This is a Green Drake pattern that Bob Jacklin ties in his shop in West Yellowstone. It's a Comparadun style with olive hackle added. He likes them bright when the hatch first comes off.
green drake hatch on the ranch
This is a Green Drake pattern that Bob Jacklin ties in his shop in West Yellowstone. It's a Comparadun style with olive hackle added. He likes them bright when the hatch first comes off.
green drake hatch on the ranch
Last edited by Byron haugh; 05-19-2014 at 11:09 PM.
Byron -
I have some of Jacklin's Green Drake flies that he calls Compara Drakes. They are similar to the fly you have shown, except that the tail is tied rather short with yellowish olive dyed deer hair, and the hackle is trimmed flat on the bottom. The wing appears to be deer hair dyed a dun grey color.
A friend had Jacklin tie a dozen of this pattern, plus some other flies, about 5-6 years ago, and gave me a half dozen of the Green Drake Compara Drake flies, all of which I still have, unused.
John
John,
A slightly different version today.
It is "greased up" which brings up a point I have been pondering for some time. When a dry fly is "greased up", it floats better and longer, and it also gives off tiny bubbles of air around the fly. Might be good for fishing. Not sure at this point.
Fly ON the water.
From below the water.
Last edited by Byron haugh; 05-27-2014 at 09:16 PM.
Okay, I'm just going by the looks of the pattern with the bottom trimmed. the only resemblance to a 'compara-anything' is that it has a splayed deer hair wing. If I had to give it some lineage or heritage, it has a lot in common with the Haystack. Having said that, it's a nice fly that just screams, 'Here Mr. trout'.
Allan