Fishing The Fly Scotland Forum

Sandy Nelson

DHE's
« on: 19/05/2013 at 20:51 »
Having become a bit of a convert to the DHE i have some wee questions for those who swear by them.

I have been using costal deer hair for the size 12 and 14's i've been tying and it is perfect, well in my eyes anyway, but i notice Bob reccomends using snowshoe on smaller sizes and i have historically preferred using Snowshoe on all my DHE style emergers (i have not been keen on tying with Deer hair as i thought it was too spiky  :X1 What a spaz :roll), but i have problems with it floating which is why i've never been a fan of the fly :X1
So having discovered that a DHE tied with Deer hair actually floats :z16 and catches fish i want to try tying the 16's and 18's with some Deer hair instead of snowshoe.
Lakeland have deer hair patches designed for Compara duns that is supposed to suit smaller sizes, has anyone tried it? would it be better than the coastal deer i've been using or just the same? i reckon i could tie the 16's with the coastal if need be, but you know what like :X2

Sandy

Ben Dixon

Re: DHE's
« Reply #1 on: 19/05/2013 at 21:19 »
Comparadun hair is good stuff.  Orvis sell it, ask Kev about it  :z4


Cheers

Ben

Noel Kelly

Re: DHE's
« Reply #2 on: 19/05/2013 at 22:02 »





Eddie Sinclair

Re: DHE's
« Reply #3 on: 19/05/2013 at 22:05 »
Sandy,
I have been using the comparadun hair from Orvis this season on DHE from size 16 to 20 and it works just fine and floats extremely well. I have put some gink on the hair although I do not know if I need to.

Eddie.

Allan Liddle

Re: DHE's
« Reply #4 on: 19/05/2013 at 23:42 »
Yup you can do it with good quality deer hair Sandy, but the bulk kinda kills the desired profile.
Switch to the Dirty Duster  :wink

Andy Finlay

Re: DHE's
« Reply #5 on: 20/05/2013 at 06:42 »
I've seen there's a DHE & a DHE 2.0 step by step video by Hans Weilenmann on you tube. Is there any benefit of one vs the other?

Sandy Nelson

Re: DHE's
« Reply #6 on: 20/05/2013 at 08:12 »
Yup you can do it with good quality deer hair Sandy, but the bulk kinda kills the desired profile.
Switch to the Dirty Duster  :wink

Cheers Alan

I've the DD tied down to 24's in various shades already :z18 I was just thinking a size 18 DHE would be rather good and getting the profile was my concern, while maintaining the floatability, hence the question. Having found the snowshoe to be less than ideal, for me anyway :z6, and being impressed with the deer hair option on the larger hooks i figured a finer hair would do the job nicely, i just didn't know which hair would be finer than the coastal deer i've got.

Will get some comparadun hair to see what it is like, i see i can get it dyed a nice dun colour too, hmmmm.......size 18 BWO's.......... :z12  It has to be tried :z16

Thanks for all the tips though guys :z18

Sandy

Peter McCallum

Re: DHE's
« Reply #7 on: 20/05/2013 at 08:20 »
Interesting your comment re snowshoe. I've never had a problem with it sinking Sandy, putting gink on it should float it and its really fine. :z8

Sandy Nelson

Re: DHE's
« Reply #8 on: 20/05/2013 at 08:36 »
Peter

I've tried snowshoe loads of times as i have had an aversion to Deer hair for most of my tying life :roll, I have a deep seated belief (that is slowly dissapating :z16) that fish spit out spiky flies, so have always gone for a nice soft material where i can. Hence the spiders and CDC fetishes :z7
I have a few Shoes in different colours and really like tying with it, but i can never get the bloody stuff to float for very long, even with Gink,aquel, watershed or dry shake, Dry Shake works best but makes the body float too :X1.
I often end up using it with CDC on top, that works but adds to the tying time and trickiness and i'm getting lazy in my old age :X2. Plus the profile of the DHE doesn't lend itself to the use of cdc.

Having persuaded myself into trying Deer Hair again, due to the comments on the forum, i'm impressed with the way it works so wanted a smaller size solution.

My only thought would be, when i tie with Snowshoe hair i remove all the soft underfibers to make the tying slimmer, could this be the floatation problem? perhaps its the underfibers that help it float or retain floatant, i know from looking at them the longer fibres tend to be more glossy :z8 Any ideas?

