apply head cement to the bare hook, and then wrap the hook shank with thread.

  • Wow, thats a really nice fly.

  • Hi Davie

    Another beautiful fly made to look easy in your hands. Not so easy for us mere mortals :-) How do you keep the mallard feather together? Mine always split ans look terrible. Am I just a clumsy git or is there a knack to it?

    I always buy my winged dries because I can't get the wings to look right.

    Cheers again for the videos

    Tom

Loading...

Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more