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#1
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David LaCourse wrote:
If you are fishing a fertile stream, there is a hatch that will occur daily, not once or twice a year. In the early spring for about two months, the Mayflies go nuts. There is also the cutest 1/2" stones that run away from you (they have "space" issues). I fish a drowned Adams. Total fun. After that, not so much airborne bugs. I should mention, that for some weird reason, in my river, trout seldom feed off the surface. The guys at the fly shop have noticed it too. It is really weird. I popped a 3" stone, from the back of my neck by the way, into the current and watched it drift about 100' with no attention whatsoever. My theory is the local Osprey have done some "on the job training". Trout in their feed lies foraging off the drift act much different than trout feeding off a hatch. Ozzie has a bunch of great video on the subject in his "the underwater world of trout: feeding lies". In the drift, they do not like each other's company. Huh? I have taken trout and salmon from the same run on both dries and nymphs. I've never asked the one I caught on the dry how he feels about the one I caught on the nymph. Perhaps I'll try that today. Have you ever fished with a dry fly and a trailing nymph? Most on this forum have. The fish comes up to take the dry but sees the nymph and takes it instead. The "feeding" lines contain fish that will either take a nymph OR a dry. I ask about the "wet" for the reason stated above: no action on the surface. Very weird water. I have tried the combo you suggest. All I ever get is knots and tangles. If you can do this without cussing up a storm, YOU ARE THE MAN! Here is a difference between a "drifter" and a "hatcher": a "hatcher" would fish a Stone right side up. A "drifter" would fish it upside down. There is great video of this in Cutter's "Bugs of the Underworld". By a "drifter", do you mean nymph fishing? Yes and no. By "drifter" I mean what is in the normal underwater life of the trout, not something going through a "metamorphosis". I don't target what is "hatching", just what is "growing" A nympher would fish all kinds of nymphs besides a stone fly. On the rare occasion that I do nymph a stone, usually on waters other than my home ones, I fish it in a dead drift bouncing off the bottom. Very, very close to what I do. Except I give it a slight ~1" tug every two feet or so, to a) keep contact with my line and b) simulate slight movement against the current (debris vs alive) How can you fish a stone fly as a "hatcher"? It's a nymph meant to be a sub-surface lure. It's surface fly would be a stimulator - big and bushey - not the same fly you would sub-surface. I see lots of rubber winged adults patters out there. I have tried them. No better luck that any other top side fly on my weird river. I meant that a nymph's that have shucked the old skeletons before their new ones are in place are easier to catch, eat, and less bran And you know this how? The only white nymph I fish is a buckskin caddis, and I fish it simply because it immitates a particular caddis, not a nymph that has "shucked". "The Underwater World of Trout: Feeding Lies" by Ozzie Ozefovish. http://www.underwateroz.com/ An absolute must see. -T |
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On 2009-09-21 11:24:28 -0400, ToddAndMargo
said: Yes and no. By "drifter" I mean what is in the normal underwater life of the trout, not something going through a "metamorphosis". I don't target what is "hatching", just what is "growing" I know you bruise easily, Todd, but enough is enough. If you do not know the difference between nymphing and fishing the hatch, you are a troll. I have never read so much garbage as the above. Trout don't go through a metamorphosis, and they eat constantly thereby the are always growing. You have to be a troll. No fly fisherman I know would make such absolutely stupid statements. I was on the river this a.m. about 8. Two casts with a "home tie" pt and I had a nice silver salmon in my hand. Jumped three or four times, tale wagging across the small pool. Two more casts and I had a small 12 inch brookie, a male in full spawning regalia. Then, nothing for two hours. Missed several nice brook trout on a tan cdc caddis - a little rusty at setting the hook from 60 feet away. After exploring more flies and spots, I hooked up with another nice salmon using the cdc. No jumper was he, but he did fight like hell. Switched to a normal Sawyer's pt (no home tie goodies on it) and took a very beautiful female brookie about 15 inches long. I got a couple more small brookies (10 inch) both male and female before I headed back to the cabin for a nice lunch with my wife and dog. Took a well deserved nap until 3 when the cabin boy woke me putting wood in the bin. We'll need it because it's supposed to get into the 30s tonight. The sun is bright as are the colors on the maples and birches. It will be an early fall. Dave |
