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fishin for trout in lakes
yesterday my son and i went fishin at a local lake in blowin rock ,
(appropriately called trout lake). he fished with his spin rod, i with my fly rod. he had an artificial worm on his hook, which landed him his first trout. i, in spite of trying a few different flies, got nothing. my question is this. in the absence of a hatch, when fishing for trout in lakes, does one approach fly selection differently than when fishing streams? you ever fish in there mark? snakefiddler |
fishin for trout in lakes
snakefiddler wrote:
my question is this. in the absence of a hatch, when fishing for trout in lakes, does one approach fly selection differently than when fishing streams? Yes. Definitely. It's another world. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
fishin for trout in lakes
snakefiddler wrote:
my question is this. in the absence of a hatch, when fishing for trout in lakes, does one approach fly selection differently than when fishing streams? Yes. Definitely. It's another world. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
fishin for trout in lakes
On Sun, 15 Aug 2004 18:40:42 -0400, "snakefiddler"
wrote: yesterday my son and i went fishin at a local lake in blowin rock , (appropriately called trout lake). he fished with his spin rod, i with my fly rod. he had an artificial worm on his hook, which landed him his first trout. i, in spite of trying a few different flies, got nothing. my question is this. in the absence of a hatch, when fishing for trout in lakes, does one approach fly selection differently than when fishing streams? Oh, definitely...either the "Tovex Surprise" or "BUZ-TA 312" patterns are surefire fish getters...of course, when all else fails, there's the "Ro-10-1," but you can't use it in FFing-only waters. Here's one recipe for the Tovex: Hook: 1/1.1 Body: dubbed with Tasmanian Tiger Tail: Guacamayo Hackle: Grizzly Mamo Wings: Shellduck hen HTH, R |
fishin for trout in lakes
On Sun, 15 Aug 2004 18:40:42 -0400, "snakefiddler"
wrote: yesterday my son and i went fishin at a local lake in blowin rock , (appropriately called trout lake). he fished with his spin rod, i with my fly rod. he had an artificial worm on his hook, which landed him his first trout. i, in spite of trying a few different flies, got nothing. my question is this. in the absence of a hatch, when fishing for trout in lakes, does one approach fly selection differently than when fishing streams? Oh, definitely...either the "Tovex Surprise" or "BUZ-TA 312" patterns are surefire fish getters...of course, when all else fails, there's the "Ro-10-1," but you can't use it in FFing-only waters. Here's one recipe for the Tovex: Hook: 1/1.1 Body: dubbed with Tasmanian Tiger Tail: Guacamayo Hackle: Grizzly Mamo Wings: Shellduck hen HTH, R |
fishin for trout in lakes
Very helpful rw, you must be very proud of yourself!
Mark "rw" wrote in message ... snakefiddler wrote: my question is this. in the absence of a hatch, when fishing for trout in lakes, does one approach fly selection differently than when fishing streams? Yes. Definitely. It's another world. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
fishin for trout in lakes
Very helpful rw, you must be very proud of yourself!
Mark "rw" wrote in message ... snakefiddler wrote: my question is this. in the absence of a hatch, when fishing for trout in lakes, does one approach fly selection differently than when fishing streams? Yes. Definitely. It's another world. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
fishin for trout in lakes
Unless you don't care what you catch, you would likely need to use at least a sinkin'
tip line and a nymph pattern. You could catch some brim or bluegills along the banks, but you aren't likely to catch any trout in the shallows, unless you just happen upon some along the banks. Most likely, any lake trout are going to be in the deeper waters feedin' on nymphs or minnows--dependin' on their size of course. Never fished there myself. Mark "snakefiddler" wrote in message ... yesterday my son and i went fishin at a local lake in blowin rock , (appropriately called trout lake). he fished with his spin rod, i with my fly rod. he had an artificial worm on his hook, which landed him his first trout. i, in spite of trying a few different flies, got nothing. my question is this. in the absence of a hatch, when fishing for trout in lakes, does one approach fly selection differently than when fishing streams? you ever fish in there mark? snakefiddler |
fishin for trout in lakes
Unless you don't care what you catch, you would likely need to use at least a sinkin'
tip line and a nymph pattern. You could catch some brim or bluegills along the banks, but you aren't likely to catch any trout in the shallows, unless you just happen upon some along the banks. Most likely, any lake trout are going to be in the deeper waters feedin' on nymphs or minnows--dependin' on their size of course. Never fished there myself. Mark "snakefiddler" wrote in message ... yesterday my son and i went fishin at a local lake in blowin rock , (appropriately called trout lake). he fished with his spin rod, i with my fly rod. he had an artificial worm on his hook, which landed him his first trout. i, in spite of trying a few different flies, got nothing. my question is this. in the absence of a hatch, when fishing for trout in lakes, does one approach fly selection differently than when fishing streams? you ever fish in there mark? snakefiddler |
fishin for trout in lakes
"Mark Bowen" wrote in message ... Unless you don't care what you catch, you would likely need to use at least a sinkin' tip line and a nymph pattern. You could catch some brim or bluegills along the banks, but you aren't likely to catch any trout in the shallows, unless you just happen upon some along the banks. Most likely, any lake trout are going to be in the deeper waters feedin' on nymphs or minnows--dependin' on their size of course. Never fished there myself. Mark "snakefiddler" wrote in message ... yesterday my son and i went fishin at a local lake in blowin rock , (appropriately called trout lake). he fished with his spin rod, i with my fly rod. he had an artificial worm on his hook, which landed him his first trout. i, in spite of trying a few different flies, got nothing. my question is this. in the absence of a hatch, when fishing for trout in lakes, does one approach fly selection differently than when fishing streams? you ever fish in there mark? snakefiddler thank you for the HELPFUL response, op. there isn't any boating in there, so i'm just fishin off the bank. got some pretty good distance out there this evenin, but of course, nothin like you're saying would be sufficient to catch trout. maybe my son got lucky yesterday. either way, i'm glad for him. hey, ya wanna try that spot again this week? if you do, maybe tomorrow? i have a friend who is a singer songwriter and has a gig comin up at a coffee house in w. jefferson on the 28, and she wants me to play it with her, so if i say yes, i will be practicing with her a couple of nights this week, but i know that we won't start practicing yet tomorrow. whatchya think? snake |
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