Marabou Tails
This method of tying a marabou tail produces an even underbody and a robust pattern. I'm illustrating it so as to provide an alternative to the technique offered in the other marabou article. In a situation where you could employ either technique you may find this the easiest and quickest way to go.
![]() | 1. Start the thread two or three hook eye widths behind the eye. Run it in touching turns to the start of the bend and then run it back to the starting point. |
![]() | 2. Take a good long bunch of marabou - long enough to produce the tail you're after and run the full length of the hook shank. This may mean buying marabou bloods. |
![]() | 3. Clip the butts with scissors to even them up. This helps ensure an even underbody. |
![]() | 4. Hold the marabou on the near side of the tying in point and using a pinch and loop catch in the feather. Make two or three tight wraps of thread making touching turns toward the bend of the hook. |
![]() | 5. Now slide your pinch hold on the marabou toward the bend. You're not trying to pull the feather through the thread wraps; instead you're aiming to keep it in sufficient tension to prevent it from twisting round the shank while you wrap the thread around the marabou and toward the bend. |
![]() | 6. Keep the bulk of the feather at the top of the shank and make securing wraps of thread toward the bend. At the end of the thread base pull the tail upwards and make three tight and close wraps to secure the root of the tail on top of the hook. Be careful not to take the thread beyond the thread base. |
![]() | 7. You now have the option to cut away the marabou butts and take the thread toward the eye and back again leaving a tidy underbody (illustrated); or you can tie in other materials at the bend of the hook right now. |
![]() | 8. This sequence was recorded while tying this olive woolly bugger. |