#3
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David LaCourse wrote:
On 2009-09-21 11:24:28 -0400, ToddAndMargo said: Yes and no. By "drifter" I mean what is in the normal underwater life of the trout, not something going through a "metamorphosis". I don't target what is "hatching", just what is "growing" I know you bruise easily, Todd, but enough is enough. If you do not know the difference between nymphing and fishing the hatch, you are a troll. I have never read so much garbage as the above. Trout don't go through a metamorphosis, and they eat constantly thereby the are always growing. You have to be a troll. No fly fisherman I know would make such absolutely stupid statements. Dude! I meant the invertebrates they eat. |
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Todd wrote:
David LaCourse wrote: On 2009-09-21 11:24:28 -0400, ToddAndMargo said: Yes and no. By "drifter" I mean what is in the normal underwater life of the trout, not something going through a "metamorphosis". I don't target what is "hatching", just what is "growing" I know you bruise easily, Todd, but enough is enough. If you do not know the difference between nymphing and fishing the hatch, you are a troll. I have never read so much garbage as the above. Trout don't go through a metamorphosis, and they eat constantly thereby the are always growing. You have to be a troll. No fly fisherman I know would make such absolutely stupid statements. Dude! I meant the invertebrates they eat. Now I feel dumb. You knew that and were pulling my chain. In other words, guy talk for you like me. I like you too. :-) -T |
#5
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On 2009-09-21 16:34:03 -0400, Todd said:
Now I feel dumb. You knew that and were pulling my chain. In other words, guy talk for you like me. I like you too. :-) -T Yeah. Guy talk. I luv ya, man. wayno..............wayno.......... help.......... help......... |
#6
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Todd wrote:
David LaCourse wrote: snip You have to be a troll. No fly fisherman I know would make such absolutely stupid statements. Dude! I meant the invertebrates they eat. I don't know Todd, I have to agree with Dave S and Louie, the nonsense you post about fly fishing indicates to me you don't know **** from shinola about fly fishing. Never fishing dries, throwing away your bead heads, catching a "zillion" wild fish in a stream that's stocked annually, none of it sounds real or believable. C'mon, confess. You're just yankin' our chains, right ? -- Ken Fortenberry |
#7
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Ken Fortenberry wrote:
Todd wrote: David LaCourse wrote: snip You have to be a troll. No fly fisherman I know would make such absolutely stupid statements. Dude! I meant the invertebrates they eat. I don't know Todd, I have to agree with Dave S and Louie, the nonsense you post about fly fishing indicates to me you don't know **** from shinola about fly fishing. Never fishing dries, throwing away your bead heads, catching a "zillion" wild fish in a stream that's stocked annually, none of it sounds real or believable. C'mon, confess. You're just yankin' our chains, right ? I love you too Ken. |
#8
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Todd wrote:
Ken Fortenberry wrote: I don't know Todd, I have to agree with Dave S and Louie, the nonsense you post about fly fishing indicates to me you don't know **** from shinola about fly fishing. Never fishing dries, throwing away your bead heads, catching a "zillion" wild fish in a stream that's stocked annually, none of it sounds real or believable. C'mon, confess. You're just yankin' our chains, right ? I love you too Ken. Well, as confessions go that left a little to be desired. Maybe you do actually fly fish and you're just clueless, I mean given some of the dittohead **** you've posted here that is certainly not beyond the realm of possibility. But it sounds to me like you're pretending to be a fly fisherman and if you want to pretend to be a fly fisherman in a Usenet newsgroup full of actual fly fishermen you need to watch better videos. "Drifters versus Hatchers" LOL !! Get real. -- Ken Fortenberry |
#9
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On Sep 21, 4:11*pm, David LaCourse wrote:
Took a well deserved nap until 3 when the cabin boy woke me putting wood in the bin. How did that feel? |
#10
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mr.rapidan wrote:
On Sep 21, 4:11 pm, David LaCourse wrote: Took a well deserved nap until 3 when the cabin boy woke me putting wood in the bin. How did that feel? POTM -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
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