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#1
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Well, this is the time of year when the dry fly fisher finally gets
his due. Sure, there have been bugs floating on the water since the early stoneflies of March but late May/early June has the water and air filled with swarms of Sulphurs, Brown Drakes and other fishy foodstuffs. Even when there is no active hatch or spinner fall the fish have gotten used to looking up and a well placed Pass Lake or Bivisible will often encourage their interest. I got off work Saturday morning at 6am. Wolfgang and Joel were up for the day from the Banana Belt. While bass fishing was tops on their "to do" list, sleep was on mine. So after a quick breakfast at Champs, they went to the Big River to try their smallmouth luck. I, instead, went home to grab a few quick hours of sleep. Wolf called at 1 pm, as per instructions, I assembled my stuff and drove down to the park behind the hospital. There I found Joel and Wolfgang sitting side by side at the edge of the river, a perfect Norman Rockwell moment. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0044a.jpg A little conferencing revealed that the bass were not particularly aggressive so it was decided to take a trip up the River and see if we could find some trout. As we drove up the highway it became obvious that our planning lacked uniqueness. every bridge had at least on car, some more. Almost as bad as opening day, with the exception that every person I saw was holding a fly rod. The lower River being exhausted we drove instead to the smaller water upstream. Finally the pullouts began to pass by empty. And when we pulled into the parking area near the point on the river that I had wanted to put them on it too was empty. Wolfgang was in the water and fishing first. When I told him that Pass Lakes had worked well for me a few days ago his ears had perked up and before I even had the line in my rod through the last guides he was into some fish. He probably had a half dozen landed by the time I was ready. Joel had originally rigged up for nymphs but as Wolfie landed fish after fish, he snipped off the underwater bug and he too tied on a dry. When I finally got my rod ready, Joel was into his first fish and Wolfgang was into sixth or seventh. Joel waded down and I went over by Wolfgang and we waded up. Every once and a while Joel would call out when he caught another fish. It sounded as if he were doing well. I tied on a rusty Sparkle Dun and standing shoulder to shoulder with Wolf promptly caught a couple little brookies. We waded through a fairly narrow stretch. We took turns casting to the occasional riser. Wolfgang's Pass Lake was doing a better job than my Comparadun so I snipped it off and tried another fly. Now a smart angler would have seen how well his partner was doing and would have also put on a Pass lake. But I am a stubborn Norwegian with more than a fair dash of arrogance and thus I felt that I could find a fly that worked even better. So I ran the gamut, even going so far as to trying a dry (a Hornberg) with a dropper nymph. I caught fish but for every one I caught, Wolfgang probably caught three. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0047a.jpg We had come to a part of the river where it was wide enough for us to stand side by side and cast and talk. It made for a pleasant way to fish. After a couple hundred yards of being "schooled" by Wolfgang I gave up and re-rigged with a Pass Lake. I caught fish with a little more regularity but I still didn't equal my partners efforts. Part of the problem lay with my Pass Lakes. I had ordered some pre-dubbed yarn over the winter. The black stuff was advertised as being for both wet and dry flies. It had become obvious before yesterday that it made great wet fly dubbing but its floating qualities were greatly overstated. In short my Pass Lakes sank. Also the thinner dubbed bodies gave a significantly different silhouette than Wolfgang's chubby chenille bodied flies. and it was obvious that the trout preferred the chunkier flies. We had worked our way upstream only about 300 yards when we heard a car door slam back at the parking lot. We had been fishing for about a couple hours. Wolfgang decided that it was probably time for them to head back and retreated downstream toward their car, after we had exchanged good byes and plans for getting together again in September in Da YouPee. Now a good host would have gone back to the parking lot and said good bye to Joel too. I wasn't a good host. Instead I waited for Wolfgang to leave then turned back upstream and started to cast again. I didn't even hear them start their car and leave. I had tied on a Bivisible just after Wolfgang left. I had done well with that fly last fall down in the Driftless. It is the first pattern I tied and caught fish with many years ago. Wolfgang had opined that it seemed the fish preferred flies that rode high that day and a bivisible rides higher than any other fly I tie. And the fish seemed to like it well