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#11
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Scott, I see where I have confused you. Sorry. That should read if
your indicator (line) is moving at the same speed as the surface current, you need to add weight to slow it down. If it is moving "faster", then you have a belly in you line and need to mend (as you have stated). Sorry for any confusion. Dave |
#12
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Scott Seidman wrote:
Dave LaCourse wrote in : Remember, if your indicator (line/leader connection) is going faster or the same speed as the top current (watch to bubbles), then you do not have enough weight on. Your indicator should be going slower than the top level of water. Can't get down to the bottom? Add more weight, move your indicator up, or remove it all together. Dave I don't get this. I don't either. My approach to dead-drift nymphing is to work the "turnover point." That's the (usually short) section of the drift where the indicator is directly above the fly, and where the drift has the least drag. Ideally, the indicator, as well as the fly, will drift with no drag. The idea is basically to decide where the fish are and then to cast upstream, with the distance depending in the current, and to mend to create a turnover point right in front of the fish. Works for me. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
#13
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![]() "Dave LaCourse" wrote in message ... If your strike indicator is going the same speed as the bubbles around it (top current), so is your nymph... Hm...... If you're fishing in shallow water with a weighted nymph with an eight foot leader and the nymph starts out downstream from the indicator and in the lee of a small pebble...... Your indicator can move nearly sixteen feet.....at the same speed as the bubbles around it.....before the nymph moves at all.. Wolfgang |
#14
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On Tue, 31 May 2005 19:11:51 -0500, "Wolfgang"
wrote: If you're fishing in shallow water with a weighted nymph with an eight foot leader and the nymph starts out downstream from the indicator and in the lee of a small pebble...... Your indicator can move nearly sixteen feet.....at the same speed as the bubbles around it.....before the nymph moves at all.. You are correct. But who nymphs downstream. Certainly not me. And just because I am fishing with an eight foot leader, it does not mean my strike indicator is eight feet from the nymph. In two feet of water, it is probably three or four feet from the nymph. Or, more than likely I am not using an indicator at all. Dave |
#15
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On Tue, 31 May 2005 18:05:09 -0600, rw
wrote: I don't either. My approach to dead-drift nymphing is to work the "turnover point." That's the (usually short) section of the drift where the indicator is directly above the fly, and where the drift has the least drag. Ideally, the indicator, as well as the fly, will drift with no drag. The idea is basically to decide where the fish are and then to cast upstream, with the distance depending in the current, and to mend to create a turnover point right in front of the fish. Works for me. I posted a correction to the original post saying that "faster than the current" is possible only if you have a belly in the line, meaning the line and indicator are dragging. If the strike indicator (leader/line connection, or whatever you are watching for a strike) is not moving slower than the top current, you need more weight. Your turnover point is obvious, however most of my strikes are before I reach the turnover spot. |
#16
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Dave LaCourse wrote:
Your turnover point is obvious, however most of my strikes are before I reach the turnover spot. That's because you're dragging your fly over what should be the turnover point. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
#17
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![]() "Dave LaCourse" wrote in message ... On Tue, 31 May 2005 19:11:51 -0500, "Wolfgang" wrote: If you're fishing in shallow water with a weighted nymph with an eight foot leader and the nymph starts out downstream from the indicator and in the lee of a small pebble...... Your indicator can move nearly sixteen feet.....at the same speed as the bubbles around it.....before the nymph moves at all.. You are correct. But who nymphs downstream. Certainly not me. Well, I don't do much nymph fishing so I can hardly claim to be an authority but, if memory serves, Jim Leisenring had something to say about it. Besides, it stand to reason that fishing a weighted nymph downstream on a taut leader is an excellent way to control the speed of the drift. And just because I am fishing with an eight foot leader, it does not mean my strike indicator is eight feet from the nymph. True, true. In two feet of water, it is probably three or four feet from the nymph. If your depth holds, that's good thing. But if you're working the tailout of a pool or a run, things can get shallow in a hurry. If there's four feet of leader between the indicator and the fly and the fly is ahead of the indicator, your indicator can move up to nearly eight feet.....at the same speed as the bubbles around it.....before the numph moves at all. Or, more than likely I am not using an indicator at all. Your scenario, not mine. Wolfgang look it up. |
#18
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If you're fishing deep with lots of distance between the bobber and the
fly, watch the submerged curves in your leader instead of your fish pimp when you can and you'll notice more takes. When the drift is too far away to see the leader underwater, overpower the mend a little and pull the whole outfit a little tighter underwater and that'll also help with detection. I think it's worth the temporary interruption in the drift to get a little straighter leader underwater. Let your downstream drifts straigthen completely before you strip your line in or pick it up to cast. Sometimes you've got a fish hooked and don't know it and of course sometimes they like it swinging and/or rising at the end of the drift. bruce h |
#19
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On Tue, 31 May 2005 19:59:32 -0500, "Wolfgang"
wrote: If there's four feet of leader between the indicator and the fly and the fly is ahead of the indicator, your indicator can move up to nearly eight feet.....at the same speed as the bubbles around it.....before the numph moves at all. Like I said, I don't nymph down stream. Some do. More power to them, but I don't. |
#20
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On Tue, 31 May 2005 18:53:35 -0600, rw
wrote: Dave LaCourse wrote: Your turnover point is obvious, however most of my strikes are before I reach the turnover spot. That's because you're dragging your fly over what should be the turnover point. Huh? I cast upstream ten feet, the indicator drifts toward me at a speed slower than the surface current. I see a strike when the indicator is six feet upstream. I set the hook. There's no drag involved. If there was I wouldn't be so successful as a nympher. |
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