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Bass on the fly
Steve Nyhan wrote: ... I believe a fly rodder can out fish a bait caster in shallow water anytime. deja vu!! (eh, petah?) 6-8 weight rod, bass leaders, big popping bugs in various colors... hula poppers, dixie devils, worm/leech ties, etc. fish edges and holes in lilly pads, fish the drop offs. and...a good baitcaster or spin fisherman will kick your butt everytime, shallow or deep water... that's my opinion. jeff |
Bass on the fly
On Sun, 23 May 2004 14:47:12 -0400, Jeff Miller
wrote: Steve Nyhan wrote: ... I believe a fly rodder can out fish a bait caster in shallow water anytime. deja vu!! (eh, petah?) 6-8 weight rod, bass leaders, big popping bugs in various colors... hula poppers, dixie devils, worm/leech ties, etc. fish edges and holes in lilly pads, fish the drop offs. and...a good baitcaster or spin fisherman will kick your butt everytime, shallow or deep water... that's my opinion. jeff ya, ya, ya -- that's why I said the fly rodder has to think out of the box. If you're gonna fish like a baitcaster, take a baitcaster. PJ would cast into the salad and rip the worm across the top. A short (9 footer) fly rod wouldn't be able to cast as far nor keep the fly line out of the salad. I spent a lot of time casting to fish that weren't home, fishing the cold, empty shallows. The wind played merry hell with the lighter line but it was of no concern to PJ's baitcaster. I didn't play to the strengths of the fly rod that day. Give the weather we had, the fish weren't going to be in the shallows until the temperature rose. They weren't going to be moving too fast either. They were either in deeper water or under the salad that probably acted like an insulating blanket for that water. I bet the temps under the salad were one or two degrees warmer than the open shallows. I should've been fishing the canals like a UK stillwater angler, dropping damselflies and dragonflies into the canels and retrieving them very slowly along the bottom. Would've driven PJ nuts as I took the better part of five minutes to retrieve a single cast, but that in of itself would've made the day interesting. :)) If I ever went back, I'd take a two-hander, blast casts 90' to 100' down the length of the canals using a shooting head, then slowly retrieve a team of flies along its length. Don't think I wouldn't pick up a few? The interesting thinks about models, is that far more people follow existing ones rather than use their brains and a bit of moral courage to try and forge new ones. Fly fishing for largemouth exactly like a gear chucker is a losing propostion in my books. IIRC, we had a similar discussion before I left for NC. Peter turn mailhot into hotmail to reply Visit The Streamer Page at http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...ers/index.html |
Bass on the fly
"Jeff Miller" wrote in message news:in6sc.4324$zE6.5@lakeread06... Steve Nyhan wrote: ... I believe a fly rodder can out fish a bait caster in shallow water anytime. deja vu!! (eh, petah?) 6-8 weight rod, bass leaders, big popping bugs in various colors... hula poppers, dixie devils, worm/leech ties, etc. fish edges and holes in lilly pads, fish the drop offs. and...a good baitcaster or spin fisherman will kick your butt everytime, shallow or deep water... that's my opinion. jeff Hi, Jeff - Recently in SouthWestern Nova Scotia, where there is excellent smallie fishing, several tournamnets have been won by fly rodders!!! Bill http://www.tightlines.ca |
Bass on the fly
On Sun, 23 May 2004, Peter Charles wrote:
Would've driven PJ nuts as I took the better part of five minutes to retrieve a single cast, but that in of itself would've made the day interesting. Yeah, I've done the fly fishing thing quite a bit side by side with hardware and bait *******. It's not very productive because there are differing boat handling requirements that are suited to the different methods. Mu |
Bass on the fly
bill - no kidding? but, i thought we were talking about warmwater
fishing for largemouth... still, i have no doubt a good flyfisherman will do well, and even on occasions catch more...i just believe, day in and day out, a good spin or baitcaster will catch more largemouth. during our smallmouth float on penns, wolfgang - who is a much better fisherman than i - caught more small smallies on the flyrod than i did on a spinning rod...but i caught almost as many as he did, and i definitely caught the largest of the smallies that day. jeff Bill Curry wrote: Hi, Jeff - Recently in SouthWestern Nova Scotia, where there is excellent smallie fishing, several tournamnets have been won by fly rodders!!! Bill http://www.tightlines.ca |
Bass on the fly