enough. My second or third cast brought the biggest fish of the day up for a look. At 10" he wasn't a monster but he put a nice bend in the 50 year old fiberglass rod I was using for the first time that day. (An old rod with a Herters reel seat but marked Johnson on the shaft. It also had HDH marked as a line weight and has a nice , if slow, action. It took me awhile to get a feel for it and it made me think about my casting, but that isn't a bad thing.) I continued to catch fish as I waded upstream. Nothing big but at least another dozen bright little brookies came my way. I even caught a small 4" brown, a somewhat rare occurrence on a stream which seems to be counteracting the current wisdom and is seeing an increase of brookies at the expense of the browns. When I reached the top of a long, flat riffle I stopped. Up stream was a long series of still pools, many were edged and bottomed with springs but the water itself was featureless. When I'm in the right mood fishing these places is fun but today, a dry fly day if there ever was one, I didn't want to make the effort to change my tactic to find fish that weren't coming up to a floating fly. So I turned and headed back, skittering my Bivisible ahead of me as I waded. I hooked a number of fish this way including some from under some floating tree trunks that had evaded me on the way up. By the time I made it back to the parking lot it was probably nearing 7 pm. The last half hour had seen increasing bug activity. There had been no organized hatches during the afternoon, just the odd bug and rise. But now there were swarms of caddis patrolling the water. And I knew that before it was dark that there would be Sulphurs and other flies joining them. So I continued downstream and soon came to first riffle. I had clipped off my waterlogged Bivisible and now tried a small gray caddis. A few splashes but no hook ups soon had me hooking that to the fleece patch on my vest and tying on another. I spent a while trying different patterns when finally I tied on a #16 Parachute Adams. As I was playing around with different flies the hatch of bugs was increasing. There were two or three different mayflies in the air. along with the occasional Sulphur there was a few bigger brown bugs, probably brown drakes, and quite a few medium sized grayish mayflies of undetermined provenance. On my first drift over the spreading rings of a rise my Parachute Adams got sucked down. From then on it was almost constant action. A few nicer fish were making themselves shown and I hooked and landed a fish that was probably close to a foot. I waded a few hundred yards downstream, through a stretch of riffly water and then turned and looked back up stream. All the water I had waded was covered with rising fish. The air was full of bugs. The water was full of bugs. The sulphurs were swarming with authority, huge clouds hovering over particularly attractive (to them) patches of water. In the deepening dusk I worked back up to the car. With all the competition my Adams wasn't being attacked quite as often but it still was almost a fish on every other cast. I briefly hooked a bigger fish but a splash and he was gone. I found myself at the back of the pool by the parking area, standing in a riffle looking up at the willow shaded pool. The sun was down but the sky had plenty of light left in it. Then I noticed the still water at the edge of the riffle being disturbed. What at first I took as roiling water from a submerged rock soon made itself apparent as a fish. Its wake worked back and forth at the face of the riffle. Maybe it was taking submerged nymph, maybe it was plucking off hapless baby trout, but whatever it was eating had it excited. It never rose and I never saw it. A good fisher would have clipped off the #16 dry and tried a bigger nymph or a small streamer. But, as I pointed out earlier, I am a stubborn Norwegian, and the small dry stayed on my leader. After a half dozen or so casts the fish quit prowling and probably moved off into deeper water. I continued fishing up, again passing the parking area. The rises had settled down considerably, easing back to the soft rings that bespoke fish feeding a dead flies drifting in the current. I took a few more small fish, the fly outlined faintly by the band of light that glowed in the northwest. Finally I couldn't see my line on the water and the gurgling of the rapids would have drowned out any sound of a rising fish so I called it a day. I waded back out to my car, started it and drove the 20 miles back to town, listening to jazz on Public Radio. The clock at the bank in the little town north of Merrill said 10 pm as I drove past it. And suddenly I was very, very tired. hth g.c. |
#2
