![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#51
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 2 Jun 2005 18:39:14 -0500, "Wolfgang"
wrote: Leisenring.....Leisenring.....um......dead guy?......used to fly fish?.....downstream, with a nymph?.....that Leisenring? d;o) |
#52
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Danl wrote:
I prefer using #10 - #18 LWSHs (Lead Weight Substitute Holders) sold at most fly shops, but sometimes by other names. Most come with a convenient built in barb-like doohickey that assist in holding the LWS onto the hoo....err...LWSH. last year, just below the dam on the madison above cabin creek campground, there was an older fella (shutup) about 50 yards ahead of me fishing with a downstream sweep. i was moving along the mountain side currents. he was catching a fish...some big ones...on almost every cast. i was...er...wasn't catching anything but a few bruises. i thought he was swinging wets. no one else in the area was catching anything. i changed flies 10 or more times before i neared the *******. when he brought a fish in, i brazenly cast into his lanes as he concentrated on unhooking his catch. nothing. i looked closer to make sure his feet were below the water surface. yup, a mere mortal. whatthefukwashedoin?? when i finally got close enough, i couldn't stand it any longer, and i asked what he was using.... says he: "i'm cheating today, wanted to catch a few...salmon eggs". says a bewildered i: "uh...what color?" g once up close enough to see, i discovered that what i thought was simply a peculiar fly cleaning gesture made after releasing each fish was actually the motion used in opening a little jar, retrieving an egg, and placing it on a lwsh. hell, i didn't know the madison had salmon egg-layers in it! BG but the trout sure did love those eggs... jeff |
#53
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
rw wrote:
Wayne Harrison wrote: i can't believe that the same guy who tied those amazing, tiny flies that you sent to me can withstand the grotesque feeling of launching an ounce or so of lead with a fly at the end of the chain... An ounce or so? Get real. A couple of #4s is just about all you'll need, except for runoff conditions. ....and, um, when did obvious hyperbole around here require a "get real" response? lighten up a bit rw... at times, in your bob-and-weave with wayno, you seem pulled tighter than my sphincter whenever i board an airplane. of one thing i'm sure...wayno knows the relative value and importance of an ounce...and of fishing with and without lead weight. jeff |
#54
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 04 Jun 2005 11:15:32 -0400, Jeff Miller
wrote: rw wrote: Wayne Harrison wrote: i can't believe that the same guy who tied those amazing, tiny flies that you sent to me can withstand the grotesque feeling of launching an ounce or so of lead with a fly at the end of the chain... An ounce or so? Get real. A couple of #4s is just about all you'll need, except for runoff conditions. of one thing i'm sure...wayno knows the relative value and importance of an ounce... Oh, lordy, the possibilities, the possibilities... "yeah, 1/4 of a well-made see-through..." "anything more is felony in these states:..." etc., etc.... At least he didn't say "an eight-ball of lead..." TC, R |
#55
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Jeff Miller" wrote ...and, um, when did obvious hyperbole around here require a "get real" response? lighten up a bit rw... at times, in your bob-and-weave with wayno, you seem pulled tighter than my sphincter whenever i board an airplane. the thing about it that is beginning to scare the hell out of me is that his pattern is clearly taking on a dead replica for the phrase "having a hard on" for someone... yfitons wayno (glad you had a good trip; i had fun in pitt county this weekend). |
#56
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Wayne Harrison wrote:
yfitons wayno (glad you had a good trip; i had fun in pitt county this weekend). penns was a lot of fun this year. sorry you and jim weren't able to make it. the hatch was worth seeing. one night, the hatch changed the air around me...didn't just fill the air, but "changed" it. jeff |
#58
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Willi,
I concur. One thing... "read the water" when casting upstream. Calculate how fast the nymph will sink in the given flow condition. Guy There's LOTS of ways of nymphing but USUALLY when you're fishing with an indicator and weight you want to get your nymph dead drifting along the bottom. That means that the distance between your indicator has to be greater than the water depth (unless you're using an indicator that gets submerged which can be a good tactic). There's a balance that you try and strike among a variety of things - water depth, current speed, amount of weight, distance between your fly and the indicator, thickness of your leader, etc. So that means that there are a variety of ways to get your nymph drifting along the bottom. For example if you want your nymph drifting deeper, you can add more weight or lengthen the distance between the indicator and fly or go with a lighter tippet or make a longer cast or..... You got a good range of responses from a range of people. All the advice you've gotten is good, even though it may seem contradictory. There is more than one way to gut a rat. The way I do it is a bit different from what the other people have brought up. I don't like to fling a bunch of weight, so I try and set up my rig so that I can get my flies to the bottom with as little weight as possible. When indicator nymphing I use LONG tippets often up to 6 feet, sometimes more. This thinner material sinks MUCH easier than the thick sections at the butt of a leader, allows a more natural drift, makes for better contact with the drifting nymph and also makes it easier to detect strikes. I also believe that only on part(s) of any drift will your fly be dead drifting along the bottom. I try and gauge the length of my cast so the fly is most likely to be dead drifting when it reaches the area that I think is most likely to hold a fish. Willi |
#59
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Willi's taught me to use less lead and more tippet and mending to make
the fly sink. If I can see fish I like to sight fish with nymphs and try to drift em right into the fishes mouth a la Andy Kim. It is a bummer to chuck a bunch of lead all day. My friend said recently it's like tying your keys to the end of your leader. Even in a swift river 4 or 5 BBs will usually git er done (G). bh |
#60
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
There have been many mentions of mending to make the fly sink. I'm
pretty sure I get this. But if anyone had anything more specific to say on the topic...? Tim |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Nymph Line | Tom Nakashima | Fly Fishing | 15 | December 3rd, 2004 03:22 PM |
Wattage and distance of GMRS two-way radios | Jeff Durham | Bass Fishing | 4 | May 1st, 2004 01:21 AM |