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Nobody told him



 
 
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  #1  
Old October 19th, 2008, 05:38 AM posted to rec.outdoors.fishing.fly
daytripper
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Posts: 1,083
Default Nobody told him

On Sat, 18 Oct 2008 11:18:31 -0700 (PDT), DaveS wrote:

On Oct 17, 8:24*pm, daytripper wrote:
On Sat, 18 Oct 2008 02:05:02 GMT, notbob wrote:
I saw something today that left me dumbfounded. *


[...]

Seems like the title shouldda been "Nobody Told Me" ;-)

Aside from the use of bubble floats with casting gear to enable the use of
flies, there's even a specific class of fly tied for the purpose of dragging
on the surface, called a "wake fly", most often touted for fishing for
steelhead...

/daytripper


Im assuming that most folks know to fish ovipositing caddis across the
current, waking, bouncing etc. Right? And even splashes for big
October caddis?

Dave


In certain, riffly sections of streams, I'll often cast directly downstream
and "hop" a bushy caddis pattern back to me a few inches at a time. By letting
the line get tight then"snapping" it I can get the fly to pop virtually
straight up, then gather a half-foot of line in, let the fly hit the water,
then repeat, until it's time to cast back out again. It can be a very deadly
technique indeed...

/daytripper
  #2  
Old October 19th, 2008, 05:51 PM posted to rec.outdoors.fishing.fly
notbob
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Posts: 233
Default Nobody told him

On 2008-10-19, daytripper wrote:

In certain, riffly sections of streams, I'll often cast directly downstream
and "hop" a bushy caddis pattern back to me a few inches at a time. By letting
the line get tight then"snapping" it I can get the fly to pop virtually
straight up, then gather a half-foot of line in, let the fly hit the water,
then repeat, until it's time to cast back out again. It can be a very deadly
technique indeed...


I'll give this a try, dt. I have a good riffle section I can't access from
shore. I picked up an "attractor" fly and madam-x parachute, yesterday.
Both look pretty good as a preggo caddis (judging from my limited experience
and the advice of the local fly shop). I'll also try a little earlier,
around 12-2pm, the time the spin/fly guy said was productive on this
stretch. I see several fly fishermen go down to the river later in the
afternoon/evening, as the shadows are crossing the river, but I don't see
them being successful. What do you make of that?

Again, thank you for taking the time to listen and give advice. News at six!


nb
 




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