Thread
:
When stoneflies re-enter the food chain
View Single Post
#
7
August 6th, 2008, 09:18 PM posted to rec.outdoors.fishing.fly.tying
ToddAndMargo
external usenet poster
Posts: 19
When stoneflies re-enter the food chain
wrote:
On Aug 4, 9:26 am, ToddAndMargo
wrote:
Tom Littleton wrote:
"ToddAndMargo" wrote in message
news:_Yslk.145$EL2.115@trnddc01...
Hi All,
On the stream I fish on, when the stone flies skitter
across the water to lay their eggs, they frequently loose
control and get stuck prostrate on the surface. Thus,
re-entering the food chain, much to the delight of the
local rainbow trout population. (Their strikes on them are
rather spectacular.)
Does anyone have a favorite pattern to simulate this?
Many thanks,
-T
Todd,
Most of the hairwinged, dry stoneflies were designed to imitate the larger
species of stoneflies, egglaying. Frankly,
any floating fly of the right size and roughly close color which you can
make skitter across the surface might get
an enthusiastic response.
Tom
Hi Tom,
I am thinking of a scene from Cutter's Bugs of the Underworld
http://www.flyline.com/shop/bugs_of_the_underworld/
where it shows such a prostrate stone fly from an underwater
angle. (It also shows a red band having his lunch on her.
It's a great shot!) The underwater "signature" is very
specific. I am just not finding anything I think matches
that shot.
-T
Great video by the way -- military intelligence for the
fly fisherman.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
I didn't buy their stuff either. What does the underwater sig look
like? I do use a small ovipositing caddis surface pattern for
skittering but its main distinguishing feature is the egg sack.
Dave
It is actually not skittering. It is crashed and can't get loose.
The four winds are spread out from the body, not exactly
perpendicular or uniform from side to side. There
is a lot of indents on the surface film. The body
of the fly looks like a regular stone fly but with
the addition of trapped air around the body.
I would think every trout fly fisherman would have
a copy of Bugs. It was eye opening for me. You will
especially love the way he shows a real stone fly
nymph caught in the current. (You will start
tying your stone nymphs upside down.)
-T
ToddAndMargo
View Public Profile
View message headers
Find all posts by ToddAndMargo
Find all threads started by ToddAndMargo