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Hemingway
Tied by David Barron
  • Thread: 6/0 olive
  • Overwing: Mallard duck wing feather
  • Hackle: Med to dark dun neck feather
  • Body Hackle: Med to dark dun neck feather
  • Body: Olive fine poly dubbing
  • Thorax: Peacock herl 3-4 strands
  • Hook: Tiemco 100, 102Y, Dai-Riki 305 or equivalent, sizes 12-20
  • Underwing: Wood duck flank feather
  • Tying Instructions
    Many people are aware that the Hemingway Caddis is named after Jack Hemingway, but few know the rest of the story behind this deadly adult caddis pattern.
    Back in the early 70's, Jack would take a May trip over to the Henry's Fork to fish about the time of the Mother's Day caddis hatch. Before coming he would get in touch with Rene' Harrop and order a medium dun or gray colored caddis pattern similar to a Henryville Special. Rene' would tie up a bunch of the flies for Jack, who would be satisfied and go off fishing.
    At this same time Mike Lawson was teaching school and his wife; Sheralee and Mike were doing a lot of commercial tying on the side. Doug Swisher had put them in touch with a fellow named Cal Gates on Michigan's famous Ausable River. They would tie about 3,000 dozen flies a year for Cal. He would call up and describe the different caddis on the Ausable and they would tie variations of the Henryville Special in different colors to fill his orders.
    In 1977 when Rene' and Mike were opening the Henry's Fork Angler Fly Shop in Last Chance, Idaho, they sat down and figured out which dry caddis patterns they should feature. Mike and Rene' filled the spent egg laying adult niche with a pattern Sheralee invented called the Spent Partridge Caddis. To cover the adult niche they decided on a pattern similar to the ones Rene' tied for Jack, which wasn't much different than what Mike and Sheralee had done for Cal.
    Jack's early season flies were much lighter in shade than their fly, which over the years has become even darker. For lack of a name for the fly, Mike called it a Hemingway Caddis. He never got around to asking Jack if it was all right to use his name, but one day he came into the shop and bought a whole bunch of them, so they took that as a sign of his approval.
    Mike has received great reports on the success of the Hemingway Caddis from the Bighorn and Yellowstone Rivers. It should work anywhere you see dark caddis. If you stock only two dry caddis patterns in your fly box, make sure the Hemingway Caddis is one of them, and the Spent Partridge Caddis is the other one.
    Fishing Tips
    The Hemingway caddis is a fly that is hard to fish wrong. With it's full hackled body it can be fished dead drift or can be fished with a active retrive making it look like a caddis skidering across the water. I have found that if the fly does not work dead drift that by adding movement to the fly it will induce strikes.
    David Barron
    Ballwin, MO United States

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