Sandy

Iain Goolager

Re: DHE's
« Reply #9 on: 20/05/2013 at 11:19 »
Yup, it’s a natural progression to emulate the success of the 12’s and 14’s in smaller sizes but I too have had concerns when tying 16’s and a severe doubt about using deer hair for anything smaller.
I tied a few 16’s a couple of weeks ago with ‘coastal’ hair (I use this word cautiously as I remember Peter Smith raging about the indiscriminate use of this term for any type of fine deer hair)
I thought that the attraction of deer hair is the fact that it is hollow, which holds air, therefore the longer the hair section the more air that is trapped. For all intents and purposes each strand is a long cone and if tying small flies and subsequently only using the finer tips of the hair then wouldn’t that negate the primary properties of the material? I’m assuming that at some point the tip of the cone becomes solid.
Ok so the hair bundle could be ginked and act like a shuttlecock but does the potential hassle merit its’ use over CDC?
Don’t you think CDC is a suitable alternative Sandy?
I had this snowshoe discussion with Peter & Kev not too long ago with one (I’m not going to say which in-case I misquote anyone) advocating the use of the underfur & the other saying to junk it.
Perhaps they might help me out and give correct details.
Both these guys are top dressers and can obviously make either or work, as for me I think it is sh8t…………..if I keep the underfur (or some of ) I get a bulky ‘tie in’ & if I remove the underfur I get a long uneven whispy thin mess of rubbish that won’t float.  I have been enlightened many times in the past and am hoping that an upcoming trip north will allow me to see how it’s done in reality.
I bought 5 or so colours of ‘shoe’ thinking that I was about to embark on a game changer when I had lost all faith in CDC (this was the dark ‘pre gel’ era) but it turned out to be a major disappointment.
Iain

Sandy Nelson

Re: DHE's
« Reply #10 on: 20/05/2013 at 12:02 »

Don’t you think CDC is a suitable alternative Sandy?


Not for a DHE the way i've been tying them :z6, It is perfect for shuttlecock style flies and i use it all the time. I also spin the cdc for small F-Fly type emergers and it is lovely, but My DHE's have been working best with a comparadun style wing, i've been tying it so it fans out to form half a halo, a lot like clipping the bottom of a full hackle :z7 (this is the obvious option, as Alan said earlier) I'll post a picture of what i've been doing when i get home later :z16 It may just be the way i've interpreted the pattern, but i thought i had the concept in my head when i tied them, they certainley work better than anything i've done before on these lines, so don't intend to change anything.
 CDC would collapse if it was tied in a similar way and although it would float, it wouldn't give the impression of struggling legs that the deer hair gives or the outriggers to cock the fly in the right way, i've a feeling thats what happens with the snowshoe too as it is possibly,also too soft to fan out properly, so floats for a few casts until the fan collapses and then starts to sink :z6.

I've ordered some Comparadun hair, so we shall see if i can do what i'm thinking, or whether going to an 18 DHE is a practical step too far, But Eddie is getting it to work so i am encouraged :z18

Your comment about the cone and the tips, i'd agree with completely :z16, which is why i asked if there was something that existed that suited the situation ,as i reckon if i used the Coastal hair the tips might not float like they do on the bigger flies.

All good stuff, thanks again

Sandy

Iain Goolager

Re: DHE's
« Reply #11 on: 20/05/2013 at 12:16 »
Ok,
Comparadun, 180 degree or 135 degree? Leg profile visible above water to the trout or actually touching the surface?

I tie in a decent amount of hair and this can be fanned out but I tend to be agricultural and let it sit ‘willy nilly’. I have thought about a sparse CDC fibre spun collar, which I think is a good addition to many a pattern to sort of break up the boring  outline of the DHE.

Iain

Sandy Nelson

Re: DHE's
« Reply #12 on: 20/05/2013 at 12:30 »

Comparadun, 180 degree or 135 degree?

 :X1 I'll get my protractor out when i get home, But I probably go about 137.67' on a 14 and vary it by the square root of the decrease/increase in hook size. This of course is entirely dependant on the curve of the shank and the available gape for the specific pattern of hook, otherwise the the abdomen will not sit at the prescribed angle in the water which is a closely guarded secret :wink

As for CDC collars, all i can say is Hairy Thorax :z4

Sandy

Allan Liddle

Re: DHE's
« Reply #13 on: 20/05/2013 at 12:44 »
135 degree for DHE's  :z16 :wink

Iain Goolager

Re: DHE's
« Reply #14 on: 20/05/2013 at 12:51 »
TWATZ  :X2

Mike Barrio

Re: DHE's
« Reply #15 on: 20/05/2013 at 13:15 »
 :z4  :z4  :z4

Marc Fauvet

Re: DHE's New
« Reply #16 on: 20/05/2013 at 13:39 »
 :z4 :z4 :z4

tons and tons of most excellent points in the comments above  :z16

hey Sandy !
personally, for the wing, atm i can't see past EP International fibers. (permanently treated to float)
as a 'standard dry fly' it floats all day.
pull the fly under, it pops back up, all day.
slime it on a fish, rinse it off, false cast twice and it's back to floating all day.

