This week’s Throw Back Thursday Fly is the John Atherton No. 5 Dry Fly.
John Atherton (1900 – 1952) was an artist by trade and incorporated his impressionistic art into the flies he tied.
Interestingly, he didn’t name the flies, choosing instead to number his dry flies from 1 to 7, representing lighter to darker shades of mayflies. He also created wet flies and nymphs with the same naming convention and impressionistic characteristics.
His flies were created with “the appearance of life” as a central theme for the flies he developed to replicate colors and tones, textures, and light reflections combined in natural insects. Taking a closer look at the flies and you’ll see the mixture of materials making the body and a round tinsel. For hackle, Atherton used mixtures of cree or brown, dun, and ginger mixed with grizzly to create the life-life image of the real insect. For a wing, he liked wood duck because of the “speckled look” created lifelike appearance.
If you’d like more information about John Atherton, I encourage you to read Robert Smith’s John Atherton Dry Flies post on his website, The Sliding Stream. Smith is the author of an excellent book about the history of soft hackles.
The North Country Fly: Yorkshire’s Soft Hackle Tradition by Robert L. Smith – I purchased mine from The Rogue Anglers website.
Fly Pattern
Tail:
Dark cree, or a mixture of red brown and grizzly
Wings:
Wood Duck
Body:
Hare’s ear, using the short specked hairs on the ear and the pinkish tan hair at the base of the ears.
Rib:
Narrow oval gold tinsel
Hackle:
Dark cree or a mixture of red-brown and grizzly.
Hook sizes:
Standard dry fly, 18 – 10
Enjoy…go fish, stay safe!
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