"Jeff Miller" wrote in message news:Eclsc.7558$zE6.6723@lakeread06... bill - no kidding? but, i thought we were talking about warmwater fishing for largemouth... still, i have no doubt a good flyfisherman will do well, and even on occasions catch more...i just believe, day in and day out, a good spin or baitcaster will catch more largemouth. during our smallmouth float on penns, wolfgang - who is a much better fisherman than i - caught more small smallies on the flyrod than i did on a spinning rod...but i caught almost as many as he did, and i definitely caught the largest of the smallies that day. Not sure that's true. I caught only four smallmouth. Rock bass were another story altogether......got over a dozen of those. I'd be willing to risk a small to moderate wager on my chances with a fly rod against a spin fisher for smallmouth under most conditions, but I think it would be a sucker bet for largemouth. Wolfgang |
Bass on the fly
This is also not a fair assessment. Flyfishing requires stealth and if
you are fishing with someone who is pitching hardware the fish will become far more suspicious and go back in cover. This is the reason crankbaits work so effective the splash may cause them to retreat but the bead sound causes them to attack. The same goes with a good worm fishermen the fish feel more comfortable in deep cover attacking even if they are suspicious. The flyrodder relies on stealth to bring the bass to his popper which causes comotion that is suppose to resemble a natural behavior. Hardware fishing will try to envoke an anger strike (most of the time) and have the bass throw caution to the wind. A flyrodder tries to resemble a natural prey and have him attack prey. You can't really fish next to a hardware fishermen in the same boat and expect to consistently win. Flyfishing and baitcasting are two entirely different styles of angling. You cannot be an effective flyrod basser using baitcasting techniques just as you cannot be an effective baitcast angler using flyrod techniques. They are not the same. Tha is my point and the reson why I feel so many bass flyrodders are not as successful. They are trying to use the same technique as the baitcaster with a flyrod. It's the same as comparing an artificial angler to a live bait fishermen. Steve Sebring, FL |
Bass on the fly
On Mon, 24 May 2004 16:51:47 GMT, Steve
wrote: [snipper-rooney] Steve Sebring, FL I think I said that somewhere around here, once or twice before. Use your flyrod like a baitcaster and the baitcasting guy will whup your ass every time. Use it the way Nature intended and it'll be a different story. My point about models is that we fly guys persist in using the baitcaster model when we go after LM and lake living SM. Time for a better one. Peter turn mailhot into hotmail to reply Visit The Streamer Page at http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...ers/index.html |
Bass on the fly
Peter Charles,
I most whole heartily agree Steve |
Bass on the fly
"Jeff Miller" wrote in message news:Eclsc.7558$zE6.6723@lakeread06... bill - no kidding? but, i thought we were talking about warmwater fishing for largemouth... still, i have no doubt a good flyfisherman will do well, and even on occasions catch more...i just believe, day in and day out, a good spin or baitcaster will catch more largemouth. during our smallmouth float on penns, wolfgang - who is a much better fisherman than i - caught more small smallies on the flyrod than i did on a spinning rod...but i caught almost as many as he did, and i definitely caught the largest of the smallies that day. jeff Bill Curry wrote: Hi, Jeff - Recently in SouthWestern Nova Scotia, where there is excellent smallie fishing, several tournamnets have been won by fly rodders!!! Bill http://www.tightlines.ca Hi, There are no largemouth in Nova Scotia, so my experience with them is rather limited - only on "out of Province" excursions, and even then I tend to target trout, not bass, I must admit. My point was simply that in tournament conditions up here, where presumably one would be using the "best" method for catching the biggest and most smallmouth, many people are now choosing to use fly fishing gear. I do not participate in tournaments, preferring to fish on my own or I am out with sports. Tournaments aside, there are many locations in the Province which are, I believe, better suited for fly fishing for smallies than for using hardware - for one thing the lakes which get the most pressure, although admittedly up here the pressure is much less than is likely to be seen below the border, hold shallow water opportunities for a fly rodder in a canoe simply because you can go where the bass boats don't. I would also say that smallie fishing is a relatively new thing up here, and so we are all learning - but one thing I've learned is that the TV show methods certainly do not hold up for what we can do here. I can wade or use a canoe (and soon will have a float tube to try) and catch all kinds of bass in places where the trailed boat with all the gear (and weight) can't get in. We also catch some very large bass, as big as I hear others catching, on a fly rod - although I have never tried a direct "you fish with spinning gear, I'll use fly rod" comparison. Largemouth, it would appear from others comments, would be different? Bill http://www.tightlines.ca |
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