![]() |
|
Snowy Metolius River TR
I like reports with text and photos together, and have been trying to
figure out how to do it without a web site of my own. This is what I came up with: http://tinyurl.com/chvoy Click the photos to see larger versions. JR |
Snowy Metolius River TR
"JR" wrote in message
... I like reports with text and photos together, and have been trying to figure out how to do it without a web site of my own. This is what I came up with: http://tinyurl.com/chvoy Click the photos to see larger versions. JR I've looked for a decent way to post text and pictures and haven't taken the time to learn to use Frontpage properly - it'll come about the same time I can explain the general theory of relativity, I suppose. This is neat. Thanks for posting. Time to get out for some winter fishing. -- Bob Patton (change bgzqsdq to charter to reply) .. |
Snowy Metolius River TR
JR typed:
I like reports with text and photos together, and have been trying to figure out how to do it without a web site of my own. This is what I came up with: http://tinyurl.com/chvoy Very nice, but too cold for me. "JR possesses excellent problem solving abilities." -- TL, Tim (presently involved in performance reviews) ------------------------ http://css.sbcma.com/timj/ |
Snowy Metolius River TR
"JR" wrote .. This is what I came up with: were fish rising to the midges? or otherwise seen ( ah, flashing ;-) taking them? I've seen places/times when midges were hatching heavily but the fish weren't interested, simply not enough food value to bother with, I guess But, fish seen feeding but that 'can't be caught' are a passion with me ... where's my long johns? |
Snowy Metolius River TR
William Claspy wrote:
It was about 6 degrees here this morning, and near future temps are supposed to be 20 degrees below normal. I fear you won't be seeing any fishing trip reports from this quarter for at least a couple of months! Sorry to hear that. Even mid to high 30s is too cold for sane people to be standing in rivers g, but at least you're not cleaning ice out of your guides every five minutes. Single digit temps? Uh uh. |
Snowy Metolius River TR
Larry L wrote:
were fish rising to the midges? or otherwise seen ( ah, flashing ;-) taking them? Nope. (Which may help explain my lack of "luck")..... g I've seen places/times when midges were hatching heavily but the fish weren't interested, simply not enough food value to bother with, I guess I've always assumed that in the Met the trout may feed on midge larvae and pupae that happen to drift right into their feeding stations but won't move much to take them. That's why while waiting for the BWO hatch--which in winter is almost always preceeded by this midge hatch--I will fish a midge pupae or emerger as a dropper under a BWO dry. As I said, though, it's only produced one fish over the years. Lately, I've taken to swinging streamers while waiting for the BWO hatch. These have taken a half dozen fish the past few outings. |
Snowy Metolius River TR
|
Snowy Metolius River TR
"JR" wrote Lately, I've taken to swinging streamers while waiting for the BWO hatch. These have taken a half dozen fish the past few outings. " If I can catch trout on dry flies, I will try dries until I fail. My second choice is to sight fish with nymphs. If that also fails, my next choice is a streamer. I would rather fish a streamer, however, than blind fish a weighted nymph. I would just as soon watch snow melt as blind fish a weighted nymph. " - Mike Lawson - I've had the pleasure of some long chats with Mike, as well as reading some of his books, and find that we nearly always have a very similar 'philosophy' on things fishing ... probably because we enjoy the same types of water ... fishing the streamers will keep ya warmer too G |
Snowy Metolius River TR
On 12/7/05 2:24 PM, in article
, "Larry L" wrote: "JR" wrote Lately, I've taken to swinging streamers while waiting for the BWO hatch. These have taken a half dozen fish the past few outings. " If I can catch trout on dry flies, I will try dries until I fail. My second choice is to sight fish with nymphs. If that also fails, my next choice is a streamer. I would rather fish a streamer, however, than blind fish a weighted nymph. I would just as soon watch snow melt as blind fish a weighted nymph. " - Mike Lawson - I've had the pleasure of some long chats with Mike, as well as reading some of his books, and find that we nearly always have a very similar 'philosophy' on things fishing ... probably because we enjoy the same types of water ... fishing the streamers will keep ya warmer too G There is a nice interview with Mike on the Fly Fish Radio podcast site, http://www.flyfishradio.com. Bill |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 03:40 AM. |
|
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2006 FishingBanter