December Freshwater Fly of the Month: Hemmingway Caddis
December Freshwater Fly of the Month: Hemmingway Caddis
The Hemingway Caddis is a variation of the Henryville, developed by Mike
Lawson, with a Peacock Thorax and a Blue Dun Hackle for both the collar
hackle and the palmered rib. It was named for Jack Hemingway, son of
Ernest Hemingway, who preferred this variation when he fished the
Henry's Fork in Idaho as he thought the Henryville Special was a little
too brown in coloration.
The Hemingway Caddis is often used within Sierran streams, particularly
Spring Creeks and slow-moving waters. Lawson usually ties the Quill
Wings with two segments having the convex sides facing each other with
some overlap. This is a quill flatwing style. Often, you will also see
this pattern tied with one segment in a "Tent" style similar to the
Kings River Caddis.
Either way, the quill wings provide a very good caddis sillouette. The
colors of the hackle and body can be matched to the caddis found on the
water.
The Hemingway Caddis has a extremely realistic narrow wing profile, is
heavily hackled for good skittering and its charcoal color tone matches
many real caddis. This is an excellent pattern to pull out when you have
a late evening caddis hatch coming off. The darker color really shows
up well in flat light and the profile is a dead-on match.
This is a very realistic looking dry caddis. It will float well in both
still water and fast bubbling streams. It truly is a pattern Hemingway
himself would be proud to fish with.