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What to do with my retrieve?
On 03/26/2010 08:11 PM, Giles wrote:
The short answer: Pick it up and cast again. The longer answer: "Steady or bursts" means.....what? "Fast or slow" who and/or what? In any case, at the end of a drift, if there is no fish on the line, you pick it up and cast again. giles Hi Giles, At the end of my drift, my line is kind of far away from me. I like to pull it across the current (I get a lot of hits in the summer doing that) and pull it back along the shore a ways before I shot it back out in front (front side -- never directly in front) of me in the rapids. The longer the line stays in the water the better. An, yes, I would not have lost my fly yesterday, if I had just picked it up and shot it back out. (Note to fish with my fly in his lip: I know where you live and what you eat!) -T |
What to do with my retrieve?
"Todd" wrote in message ... On 03/26/2010 08:11 PM, Giles wrote: The short answer: Pick it up and cast again. The longer answer: "Steady or bursts" means.....what? "Fast or slow" who and/or what? In any case, at the end of a drift, if there is no fish on the line, you pick it up and cast again. giles Hi Giles, At the end of my drift, my line is kind of far away from me. I like to pull it across the current (I get a lot of hits in the summer doing that) and pull it back along the shore a ways before I shot it back out in front (front side -- never directly in front) of me in the rapids. The longer the line stays in the water the better. An, yes, I would not have lost my fly yesterday, if I had just picked it up and shot it back out. (Note to fish with my fly in his lip: I know where you live and what you eat!) -T I would tend to agree with Wolfgang on the just pick it up and recast. However, depending on the fly type nymph, woolly bugger, wet fly, streamer... you might consider different retrrieves for these different style flyz. I believe I read, not sure of the author: Quick, McNally, Brooks, Dick... though Schwiebert rings a bell... but when this fisher used a nymph he would employ an extremely slow retrieve by twisting the line over and under the fingers of his left hand. He stated that it had the effect of a nymph crawling upstream on the bed of of the stream. A bugger could be done in similar fashion, but a wet fly or streamer might be stripped in short or fast bursts. I'd try a combination of retrieves and see what works for ya. I have tried the finger roll with nymphs, but I am way too impatient to do it regularly. Op |
What to do with my retrieve?
On 03/27/2010 05:53 AM, Mark Bowen wrote:
I would tend to agree with Wolfgang on the just pick it up and recast. Wolfgang's post never showed up on my news server. :-( but when this fisher used a nymph he would employ an extremely slow retrieve by twisting the line over and under the fingers of his left hand. He stated that it had the effect of a nymph crawling upstream on the bed of of the stream. I have never tried this or even thought of it. Thank you! |
What to do with my retrieve?
"Todd" wrote in message ... On 03/27/2010 05:53 AM, Mark Bowen wrote: I would tend to agree with Wolfgang on the just pick it up and recast. Wolfgang's post never showed up on my news server. :-( but when this fisher used a nymph he would employ an extremely slow retrieve by twisting the line over and under the fingers of his left hand. He stated that it had the effect of a nymph crawling upstream on the bed of of the stream. I have never tried this or even thought of it. Thank you! Giles is Wolfgang and vice versa HTH Op |
What to do with my retrieve?
On 03/27/2010 07:21 PM, Mark Bowen wrote:
wrote in message ... On 03/27/2010 05:53 AM, Mark Bowen wrote: I would tend to agree with Wolfgang on the just pick it up and recast. Wolfgang's post never showed up on my news server. :-( Giles is Wolfgang and vice versa Giles post did show up. Just picking it up and recasting it ruins all the fun of having a trout follow your retrieve. Looking down the mouth of a trout before he strikes is great fun! -T |
What to do with my retrieve?
On Mar 26, 10:38*pm, Todd wrote:
Hi Giles, Hi Todd, At the end of my drift, my line is kind of far away from me. Well, the bit that's attached to the leader might be.....I wouldn't know. But the part that's attached to the reel should be pretty close. Otherwise you're never going to catch any fish at all. I like to pull it across the current (I get a lot of hits in the summer doing that) and pull it back along the shore a ways before I shot it back out in front (front side -- never directly in front) of me in the rapids. Hm..... O.k., then I'd suggest that you pull it across the current and pull it back along the shore a ways before shotting it back out in front (front side -- never directly in front) of you in the rapids. The longer the line stays in the water the better. Two minutes? Six days? An, yes, I would not have lost my fly yesterday, if I had just picked it up and shot it back out. Nothing that happened to you yesterday (or at any other time, for that matter) as a result of something you did would likely have happened.....or, at least not in just that way and at that precise time.....if you had done something else. Madness lies down that path. But then that's less consequential for some folks than for others, (Note to fish with my fly in his lip: I know where you live and what you eat!) -T You've got a real peculiar way about you, Todd. I like that. It's refreshing.....in small and infrequent doses. g. |
What to do with my retrieve?
On 03/28/2010 07:03 PM, Giles wrote:
You've got a real peculiar way about you, Todd. I like that. It's refreshing.....in small and infrequent doses. Did you just write me an entire letter without actually saying a single thing? Wow! By any chance, are you a, well, "politician"? "Congressman" maybe? No offense intended. If you take offense, I prefer to be called a "Nitwit". It is fun to say and has a nice ring. :-) -T |
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