Paso 1
I shift the fibers of a CDC hackle along the stem
Paso 2
I tie the hackle on a hook grub, as if I were tying the Mirage 2.
Paso 3
In the same point, I tie a stripped Peacock quill and cut the excess.
Paso 4
Keeping tense the extended body and the quill, I beginning to wrap around them the tying thread with wide turns.
Paso 5
When I reach the length that I intend to give to the extended body , I stop and go back, crossing the tying thread coils with those wrapped previously. Arrived on the hook, I stop.
Paso 6
Taking tense the CDC hackle, I wrap the peacock quill around the extended body.
Paso 7
When I arrived on the hook, I tie the quill and cut the excess.
Paso 8
I cut also the excess of the extended body.
Paso 9
I raise the rest of the hackle upright.
Paso 10
I choose two tips of rooster hackles.
Paso 11
I tie the hackles tips on both sides of the extended body.
Paso 12
I trim the hackles excesses
Paso 13
In the same point I tie a small grizzly hackle and trim excess.
Paso 14
Still in the same point, I tie a peacock herl, wrap it around the shank of the hook, to get the chest, and cut the excess.
Paso 15
I wrap two or three turns of grizzly hackle around the chest to imitate the legs and cut excess.
Paso 16
I reverse the CDC hackle over the chest and tie it near the eye of hook.
Paso 17
Keeping tense the tip of the hackle, I shift the fibers back and tie them next the eye of hook. Cut the excess of the hackle.
Paso 18
Tie the head of the fly
Paso 19
When I tie the head of fly, I lower the CDC fibers horizontally.
Paso 20
I cut a part of the CDC fibers to imitate the antennas of the midge and the fly is finished.