it comes in many colors so just mix to match the strands just like dubbing and trim to shape after the completion of the fly.
it's such an easy material to work with.

cheers,
marc

Sandy Nelson

Re: DHE's
« Reply #17 on: 20/05/2013 at 14:13 »
Hi Marc

Interesting point, but i have a Question, where does the positive buoyancy come from? I can understand waterproofing the fibres to help them float on the surface, if they don't collect the moisture then they won't sink easily, but how does it pop back up again once it goes under? The deer hair has air inside it so acts like a lifejacket and i could see how it floats, i understand how CDC traps air in the feathers due to the tiny hairs, but i can't see where the EP gets this property? although it must hold air to pop back up Any ideas?.
I'm not being awkward i'm genuinely interested as i use EP for saltwater flies and it sinks well once it is saturated, in fact one of the properties i use it for, is it dries quick on a backcast so it becomes lighter and easier to cast, but once in the water it displaces its air quite quickly so it can sink.

What do you waterproof it with? I've got EP in all sorts of colours and this could be an interesting experiment

Nice fly by the way :z16

Cheers

Sandy

Peter McCallum

Re: DHE's
« Reply #18 on: 20/05/2013 at 14:25 »
135 degree for DHE's  :z16 :wink

135 ??? you been getting the protractor out again Al  :X2 :X2 :z12

Allan Liddle

Re: DHE's
« Reply #19 on: 20/05/2013 at 16:30 »
Yup if it dosen't make the exact grade it gets cut up again  :z4 :z4  :X1 :z4 :z4

TWAT'S a place in Orkney  :z4 :z4

Sandy does the positive boyancy not come from the thorax, wing material and any floatant against the 'keel' effect of the hook?

Marc Fauvet

Re: DHE's New
« Reply #20 on: 20/05/2013 at 16:50 »
hi Sandy,
although not stated on the website, i suspect they might be hollow similar to the much more expensive Tiemco Aero-Wing or polypropylene. (can't state as fact)
this specific product is named EP International Trigger Point made specifically by Mick Hall for EP.
this is not the same fibers as the standard EP used for streamers and such.

funny D'Oh ! moment happened to me whilst chatting with Mick Hall at a fair in Stockholm two years back. i was telling him how much i liked the EP TP fibers and he just smiled/smirked and told me he was their creator !  :roll :roll :roll
(and proceded to give me a handfull of packs  :z12)

floatant: the only thing i ever use is Aquel. being an 'ingrained habit' from other materials i'll usually put some on the EP TP as well but it probably doesn't need it, specially in slow or still waters.

cheers,
marc

Sandy Nelson

Re: DHE's
« Reply #21 on: 20/05/2013 at 17:04 »
Marc

That would make sense, it explains why the EP i tried sunk :z6, will keep an eye peeled for some.

Alan

By Positive buoyancy, i was referring to the fact that when it is submerged, the fly resurfaces. The thorax, wing, floatant, etc all help the fly float, but it requires air to make the fly rise back up through the water. I was wondering how it achieves this and i think Marc has now answered that query :z18

Cheers

Sandy

Irvine Ross

Re: DHE's
« Reply #22 on: 20/05/2013 at 19:37 »
, but My DHE's have been working best with a comparadun style wing, i've been tying it so it fans out to form half a halo, a lot like clipping the bottom of a full hackle
Sandy

Sandy

Comparadun style???? that's not the way Bob Wyatt ties them, nor do I.

http://www.fishingthefly.co.uk/forum/index.php?topic=2528.0

I suspect if you try comparadun style with Snowshoe hair it will not be very successful. You need to trap air in the clump of hair forming the wing to make it float consistently for a long time. If you fan out the hair it will not trap air between the fibres.

Irvine

Iain Goolager

Re: DHE's
« Reply #23 on: 20/05/2013 at 20:05 »
Nice fly Marc  :z16
I must admit that I do like natural over synthetics but beggars can't be choosers.

A picture of the B100 DHE in size 16, as said I really am dubious about tying them smaller using deerhair.




Might Davy Wotton have a material to resolve this problem?

Iain

Ben Dixon

Re: DHE's
« Reply #24 on: 20/05/2013 at 20:13 »
I've tied them down to #18 and caught well on them.  They are a pain to tie in that size but I refuse to use snowshoe, mainly because Kev says I should but also because it is a pig to tie with  :z4

Cheers

Ben

 




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