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![]() "George Cleveland" wrote in message ... Well, this is the time of year when the dry fly fisher finally gets his due. Sure, there have been bugs floating on the water since the early stoneflies of March but late May/early June has the water and air filled with swarms of Sulphurs, Brown Drakes and other fishy foodstuffs. Even when there is no active hatch or spinner fall the fish have gotten used to looking up and a well placed Pass Lake or Bivisible will often encourage their interest. I got off work Saturday morning at 6am. Wolfgang and Joel were up for the day from the Banana Belt. While bass fishing was tops on their "to do" list, sleep was on mine. So after a quick breakfast at Champs, they went to the Big River to try their smallmouth luck. I, instead, went home to grab a few quick hours of sleep. Wolf called at 1 pm, as per instructions, I assembled my stuff and drove down to the park behind the hospital. There I found Joel and Wolfgang sitting side by side at the edge of the river, a perfect Norman Rockwell moment. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0044a.jpg A little conferencing revealed that the bass were not particularly aggressive so it was decided to take a trip up the River and see if we could find some trout. As we drove up the highway it became obvious that our planning lacked uniqueness. every bridge had at least on car, some more. Almost as bad as opening day, with the exception that every person I saw was holding a fly rod. The lower River being exhausted we drove instead to the smaller water upstream. Finally the pullouts began to pass by empty. And when we pulled into the parking area near the point on the river that I had wanted to put them on it too was empty. Wolfgang was in the water and fishing first. When I told him that Pass Lakes had worked well for me a few days ago his ears had perked up and before I even had the line in my rod through the last guides he was into some fish. He probably had a half dozen landed by the time I was ready. Joel had originally rigged up for nymphs but as Wolfie landed fish after fish, he snipped off the underwater bug and he too tied on a dry. When I finally got my rod ready, Joel was into his first fish and Wolfgang was into sixth or seventh. Joel waded down and I went over by Wolfgang and we waded up. Every once and a while Joel would call out when he caught another fish. It sounded as if he were doing well. I tied on a rusty Sparkle Dun and standing shoulder to shoulder with Wolf promptly caught a couple little brookies. We waded through a fairly narrow stretch. We took turns casting to the occasional riser. Wolfgang's Pass Lake was doing a better job than my Comparadun so I snipped it off and tried another fly. Now a smart angler would have seen how well his partner was doing and would have also put on a Pass lake. But I am a stubborn Norwegian with more than a fair dash of arrogance and thus I felt that I could find a fly that worked even better. So I ran the gamut, even going so far as to trying a dry (a Hornberg) with a dropper nymph. I caught fish but for every one I caught, Wolfgang probably caught three. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0047a.jpg We had come to a part of the river where it was wide enough for us to stand side by side and cast and talk. It made for a pleasant way to fish. After a couple hundred yards of being "schooled" by Wolfgang I gave up and re-rigged with a Pass Lake. I caught fish with a little more regularity but I still didn't equal my partners efforts. Part of the problem lay with my Pass Lakes. I had ordered some pre-dubbed yarn over the winter. The black stuff was advertised as being for both wet and dry flies. It had become obvious before yesterday that it made great wet fly dubbing but its floating qualities were greatly overstated. In short my Pass Lakes sank. Also the thinner dubbed bodies gave a significantly different silhouette than Wolfgang's chubby chenille bodied flies. and it was obvious that the trout preferred the chunkier flies. We had worked our way upstream only about 300 yards when we heard a car door slam back at the parking lot. We had been fishing for about a couple hours. Wolfgang decided that it was probably time for them to head back and retreated downstream toward their car, after we had exchanged good byes and plans for getting together again in September in Da YouPee. Now a good host would have gone back to the parking lot and said good bye to Joel too. I wasn't a good host. Instead I waited for Wolfgang to leave then turned back upstream and started to cast again. I didn't even hear them start their car and leave. I had tied on a Bivisible just after Wolfgang left. I had done well with that fly last fall down in the Driftless. It is the first pattern I tied and caught fish with many years ago. Wolfgang had opined that it seemed the fish preferred flies that rode high that day and a bivisible rides higher than any other fly I tie. And the fish seemed to like it well enough. My second or third cast brought the biggest fish of the day up for a look. At 10" he wasn't a monster but he put a nice bend in the 50 year old fiberglass rod I was using for the first time that day. (An old rod with a Herters reel seat but marked Johnson on the shaft. It also had HDH marked as a line weight and has a nice , if slow, action. It took me