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-   -   Fun with hoppers (http://www.fishingbanter.com/showthread.php?t=23282)

Tim J. August 14th, 2006 01:50 PM

Fun with hoppers
 
My wife and I were on a rock-hunting expedition Saturday, and almost every
rock I turned over sent five or six crickets running for cover. Hmmmm. . . .

Early Sunday I went out with the trusty KPOS 3wt and some various hoppers. I
tied on one that I know I received during one of the roff swaps, kind of a
Madame-X looking thingy with the bullet head, chenille body, and green
striped rubber legs. It was the only fly I used for the next three hours,
and I thank whoever submitted the fly to the swap. For those in the know
(you know who you are), I was fishing in very clear water about a mile south
of the the "secret spot", walked into the water at the southern most
"artificial lures only" sign and fished down from there. I was in the water
all the way down to where a downed tree blocks further progress, which is
about 3/4 of a mile or so. It's probably a good thing the tree was there,
because it was getting mighty cold in that water. Incredibly fun fishing
from one side or the other to the opposite bank, and relatively few casts
without some action. Lots of healthy, small brookies, many small 'bows, and
enough larger ones to keep it interesting. Not one to count, I won't bore
you with the details, but I *did* catch more than my spin-casting partner,
which is all that matters. ;-)

BTW, whoever tied that hopper, please send more. The one I have now looks a
bit ratty.
--
TL,
Tim
-------------------------
http://css.sbcma.com/timj



Tim J. August 14th, 2006 01:55 PM

Fun with hoppers
 
Tim J. typed:
I was
fishing in very clear water about a mile south of the the "secret
spot",


Here's what this area looks like:
http://css.sbcma.com/timj/pics/Swift030603%20004.jpg
--
TL,
Tim
-------------------------
http://css.sbcma.com/timj



George Adams August 14th, 2006 03:10 PM

Fun with hoppers
 

Tim J. wrote:
Tim J. typed:
I was
fishing in very clear water about a mile south of the the "secret
spot",


Here's what this area looks like:
http://css.sbcma.com/timj/pics/Swift030603%20004.jpg
--
TL,
Tim
-------------------------
http://css.sbcma.com/timj


Tim,

Try tying up a few Madam X's about size 10, all black. I would guess
the fish think they are crickets. Over the past 10 years, this is the
most productive late summer/early fall pattern I have used.


Tim J. August 14th, 2006 03:53 PM

Fun with hoppers
 
George Adams typed:
Tim J. wrote:
Tim J. typed:
I was
fishing in very clear water about a mile south of the the "secret
spot",


Here's what this area looks like:
http://css.sbcma.com/timj/pics/Swift030603%20004.jpg


Try tying up a few Madam X's about size 10, all black. I would guess
the fish think they are crickets. Over the past 10 years, this is the
most productive late summer/early fall pattern I have used.


I'll do that. IIRC, we had the same discussion last year at this time. I
always forget about hopper patterns for some reason.
--
TL,
Tim
-------------------------
http://css.sbcma.com/timj



daytripper August 14th, 2006 10:17 PM

Fun with hoppers
 
On Mon, 14 Aug 2006 10:53:17 -0400, "Tim J."
wrote:

George Adams typed:
Tim J. wrote:
Tim J. typed:
I was
fishing in very clear water about a mile south of the the "secret
spot",

Here's what this area looks like:
http://css.sbcma.com/timj/pics/Swift030603%20004.jpg


Try tying up a few Madam X's about size 10, all black. I would guess
the fish think they are crickets. Over the past 10 years, this is the
most productive late summer/early fall pattern I have used.


I'll do that. IIRC, we had the same discussion last year at this time. I
always forget about hopper patterns for some reason.


This time of year, banging big dries off the bank can be a lot of fun in that
river. *Far* more fun than the alternative of fishing the fricken' minutiae
that's carried under the dam.

It appears there's very little water coming over the flashboards now
(finally!) Did you happen to get the temperature of the river while you were
shivering in it? ;-)

/daytripper (thinking I might chill in it on Wednesday)

Tim J. August 14th, 2006 10:44 PM

Fun with hoppers
 
daytripper typed:
On Mon, 14 Aug 2006 10:53:17 -0400, "Tim J."
wrote:

George Adams typed:
Tim J. wrote:
Tim J. typed:
I was
fishing in very clear water about a mile south of the the "secret
spot",

Here's what this area looks like:
http://css.sbcma.com/timj/pics/Swift030603%20004.jpg

Try tying up a few Madam X's about size 10, all black. I would guess
the fish think they are crickets. Over the past 10 years, this is
the most productive late summer/early fall pattern I have used.


I'll do that. IIRC, we had the same discussion last year at this
time. I always forget about hopper patterns for some reason.


