![]() The Bird's Nest By Skip Morris
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1. If you want to add lead, do so and secure the lead under thread; if not,
start the thread two-thirds up the shank, tie in a section of fibers as tail
(long; about three-quarter shank length). Trim off the fibers' butts. Tie
in copper wire at the bend.
2. Dub a slightly tapered abdomen up two-thirds of the shank. Rib the
abdomen with five or six turns of the copper wire. Secure the wire's end
with thread and then add a half hitch.
3. If the fibers of your teal or mallard feather aren't squared at their tips,
draw them to whatever angle to the stem will square them. Strip off, or snip off,
the section. Hold the section flat over the shank as shown. The tips should
reach to the far edge of the hook's bend.
4. With your thumb and finger, roll the fibers around the shank and then
press the fibers tight to the abdomen. Take a loose turn of thread around
the fibers, and then pull the thread tight. Add a few tight thread turns. Trim
the fibers' butts.
5. Build a thorax over the front third of the shank. Build and complete a
thread head to complete the Bird's Nest.
For more great flies, check out:
Beginning Fly Tying,
Intermediate Fly Tying and Advanced
Fly Tying.
Credits: From The Art of Tying the Nymph published
by
Frank Amato Publications. We thank them for use permission!
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