awhile to get a feel for it and it made me think about my casting, but that isn't a bad thing.) I continued to catch fish as I waded upstream. Nothing big but at least another dozen bright little brookies came my way. I even caught a small 4" brown, a somewhat rare occurrence on a stream which seems to be counteracting the current wisdom and is seeing an increase of brookies at the expense of the browns. When I reached the top of a long, flat riffle I stopped. Up stream was a long series of still pools, many were edged and bottomed with springs but the water itself was featureless. When I'm in the right mood fishing these places is fun but today, a dry fly day if there ever was one, I didn't want to make the effort to change my tactic to find fish that weren't coming up to a floating fly. So I turned and headed back, skittering my Bivisible ahead of me as I waded. I hooked a number of fish this way including some from under some floating tree trunks that had evaded me on the way up. By the time I made it back to the parking lot it was probably nearing 7 pm. The last half hour had seen increasing bug activity. There had been no organized hatches during the afternoon, just the odd bug and rise. But now there were swarms of caddis patrolling the water. And I knew that before it was dark that there would be Sulphurs and other flies joining them. So I continued downstream and soon came to first riffle. I had clipped off my waterlogged Bivisible and now tried a small gray caddis. A few splashes but no hook ups soon had me hooking that to the fleece patch on my vest and tying on another. I spent a while trying different patterns when finally I tied on a #16 Parachute Adams. As I was playing around with different flies the hatch of bugs was increasing. There were two or three different mayflies in the air. along with the occasional Sulphur there was a few bigger brown bugs, probably brown drakes, and quite a few medium sized grayish mayflies of undetermined provenance. On my first drift over the spreading rings of a rise my Parachute Adams got sucked down. From then on it was almost constant action. A few nicer fish were making themselves shown and I hooked and landed a fish that was probably close to a foot. I waded a few hundred yards downstream, through a stretch of riffly water and then turned and looked back up stream. All the water I had waded was covered with rising fish. The air was full of bugs. The water was full of bugs. The sulphurs were swarming with authority, huge clouds hovering over particularly attractive (to them) patches of water. In the deepening dusk I worked back up to the car. With all the competition my Adams wasn't being attacked quite as often but it still was almost a fish on every other cast. I briefly hooked a bigger fish but a splash and he was gone. I found myself at the back of the pool by the parking area, standing in a riffle looking up at the willow shaded pool. The sun was down but the sky had plenty of light left in it. Then I noticed the still water at the edge of the riffle being disturbed. What at first I took as roiling water from a submerged rock soon made itself apparent as a fish. Its wake worked back and forth at the face of the riffle. Maybe it was taking submerged nymph, maybe it was plucking off hapless baby trout, but whatever it was eating had it excited. It never rose and I never saw it. A good fisher would have clipped off the #16 dry and tried a bigger nymph or a small streamer. But, as I pointed out earlier, I am a stubborn Norwegian, and the small dry stayed on my leader. After a half dozen or so casts the fish quit prowling and probably moved off into deeper water. I continued fishing up, again passing the parking area. The rises had settled down considerably, easing back to the soft rings that bespoke fish feeding a dead flies drifting in the current. I took a few more small fish, the fly outlined faintly by the band of light that glowed in the northwest. Finally I couldn't see my line on the water and the gurgling of the rapids would have drowned out any sound of a rising fish so I called it a day. I waded back out to my car, started it and drove the 20 miles back to town, listening to jazz on Public Radio. The clock at the bank in the little town north of Merrill said 10 pm as I drove past it. And suddenly I was very, very tired. hth g.c. Nice TR!! Had the pleasure of spending time with Joel and Wolfgang this year, always a pleasure.. |
#3
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George Cleveland wrote:
Well, this is the time of year when the dry fly fisher finally gets his due. snipped excellent example of a TR Sweet - it sounds like you all got into your share of fish. Up this way we have a "it's my turn" rule, and no one who has already caught a fish is allowed to catch another until everyone is even. I suggest you envoke that rule next time out with Wolfgang. -- TL, Tim --------------------------- http://css.sbcma.com/timj/ |
#4
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On Sun, 4 Jun 2006 16:18:46 -0400, "Tim J."