This time of year, banging big dries off the bank can be a lot of fun
in that river. *Far* more fun than the alternative of fishing the
fricken' minutiae that's carried under the dam.

It appears there's very little water coming over the flashboards now
(finally!) Did you happen to get the temperature of the river while
you were shivering in it? ;-)


-1" (that's about where it resided)

/daytripper (thinking I might chill in it on Wednesday)


Mmmmmmmm. . . . Wednesday. . . . I might be able to swing some time off in
the PM, 'tho Thursday PM would be better. 'You wanna see about getting
together to talk politics and religion? ;-)
--
TL,
Tim
-------------------------
http://css.sbcma.com/timj



daytripper August 14th, 2006 11:21 PM

Fun with hoppers
 
On Mon, 14 Aug 2006 17:44:09 -0400, "Tim J."
wrote:

daytripper typed:
On Mon, 14 Aug 2006 10:53:17 -0400, "Tim J."
wrote:

George Adams typed:
Tim J. wrote:
Tim J. typed:
I was
fishing in very clear water about a mile south of the the "secret
spot",

Here's what this area looks like:
http://css.sbcma.com/timj/pics/Swift030603%20004.jpg

Try tying up a few Madam X's about size 10, all black. I would guess
the fish think they are crickets. Over the past 10 years, this is
the most productive late summer/early fall pattern I have used.

I'll do that. IIRC, we had the same discussion last year at this
time. I always forget about hopper patterns for some reason.


This time of year, banging big dries off the bank can be a lot of fun
in that river. *Far* more fun than the alternative of fishing the
fricken' minutiae that's carried under the dam.

It appears there's very little water coming over the flashboards now
(finally!) Did you happen to get the temperature of the river while
you were shivering in it? ;-)


-1" (that's about where it resided)

/daytripper (thinking I might chill in it on Wednesday)


Mmmmmmmm. . . . Wednesday. . . . I might be able to swing some time off in
the PM, 'tho Thursday PM would be better. 'You wanna see about getting
together to talk politics and religion? ;-)


Thursday might work. We'll see how it goes.

daytripper August 18th, 2006 02:48 AM

Fun with hoppers
 
Just to close the sub thread, Tim and I played hooky on the Swift this
afternoon, and bumped into George Adams in the bargain. It was a perfect 10 of
a day, the river was back to its usual "sure looks just like a western spring
creek" self now that the flood waters have finally run off, and the trouties -
brookies, browns and bows today - were accommodating.

Some *real* nice fish in the river today. We landed some nice strong rainbows
pushing 15" and real thick through the middle, and with the water around 60°
they weren't coming to hand quickly, and were more than ready to shoot off
once released. Good stuff.

Mostly dry fly fishing today, I used one #18 parachute BWO for most of the
fish caught. Very satisfying to take fish in this river on dries when it's
down to its historically normal thin, slow, and gin-clear condition. I also
took a new-to-me nymph tie out for a test drive and caught a half-dozen fish
on it pretty quickly - reassuring, as I had already tied two dozen of them in
a couple of sizes and hate wasting vise time on dud patterns.

Finally, as I am apparently the first roffian to witness Tim actually catching
a trout, I feel compelled to mention I saw him catch at *least* four trout
today, including two very handsome rainbows that he must've put fifty casts to
before getting that perfect drift...

/daytripper (That's dedication! Or compulsion :-)

Tim J. August 18th, 2006 03:33 AM

Fun with hoppers
 

daytripper typed:
snip
Finally, as I am apparently the first roffian to witness Tim actually
catching a trout, I feel compelled to mention I saw him catch at
*least* four trout today, including two very handsome rainbows that
he must've put fifty casts to before getting that perfect drift...


Hey - I saw that, too! And, for George, they were caught on that Ultra
Fine 2wt so it has now been properly broken in. That rod is a real kick
to get a decent size fish on, and casts like a dream, especially for a
sub-par caster like me. Mine were all caught on this E.C. Caddis:
http://gula.org/roffswaps/detail.php?page=FS2004&id=8 - thanks, Svend.

/daytripper (That's dedication! Or compulsion :-)


I just figured after fifty casts, those freakin' fish were bound to
think the hatch was on. :)

It was great getting together with both of you fine companions (I can
say that now that we all caught some decent fish) on one of the finest
New England days we've had in a long time - barely a hint of August.
--
TL,
Tim
---------------------------
http://css.sbcma.com/timj/



Wayne Harrison August 18th, 2006 03:37 AM

Fun with hoppers
 

"daytripper" wrote

Finally, as I am apparently the first roffian to witness Tim actually
catching
a trout, I feel compelled to mention I saw him catch at *least* four trout
today, including two very handsome rainbows that he must've put fifty
casts to
before getting that perfect drift...


so, you're saying that the swift is a trout zoo?

yfitons
wayno(there must have been something in the water...)




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