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Question about foam fly fishing.
First I want to say hello to all of you roffians.
I will just start with a little presentation as I am new to this NG. I am lurking on this group episodically since 1 year now. I am living in France, and am quite newbie to flyfishing, although I went trough my first season quite successfully. I fish trout since I am 5 or 6, but with other techniques. I have to say I was always interested in fly fishing, but I never dare go into it until last year. But since last year all my rods but the fly rod never went out of the garage... :) So here is my question, I can see many foam patterns on the net. Some are really impressionistics. I know they can be real killers on bass, even if this is not my common specy around here. But what about fishing trout with them? Arounf here I mainly have brown, and some rainbows, but rainbows are mainly introduced to help with the fishing pressur. I tried the experience to tie 2 of them, one in foam, the other with Pheasant biots and Helk hairs. The "natural one" made some brown go on it (without taking), maybe a smaller pattern would have been successfully catching. The foam one even affraid them when sight fihing. So my question is, do these foam fly catch trout? If yes, can it be possible in some geographies they would catch and in other just make the fish laugh? And why? Thanks for reading this long thread. |
Question about foam fly fishing.
"Gilbert " wrote in news:473971f8$0$26677
: First I want to say hello to all of you roffians. Welcome Gilbert, I am the first but there'll be others to answer that question...yes, there are foam patterns that will take trout, cricket and hopper patterns should be killers in summertime. That said, I am not a trout fisher (warmwater fishies are my prey) But they are popular over here, new patterns are showing up all the time in my FlyTying magazines. It is my belief that trout are trout wherever in the world you find them, (OK,I read that in a book once) you only need to present to them what they are used to seeing in the way of floating "bugs" during the proper time of year. Others here are way more knowledgeable about trout so I'll get off my soapbox and exit stage right... Frank Sr. where's our resident Kiwi when we need him? |
Question about foam fly fishing.
First I want to say hello to all of you roffians.
snip Hi Gilbert - welcome! So here is my question, I can see many foam patterns on the net. Some are really impressionistics. I know they can be real killers on bass, even if this is not my common specy around here. But what about fishing trout with them? As Frank said, hoppers work well during certain times of the year. I also carry a few mayfly patterns with foam bodies. Be sure to get the closed-cell foam if you want them to maintain their bouyancy without having to squeeze out the water every few casts. PS: Don't let Wayne Knight catch you with these flies. He gets really cranky about foam. ;-) -- TL, Tim ------------------------- http://css.sbcma.com/timj |
Question about foam fly fishing.
"Gilbert " wrote in news:473971f8$0$26677
: First I want to say hello to all of you roffians. I will just start with a little presentation as I am new to this NG. I am lurking on this group episodically since 1 year now. I am living in France, and am quite newbie to flyfishing, although I went trough my first season quite successfully. I fish trout since I am 5 or 6, but with other techniques. I have to say I was always interested in fly fishing, but I never dare go into it until last year. But since last year all my rods but the fly rod never went out of the garage... :) So here is my question, I can see many foam patterns on the net. Some are really impressionistics. I know they can be real killers on bass, even if this is not my common specy around here. But what about fishing trout with them? Arounf here I mainly have brown, and some rainbows, but rainbows are mainly introduced to help with the fishing pressur. I tried the experience to tie 2 of them, one in foam, the other with Pheasant biots and Helk hairs. The "natural one" made some brown go on it (without taking), maybe a smaller pattern would have been successfully catching. The foam one even affraid them when sight fihing. So my question is, do these foam fly catch trout? If yes, can it be possible in some geographies they would catch and in other just make the fish laugh? And why? Thanks for reading this long thread. Skip Morris has one book with many foam flies, suitable for many different species. -- Scott Reverse name to reply |
Question about foam fly fishing.
On 13 Nov, 10:43, "Gilbert " wrote:
So my question is, do these foam fly catch trout? If yes, can it be possible in some geographies they would catch and in other just make the fish laugh? And why? Thanks for reading this long thread. Some are very good indeed for trout. You might like to have a look at some of these; http://www.flyfisherman.com/ftb/ssmaterials/index1.html http://business.virgin.net/british.c...lackbeetle.htm http://www.creelflyfishing.com/tenne...rout_flies.htm http://www.flyfisherman.com/ftb/hshopper/ This ant pattern has been very successful for me; http://globalflyfisher.com/patterns/ant/ This popper works well for rainbows; http://www.flytyingworld.com/PagesG/...oam_popper.htm You can find many good foam flies here; http://www.ultimateflytying.com/FoamFlies.htm TL MC |
Question about foam fly fishing.
Hey Foam man, I've tied a few of the foam patterns. I've had success with the foam beelte. I prefer to tie a dubbed body for my ant patterns. Foam can be used to make the post on some parachute emergers. I don't know about France, but a cheap source of foam here is Walmart where it is sold in sheets for kids projects. I've also seen and article that used a leather punch to cut pieces of foam from cheap flip-flops. Good luck, Frogge. -- frogge ------------------------------------------------------------------------ frogge's Profile: http://www.njflyfishing.com/vBulleti...hp?userid=1499 View this thread: http://www.njflyfishing.com/vBulleti...ad.php?t=13008 ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Unrestricted-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
Question about foam fly fishing.
frogge wrote:
Hey Foam man, I've tied a few of the foam patterns. I've had success with the foam beelte. I prefer to tie a dubbed body for my ant patterns. Foam can be used to make the post on some parachute emergers. I don't know about France, but a cheap source of foam here is Walmart where it is sold in sheets for kids projects. I've also seen and article that used a leather punch to cut pieces of foam from cheap flip-flops. Good luck, Frogge. Hello frogge. And thanks to all of you. Yes, I have also beetles and ants(winged) These fish well at summer time. I have tied e serie of winged ant on caddis hook #18 and #20 for altitude lakes, and they fish. Caddis hook is interesting because it make a bended body like a dead/sunk ant. (I stole this pattern from a notorious tier somewhere on the web) But my full foam hopper made no success. A good friend of mine says the foam colors are too flashy. I should only retain yellow foam for the abdomen. You are right cheap source for the foam, is creation stores (like scrapbooking), also an excellent source for many other stuff for tying. |
Question about foam fly fishing.
On Nov 14, 6:49 am, "Gilbert " wrote:
frogge wrote: Hey Foam man, I've tied a few of the foam patterns. I've had success with the foam beelte. I prefer to tie a dubbed body for my ant patterns. Foam can be used to make the post on some parachute emergers. I don't know about France, but a cheap source of foam here is Walmart where it is sold in sheets for kids projects. I've also seen and article that used a leather punch to cut pieces of foam from cheap flip-flops. Good luck, Frogge. Hello frogge. And thanks to all of you. Yes, I have also beetles and ants(winged) These fish well at summer time. I have tied e serie of winged ant on caddis hook #18 and #20 for altitude lakes, and they fish. Caddis hook is interesting because it make a bended body like a dead/sunk ant. (I stole this pattern from a notorious tier somewhere on the web) But my full foam hopper made no success. A good friend of mine says the foam colors are too flashy. I should only retain yellow foam for the abdomen. You are right cheap source for the foam, is creation stores (like scrapbooking), also an excellent source for many other stuff for tying. Your right about the grasshoppers. IMO the reasons may be that people tie them to bigger than corresponding conventional patterns. In addition most creeks and rivers are lower in grasshoper season. Bigger flys in low water lower your chances unless there are some monsters about. If your looking for material don't overlook the foam ear plugs. I recycled some of mine and they work Ok on smallmouth. The colors are limited to red, orange, yellow, green and mottled green and white. |
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