wrote: George Cleveland wrote: Well, this is the time of year when the dry fly fisher finally gets his due. snipped excellent example of a TR Sweet - it sounds like you all got into your share of fish. Up this way we have a "it's my turn" rule, and no one who has already caught a fish is allowed to catch another until everyone is even. I suggest you envoke that rule next time out with Wolfgang. In the narrow stretch that was what we did. Its just that poor Wolfgang would almost immediately catch a fish and then he'd have to wait for 5 or 6 minutes before he got to cast again and then after one or two casts he'd have a fish and then wait another 5 minutes. After the water broadened and we could both fish is when his expertise became glaringly obvious. Or maybe he was just lucky. ;^) g.c. Who doubts the latter. |
#5
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![]() George Cleveland wrote: Well, this is the time of year when the dry fly fisher finally gets his due. Sure, there have been bugs floating on the water since the early stoneflies of March but late May/early June has the water and air filled with swarms of Sulphurs, Brown Drakes and other fishy foodstuffs. Even when there is no active hatch or spinner fall the fish have gotten used to looking up and a well placed Pass Lake or Bivisible will often encourage their interest. I got off work Saturday morning at 6am. Wolfgang and Joel were up for the day from the Banana Belt. While bass fishing was tops on their "to do" list, sleep was on mine. So after a quick breakfast at Champs, they went to the Big River to try their smallmouth luck. I, instead, went home to grab a few quick hours of sleep. Wolf called at 1 pm, as per instructions, I assembled my stuff and drove down to the park behind the hospital. There I found Joel and Wolfgang sitting side by side at the edge of the river, a perfect Norman Rockwell moment. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0044a.jpg A little conferencing revealed that the bass were not particularly aggressive so it was decided to take a trip up the River and see if we could find some trout. As we drove up the highway it became obvious that our planning lacked uniqueness. every bridge had at least on car, some more. Almost as bad as opening day, with the exception that every person I saw was holding a fly rod. The lower River being exhausted we drove instead to the smaller water upstream. Finally the pullouts began to pass by empty. And when we pulled into the parking area near the point on the river that I had wanted to put them on it too was empty. Wolfgang was in the water and fishing first. When I told him that Pass Lakes had worked well for me a few days ago his ears had perked up and before I even had the line in my rod through the last guides he was into some fish. He probably had a half dozen landed by the time I was ready. Joel had originally rigged up for nymphs but as Wolfie landed fish after fish, he snipped off the underwater bug and he too tied on a dry. When I finally got my rod ready, Joel was into his first fish and Wolfgang was into sixth or seventh. Joel waded down and I went over by Wolfgang and we waded up. Every once and a while Joel would call out when he caught another fish. It sounded as if he were doing well. I tied on a rusty Sparkle Dun and standing shoulder to shoulder with Wolf promptly caught a couple little brookies. We waded through a fairly narrow stretch. We took turns casting to the occasional riser. Wolfgang's Pass Lake was doing a better job than my Comparadun so I snipped it off and tried another fly. Now a smart angler would have seen how well his partner was doing and would have also put on a Pass lake. But I am a stubborn Norwegian with more than a fair dash of arrogance and thus I felt that I could find a fly that worked even better. So I ran the gamut, even going so far as to trying a dry (a Hornberg) with a dropper nymph. I caught fish but for every one I caught, Wolfgang probably caught three. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0047a.jpg We had come to a part of the river where it was wide enough for us to stand side by side and cast and talk. It made for a pleasant way to fish. After a couple hundred yards of being "schooled" by Wolfgang I gave up and re-rigged with a Pass Lake. I caught fish with a little more regularity but I still didn't equal my partners efforts. Part of the problem lay with my Pass Lakes. I had ordered some pre-dubbed yarn over the winter. The black stuff was advertised as being for both wet and dry flies. It had become obvious before yesterday that it made great wet fly dubbing but its floating qualities were greatly overstated. In short my Pass Lakes sank. Also the thinner dubbed bodies gave a significantly different silhouette than Wolfgang's chubby chenille bodied flies. and it was obvious that the trout preferred the chunkier flies. We had worked our way upstream only about 300 yards when we heard a car door slam back at the parking lot. We had been fishing for about a couple