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The catching has been rather patchy lately with a couple of fish
poking their noses out on evening and surprisingly for the time of year - smelters! We fished for 'em last week with nothing but follows to show for it. Fish that were caught on evening were good conditioned so they had been on something. Seining the water turned up the odd green midge pupa, a single brown nymph shuck (#16) and a micro-caddis, bright green 26 - 32 depending on the hook maker. No wonder there wasn't a lot of surface activity during the day. On Saturday (who knows what will happen this 'arvo) the fish holed up in snags and undercuts during the day and would only come out for a Brown and White Bucktail swung past their holds. Other streamers and buggery things were ignored, while the silver bodied bucktail pulled them consistently even from "used" water. (The pattern is a mod of the Black Nosed Dace - leave off the red tag and the centre black strip of bucktail in the sparse wing.) Most interestingly, there was no sign of smelting activity while all this was going on. We were fishing the area they were busting up last week at about the same time. Later toward evening we started to see bow waves and sprays of baitfish - when that happened a largish beadhead cast to the disturbance would bring a hit. To round it all off there was a reasonable evening rise and we each bagged a few surface feeders on emergers: most pleasant indeed. The key is observation, and I am admittedly a little slow to recognise what I see at times. Thinking back, here has been a bumper season for tiddlers in the river ... first noticed over a month ago ... reinforced last week and penny dropping this trip If you're in SE Aus and the streams aren't fishing "normally" (mine certainly aren't) it might be worth trying a few streamers into likely looking spots ... especially if you notice a lot of tiddlers about. Do try more than one pattern though. many bow waves, Steve |
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G'day Guys, you might like to have a look at the following link to an
Australian Fly Fishing Site. http://groups.msn.com/FlyFishingDownUnder This is a dedicated Fly Only Social and Technical Web Site. Memberships easy to arrange and free. Cheers "Harry" "Stephen Welsh" wrote in message ... The catching has been rather patchy lately with a couple of fish poking their noses out on evening and surprisingly for the time of year - smelters! We fished for 'em last week with nothing but follows to show for it. Fish that were caught on evening were good conditioned so they had been on something. Seining the water turned up the odd green midge pupa, a single brown nymph shuck (#16) and a micro-caddis, bright green 26 - 32 depending on the hook maker. No wonder there wasn't a lot of surface activity during the day. On Saturday (who knows what will happen this 'arvo) the fish holed up in snags and undercuts during the day and would only come out for a Brown and White Bucktail swung past their holds. Other streamers and buggery things were ignored, while the silver bodied bucktail pulled them consistently even from "used" water. (The pattern is a mod of the Black Nosed Dace - leave off the red tag and the centre black strip of bucktail in the sparse wing.) Most interestingly, there was no sign of smelting activity while all this was going on. We were fishing the area they were busting up last week at about the same time. Later toward evening we started to see bow waves and sprays of baitfish - when that happened a largish beadhead cast to the disturbance would bring a hit. To round it all off there was a reasonable evening rise and we each bagged a few surface feeders on emergers: most pleasant indeed. The key is observation, and I am admittedly a little slow to recognise what I see at times. Thinking back, here has been a bumper season for tiddlers in the river ... first noticed over a month ago ... reinforced last week and penny dropping this trip If you're in SE Aus and the streams aren't fishing "normally" (mine certainly aren't) it might be worth trying a few streamers into likely looking spots ... especially if you notice a lot of tiddlers about. Do try more than one pattern though. many bow waves, Steve |
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