jd_smith wrote:
If you stroke the feather as you are wrapping it around the hook
That is the key. First, you only need a relatively small amount of the feather right at the tip. Strip it so that the barbs are only just longer than from your tie in point to the back of the hook bend, and cut the stem so that there is no more than 1/4 inch of bare stem. Tie it in by the stem
on the side of the hook facing you, not the top of the hook, with the concave side of the feather towards the hook and your tie in point right at the base of the last remaining barbs. As you lift your hackle plier to make the first (and only) wrap,
GENTLY stroke the barbs on the side of the stem facing you downward away from the stem. Make one wrap. With the hackle pliers holding the feather straight up, make a wrap of thread, then a second wrap to trap the part of the feather that you will cut away. Snip it closely, hold the feather barbs back out of the way with your thumb and forefinger and make one or two tight wraps right at the forward base of the hackle. While again holding the barbs back out of the way, make a 4 or 5 turn whip finish to form the head, each wrap in front of (towards the eye) the previous one, ending right at the base of the hook eye. Tighten the thread and snip it close.
The feathers on fully half a partridge wing (from the shoulder) have soft stems and are easy to wrap especially because you will use only the tip part of the feather (but you cut the feather so that you still tie in by the stem). You are only going to make one wrap so it doesn't take much feather.
The mottling is very interesting, the feathers are the appropriate size and wrap well, and if I included a full partridge skin in the kit it would almost triple the price. The only alternative is bagged partridge feathers and they not what you would want to use.
EDITED to say OOPS, I was thinking of the Killer Kebari when writing the above, as I have just recently decided to include a partridge wing as part of the kit. For a Sakasa Kebari, the tying sequence would be substantially different, I would make two wraps, but I would still stroke the feather barbs down away from the stem on each wrap.