hours. Wolfgang decided that it was probably time for them to head back and retreated downstream toward their car, after we had exchanged good byes and plans for getting together again in September in Da YouPee. Now a good host would have gone back to the parking lot and said good bye to Joel too. I wasn't a good host. Instead I waited for Wolfgang to leave then turned back upstream and started to cast again. I didn't even hear them start their car and leave. I had tied on a Bivisible just after Wolfgang left. I had done well with that fly last fall down in the Driftless. It is the first pattern I tied and caught fish with many years ago. Wolfgang had opined that it seemed the fish preferred flies that rode high that day and a bivisible rides higher than any other fly I tie. And the fish seemed to like it well enough. My second or third cast brought the biggest fish of the day up for a look. At 10" he wasn't a monster but he put a nice bend in the 50 year old fiberglass rod I was using for the first time that day. (An old rod with a Herters reel seat but marked Johnson on the shaft. It also had HDH marked as a line weight and has a nice , if slow, action. It took me awhile to get a feel for it and it made me think about my casting, but that isn't a bad thing.) I continued to catch fish as I waded upstream. Nothing big but at least another dozen bright little brookies came my way. I even caught a small 4" brown, a somewhat rare occurrence on a stream which seems to be counteracting the current wisdom and is seeing an increase of brookies at the expense of the browns. When I reached the top of a long, flat riffle I stopped. Up stream was a long series of still pools, many were edged and bottomed with springs but the water itself was featureless. When I'm in the right mood fishing these places is fun but today, a dry fly day if there ever was one, I didn't want to make the effort to change my tactic to find fish that weren't coming up to a floating fly. So I turned and headed back, skittering my Bivisible ahead of me as I waded. I hooked a number of fish this way including some from under some floating tree trunks that had evaded me on the way up. By the time I made it back to the parking lot it was probably nearing 7 pm. The last half hour had seen increasing bug activity. There had been no organized hatches during the afternoon, just the odd bug and rise. But now there were swarms of caddis patrolling the water. And I knew that before it was dark that there would be Sulphurs and other flies joining them. So I continued downstream and soon came to first riffle. I had clipped off my waterlogged Bivisible and now tried a small gray caddis. A few splashes but no hook ups soon had me hooking that to the fleece patch on my vest and tying on another. I spent a while trying different patterns when finally I tied on a #16 Parachute Adams. As I was playing around with different flies the hatch of bugs was increasing. There were two or three different mayflies in the air. along with the occasional Sulphur there was a few bigger brown bugs, probably brown drakes, and quite a few medium sized grayish mayflies of undetermined provenance. On my first drift over the spreading rings of a rise my Parachute Adams got sucked down. From then on it was almost constant action. A few nicer fish were making themselves shown and I hooked and landed a fish that was probably close to a foot. I waded a few hundred yards downstream, through a stretch of riffly water and then turned and looked back up stream. All the water I had waded was covered with rising fish. The air was full of bugs. The water was full of bugs. The sulphurs were swarming with authority, huge clouds hovering over particularly attractive (to them) patches of water. In the deepening dusk I worked back up to the car. With all the competition my Adams wasn't being attacked quite as often but it still was almost a fish on every other cast. I briefly hooked a bigger fish but a splash and he was gone. I found myself at the back of the pool by the parking area, standing in a riffle looking up at the willow shaded pool. The sun was down but the sky had plenty of light left in it. Then I noticed the still water at the edge of the riffle being disturbed. What at first I took as roiling water from a submerged rock soon made itself apparent as a fish. Its wake worked back and forth at the face of the riffle. Maybe it was taking submerged nymph, maybe it was plucking off hapless baby trout, but whatever it was eating had it excited. It never rose and I never saw it. A good fisher would have clipped off the #16 dry and tried a bigger nymph or a small streamer. But, as I pointed out earlier, I am a stubborn Norwegian, and the small dry stayed on my leader. After a half dozen or so casts the fish quit prowling and probably moved off into deeper water. I continued fishing up, again passing the parking area. The rises had settled down considerably, easing back to the soft rings that bespoke fish feeding a dead flies drifting in the current. I took