HOW I CAME TO MY TYING
TECHNIQUE
by Hans van Klinken

For many people parachute flies
are difficult to tie. Strange as it may sound, in spite of the
bad start with fly tying, I have never had any serious
problems with producing a parachute. Of course I had my
difficulties tying off the parachute but that's quite normal,
especially when you don't know the right technique. Once
having found a good method, it can be tied as simply as any
other dry fly. My greatest problem was that I was not
satisfied with the securing and durability of the hackle.
Although I fished intensively for grayling it sometimes
happened that I hooked a trout. Those trout often destroyed
the parachute during their fight for freedom. From that moment
my interest in making more durable flies was a priority. It
took me a whole winter season to find a technique that
protected the hackle against those sharp little trout teeth.
In this period of experiments and improvements I also looked
for a much easier way to tie off the parachute hackle.
Because I used the normal parachute technique for only a very
short time, I will pay not much attention to it. I will only
can say that probably the most difficult step with parachutes
is the securing of the hackle. This is because most people tie
off the hackle at the eye of the hook. Using this method you
have to pull away the hackle fibres first which makes the tie
off very difficult. There are some special finger techniques
possible to prevent this problem but I haven't seen many tiers
using them. Although this is a solution to make the tying
easier I still don't like it. It has no effect on the
durability of the hackle. The hackle quill goes directly from
the wing post to the hook eye, which makes it easily breakable
by the sharp teeth of a trout. In my opinion it is a fragile
construction because when the quill breaks, the parachute
comes off very quickly. It happened to me quite often while
using my first parachutes. During one of my first improvements
I made some extra windings through the thorax before securing
the hackle. This makes the hackle more durable, but also the
tying more complicated.
TYING TIPS
The following style of dressing took me four months to develop
and has been received enthusiastically whenever I have
demonstrated it. I have no special name for it but I never saw
anyone using this technique. I also can imagine that there
have been fly tiers who used the same method with normal
thread even a long time before I was born. New is probably my
idea to use Danville's spiderweb to secure the hackle. My
method has been designed to make winding a parachute a simple
operation, while forming an effective, durable fly at the same
time. I never say that this improved technique is the best, (which
is Tomas Olson's melting techniques of course) but it is at
any rate a very simple and quick method and I hope you will
try it and form your own opinion. During classes and workshops
I am able to teach my technique to all participants in less
than one hour.
THE DRESSING OF THE KLINKHAMER SPECIAL

Hook :
Partridge GRS15ST, size 8-10 for salmon and trout.
: Partridge CS54 size 6 for salmon
Thread : Uni-thread, 8/0, grey
or tan for body
: Spiderweb for parachute
Body :
Light-tan poly 2 dubbing
Wing : One
strand of white poly-yarn
Thorax : Three strands of
peacock herl
Hackle : One large blue
dun hackle
For flies tied on the CS 54 I double or triple the amount of
Poly yarn, Peacock herl and the number of hackle windings.
THE TYING TECHNIQUE
Step 1

For the CS54 it is necessary to reshape the hook between thumb
and forefinger. Place the hook in the vice and wrap the entire
shank with the tying thread. This avoids the difficulty of a
slipping wing when the fly is finished. Cut off a strand of
poly-yarn and taper the tip with your scissors before tying
in; this is to be sure the underbody will be as slim as
possible. Secure the yarn onto the top of the hook shank with
the thread at the position shown in the drawing.
Step 2 &
Step 3
 
Wrapping your thread down to the bend and backwards.
Try to make a nice tapered underbody. I like a slim and
well-tapered under body. Be very critical in this stage! The
better the under body the more beautiful the completed fly.
Step 4

Tie in the hackle so it lies in the same orientation as the
yarn. Form an upright wing by tying up the yarn and hackle. (see
drawing 2) This to be sure you have no problems with the
hackle in the other tying steps.
Step 5 & 6
 
Apply a small amount of dubbing to the thread. Take as much
dubbing just to cover the under body. Tie the body very slim
and well tapered. Start as close to the barb as possible. How
thinner the body the more successful the pattern. Wind it
along the shank and stop just behind the wing and cut off
surplus poly or use the last piece of dubbing as underground
for the thorax. In that situation it is not really necessary
to cut off surplus. I recommend trying both techniques because
for some people it is much easier to produce a better-looking
thorax when you have made an under body.
Step 7
 
Tie in three peacock herl fibres. You can also tie the strands
in at their tips, this will help you to create a much nicer
thorax. I secure the strands well also behind the wing. This
provides that the thorax will come off.
Step 8
TIE OFF and varnish.
ATTENTION NOW
TAKE YOUR BOBBIN WITH SPIDERWEB!!!!
Step 9

Now turn the hook in the vice, so that the wing is horizontal,
with the bend uppermost. Grasping the tuft of poly-yarn, put
on the spiderweb, wind several turns around the base of the
poly-yarn and create a rigid wing base on which to wind the
hackle.
Wind the hackle around the base. Start at the top of your wing
base, taking each successive turn closer to the hook shank.
Take as many turns as the type of hook requires. Small flies
about 5 windings and bigger flies at least 7 or 8 windings.
Remember that the fly has to float mainly on the parachute. A
lot of people wind their hackle in the opposite way, working
up the wing, the hackle is less durable and may still come off.
When you work from top downwards it ensures a compact
well-compressed hackle and a most durable construction.
Pulling the hackle tip to the opposite direction as the wing
and secure with a few turns of spiderweb. Secure well around
the base of the wing between the wound hackle and body. Using
your whip finisher. Trim away the waste hackle tip and hackle
fibres that are pointed down. Take your varnish applicator and
apply some lacquer on the windings just under the parachute.
Step 10

The completed fly
WHAT DO FISH TAKE THIS LARGE PARACHUTE FLY FOR?
I must confess that my entomology was just started to
develop when I first developed the Klinkhamer, and it was
meant to be a copy of what I had found in the stomach of a
good grayling which were caddis pupae right on the point of
hatching. It was their curved body, which I tried to imitate
with the grub hook. The emerging wings could be seen as the
parachute hackle. This combination surely gave rise to the
fly's appearance. Now, years later and with a reasonable
knowledge of Scandinavian insect-life I misinterpreted the
function of the fly. Today, I see my Klinkhamer not only as
wonderfully effective fly or series of flies when the basic
pattern is altered to accommodate emerging sedges, midges,
upwing flies etc. but also as a perfect imitation for many
different types of large struggling terrestrials. This is the
only reason I can come up to take it even when there is no
evidence of a hatch. In this instance, it makes a truly
wonderful searching dry fly pattern.
SOME FISHING TIPS
I mainly fish and present my fly down streams. I have too
many personal arguments to describe all the details but one of
them is that I prefer a drift with the fly in front. I like to
think as a fish and believe that many fish will refuse the fly
because they simply discover the leader or shadow of the
leader with upstream fishing. With very fine leaders it is not
a real problem but with salmon fishing it is. This is what I
discovered in Scandinavia and since I fish down streams the
catches improved considerable.
Although not many people like braided leaders I love them.
Especially tapered intermediate ones. Because they give extra
power and weight to the leader it prevents wind knots and
produce better casting with large dry flies. To secure the
leader to the fly line I push the leader over the fly line and
tie it off with tying thread and a drop of waterproof
superglue. It is a very smooth, durable and unbelievable
strong connection and had never a snap. At the tip I make a
loop on which I directly put on the tippet. With this
technique I reduce the knots in the leader until a minimum.
Back to dry flies |