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snakefiddler August 16th, 2004 09:51 PM

fishin for trout in lakes
 

"JR" wrote in message ...
snakefiddler wrote:

wrote in message


SNIPPED
I (and many people outside the U.S.) have relatively costly by-the-minute
dial-up access. Many stay on line only long enough to send messages in a
batch, download emails and NG messages in a batch, then read and write off
line. One or two posts quoting 100+ lines--the entirety of several
preceding posts--with the sole addition of ":)", or "good one", or the
equivalent, is understandable I suppose. Lots of them soon become a
costly annoyance.

\

Do what you like, of course, but you might consider it.

i certainly will :-)
snake

JR





snakefiddler August 16th, 2004 09:51 PM

fishin for trout in lakes
 

"JR" wrote in message ...
snakefiddler wrote:

wrote in message


SNIPPED
I (and many people outside the U.S.) have relatively costly by-the-minute
dial-up access. Many stay on line only long enough to send messages in a
batch, download emails and NG messages in a batch, then read and write off
line. One or two posts quoting 100+ lines--the entirety of several
preceding posts--with the sole addition of ":)", or "good one", or the
equivalent, is understandable I suppose. Lots of them soon become a
costly annoyance.

\

Do what you like, of course, but you might consider it.

i certainly will :-)
snake

JR





MichaelM August 16th, 2004 10:12 PM

fishin for trout in lakes
 

"Frank Reid" wrote in message
...



Try looking at some of the British fishing sites. They are very big on
fishing "still water."



Buzzers are the mainstay of the British lake scene. Fishing with them is
quite easy, as you just cast them out and let them slowly sink. Buzzers are
supposed to represent the chironomids (spelling?) and these are the pupa of
bloodworm larva. The adult looks like a big mosquito, and buzzes around the
waters (hence the name). I think that most lakes around the world have
something similar, and most trout in the UK lakes feed mainly on buzzers.

Most people use several buzzers at once and fish on a longish leader. The
difficult aspect of fishing buzzers is the bite detection. However, quite
often people use bright indicators that attach to the leader. These float
and provide depth setting as well as bite indication. Others use the
floating leader (with applied grease) to determine when to strike. Others
still use a bushy dryfly as the bob fly, and get the benefit of the
occasional rise at the dryfly indicator. The way to fish them is to slowly
retrieve the line at a pace only as fast as the coils in the flyline; i.e.
you just keep the line taut, and not allow any surface "coil" zig zags to
form on the surface. After a while, your line is in, and you cast it out
again.

Personally speaking, I prefer on lakes, fishing when the trout are taking
hatching buzzers. The trout being up on the surface porpoise rolling makes
for some good fun. Wading around the margins casting imitations (sometimes
a klinkhamer does a good job for these occasions) in front of a porpoise
rolling trout is exciting! Much more fun that the wait-and-watch deep down
buzzer, but if the fish are down there, then so must be your flies.





MichaelM August 16th, 2004 10:12 PM

fishin for trout in lakes
 

"Frank Reid" wrote in message
...



Try looking at some of the British fishing sites. They are very big on
fishing "still water."



Buzzers are the mainstay of the British lake scene. Fishing with them is
quite easy, as you just cast them out and let them slowly sink. Buzzers are
supposed to represent the chironomids (spelling?) and these are the pupa of
bloodworm larva. The adult looks like a big mosquito, and buzzes around the
waters (hence the name). I think that most lakes around the world have
something similar, and most trout in the UK lakes feed mainly on buzzers.

Most people use several buzzers at once and fish on a longish leader. The
difficult aspect of fishing buzzers is the bite detection. However, quite
often people use bright indicators that attach to the leader. These float
and provide depth setting as well as bite indication. Others use the
floating leader (with applied grease) to determine when to strike. Others
still use a bushy dryfly as the bob fly, and get the benefit of the
occasional rise at the dryfly indicator. The way to fish them is to slowly
retrieve the line at a pace only as fast as the coils in the flyline; i.e.
you just keep the line taut, and not allow any surface "coil" zig zags to
form on the surface. After a while, your line is in, and you cast it out
again.

Personally speaking, I prefer on lakes, fishing when the trout are taking
hatching buzzers. The trout being up on the surface porpoise rolling makes
for some good fun. Wading around the margins casting imitations (sometimes
a klinkhamer does a good job for these occasions) in front of a porpoise
rolling trout is exciting! Much more fun that the wait-and-watch deep down
buzzer, but if the fish are down there, then so must be your flies.





Frank Reid August 16th, 2004 11:56 PM

fishin for trout in lakes
 
The key to still water is getting the flies to where the fish are.

Damn, rw's right. That's way different from stream fishing.... g


Maybe I should start chargin' for this Sage(C) advice.

--
Frank Reid
Reverse email to reply



Frank Reid August 16th, 2004 11:56 PM

fishin for trout in lakes
 
The key to still water is getting the flies to where the fish are.

Damn, rw's right. That's way different from stream fishing.... g


Maybe I should start chargin' for this Sage(C) advice.

--
Frank Reid
Reverse email to reply



Tom Littleton August 17th, 2004 12:04 AM

fishin for trout in lakes
 
Frank notes:
Maybe I should start chargin' for this Sage(C) advice.


maybe you should've noted that the key to still water fishing is getting the
ANGLER down to where the fish are........God, I still chuckle when I think of
your float tube story....
Tom


Tom Littleton August 17th, 2004 12:04 AM

fishin for trout in lakes
 
Frank notes:
Maybe I should start chargin' for this Sage(C) advice.


maybe you should've noted that the key to still water fishing is getting the
ANGLER down to where the fish are........God, I still chuckle when I think of
your float tube story....
Tom


Tim J. August 17th, 2004 12:21 AM

fishin for trout in lakes
 

"snakefiddler" wrote...
snip

helpful stuff- thanks


"Don't make me [helpful]. You wouldn't like me when I'm [helpful]." - Incredible
Hulk

Please see above for [helpful] snipping tutelage.
--
HT[H],
Tim
http://css.sbcma.com/timj



Frank Reid August 17th, 2004 03:13 AM

fishin for trout in lakes
 

maybe you should've noted that the key to still water fishing is getting

the
ANGLER down to where the fish are........God, I still chuckle when I think

of
your float tube story....


Hey, aside from an occasional dunking, Snake and some of the other newbies
think I have the proverbial clue. Don't bring up that float tube, it would
ruin my fine reputation.

--
Frank Reid
Reverse email to reply




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