There is one early season Mayfly that emerges from the bottom with its wings dragging behind it and that's the lovely Quill Gordon. Traditional wets that represent this fly have wings that are way too long and too pronounced. These wings are gossamer like and not densely made. You should keep this in mind when and if you tie a QC.
Theodore Gordon used stripped peacock herl for the body and for a good reason (at least for him). This stripped herl has a nice light colored band that runs along the center of the herl and gives a good segmented look to this fly. Finding a good peacock herl that has a good center band can be a problem. Here's a way around it.
Tail - Two to four blue dun hackle fibers
Body - Two or three layers of 140 denier rusty brown thread
Rib - 12/0 WHITE thread to get the segmented look. (this is the important thing)
Hackle - two turns of soft, wet fly hackle ( I use cheap India or Chinese rooster hackle)
Wing Stub - I like a short group of mallard feathers that don't extend back to the tail but to the middle part of the body AND I'll take the mallard and mark it up with a grey sharpie to get that blue dun look. (this is for BobT)
The fly to the right is tied without the rib but it still works and looks good. Either one of these flies will represent the Quill Gordon AND the next fly that will grace the Spring time stage - The Hendrickson.
The traditional way wet flies are fished is to cast long and across the current and then to retrieve the fly back in short strips. Try not to do it. Fish wets the way that Gordon fished them - cast up and across and let the fly drift down and below you. As it straightens out below you through in the "Leisenring Lift" to finish the presentation. Most of the time hits will occur during the drift if you're doing it right. If you strip the small wet fly back against the flow of the current it will appear to have the strength and agility of an otter which an insect doesn't. You may fool some recently stocked fish but not for long.
Current Conditions
We've been lucky. One big snowstorm in December and then minor nuisance snow since then. Keep fishing the Swift but spread it out. I went to two long, seldom fished sections and caught trout within the last two weeks. Also remember that the mornings have been cold and will stay way for the next few weeks. Hitting the river at 7am is not as wise as hitting it in late morning as air and water temperatures rise. Water temperature rules everything as far as trout are concerned. Air temperature is for YOU!!!
Ken