a few more small fish, the fly outlined faintly by the band of light that glowed in the northwest. Finally I couldn't see my line on the water and the gurgling of the rapids would have drowned out any sound of a rising fish so I called it a day. I waded back out to my car, started it and drove the 20 miles back to town, listening to jazz on Public Radio. The clock at the bank in the little town north of Merrill said 10 pm as I drove past it. And suddenly I was very, very tired. hth g.c. George, The first fly I tied on when I clipped the nymph off was a size 16 Parachute Adams. I fished that same fly for the next 2 hours. Only replacing the soaked one for a dry one. I stopped counting fish caught after about 16 or 18. I must have cought about 30 beautiful Brookies and missed another 30. What a great afternoon. Thanks George. Joel |
#6
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![]() George Cleveland wrote: On Sun, 4 Jun 2006 16:18:46 -0400, "Tim J." wrote: George Cleveland wrote: Well, this is the time of year when the dry fly fisher finally gets his due. snipped excellent example of a TR Sweet - it sounds like you all got into your share of fish. Up this way we have a "it's my turn" rule, and no one who has already caught a fish is allowed to catch another until everyone is even. I suggest you envoke that rule next time out with Wolfgang. Rules are for people who don't know how to get along with one another. If George and I suffer from that problem, I've see precious little evidence of it. ![]() In the narrow stretch that was what we did. Its just that poor Wolfgang would almost immediately catch a fish and then he'd have to wait for 5 or 6 minutes before he got to cast again and then after one or two casts he'd have a fish and then wait another 5 minutes. After the water broadened and we could both fish is when his expertise became glaringly obvious. Or maybe he was just lucky. ;^) Indeed. Lucky in having stumbled (lo these many years ago) on an extremely (if unaccountably) effective pattern and, if Saturday's performance is to be believed, a particularly productive version of it, lucky in having the service of a most excellent and gracious guide, lucky in that said guide spent a good deal of time changing flies.....during which intervals SOMEBODY had to fish.....and, most of all, luckier than anyone has a right to expect in having so many amiable adult companions with whom spend so much time at play in the fields of the Lord. Who doubts the latter. Never doubt it......I never have. Thanks for yet another marvelous day, George and Joel. Wolfgang who, greedy as the next guy, only wishes that his luck could have extended just enough to exterminate the virus that jumped up and bit his ass a few days ago and has not yet let go. ![]() |
#7
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Wolfgang wrote:
George Cleveland wrote: On Sun, 4 Jun 2006 16:18:46 -0400, "Tim J." wrote: George Cleveland wrote: Well, this is the time of year when the dry fly fisher finally gets his due. snipped excellent example of a TR Sweet - it sounds like you all got into your share of fish. Up this way we have a "it's my turn" rule, and no one who has already caught a fish is allowed to catch another until everyone is even. I suggest you envoke that rule next time out with Wolfgang. Rules are for people who don't know how to get along with one another. If George and I suffer from that problem, I've see precious little evidence of it. ![]() The roffians up here are very different. They all taunt me mercilessly as they catch fish after fish. ![]() In the narrow stretch that was what we did. Its just that poor Wolfgang would almost immediately catch a fish and then he'd have to wait for 5 or 6 minutes before he got to cast again and then after one or two casts he'd have a fish and then wait another 5 minutes. After the water broadened and we could both fish is when his expertise became glaringly obvious. Or maybe he was just lucky. ;^) Indeed. Lucky in having stumbled (lo these many years ago) on an extremely (if unaccountably) effective pattern and, if Saturday's performance is to be believed, a particularly productive version of it, lucky in having the service of a most excellent and gracious guide, lucky in that said guide spent a good deal of time changing flies.....during which intervals SOMEBODY had to fish.....and, most of all, luckier than anyone has a right to expect in having so many amiable adult companions with whom spend so much time at play in the fields of the Lord. Yeah, well I have that too, so phhhhttttt. Who doubts the latter. Never doubt it......I never have. Thanks for yet another marvelous day, George and Joel. Wolfgang who, greedy as the next guy, only wishes that his luck could have extended just enough to exterminate the virus that jumped up and bit his ass a few days ago and has not yet let go. ![]() Well, that's what follows greed. ;-) -- TL, Tim --------------------------- http://css.sbcma.com/timj/ |
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