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I was fishing this past weekend for bluegill. My wife was useing her
Ultralight set up and live brown crickets. She was catching them with almost everycast. Me...fishing a few feet from her with my flyrod was catching just a few. I tried every pattern I had that resembled a cricket or something similiar. The fish would always go to the live cricket. I tried different presentation techniques. Different methods of retrievals....etc..etc.... To no avail. Is there pattern for a brown cricket that anyone has had success with??? Thanks Mike |
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wrote...
I was fishing this past weekend for bluegill. My wife was useing her Ultralight set up and live brown crickets. She was catching them with almost everycast. Me...fishing a few feet from her with my flyrod was catching just a few. I tried every pattern I had that resembled a cricket or something similiar. The fish would always go to the live cricket. I tried different presentation techniques. Different methods of retrievals....etc..etc.... To no avail. Is there pattern for a brown cricket that anyone has had success with??? Thanks Mike Here's one that Warren contributed to a roff swap: http://tinyurl.com/27a2m He wouldn't give up the recipe, so you're on your own. ;-) If you *really* want to catch bluegill on just about every cast, Here's the bluegill swap Stan hosted last year: http://tinyurl.com/24zqp I can honestly say I've tried all of these and caught bluegill with each. -- TL, Tim BTW, don't tell Warren, but I used that hopper for bluegill myownself and it worked great. ------------------------ http://css.sbcma.com/timj |
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wrote...
Is there pattern for a brown cricket that anyone has had success with??? Thanks Mike "TimJ wrote: If you *really* want to catch bluegill on just about every cast, Here's the bluegill swap Stan hosted last year: http://tinyurl.com/24zqp I can honestly say I've tried all of these and caught bluegill with each. Note that Mike Bernardoni (mikeb) tied a Jitterbee for that swap. Mike: did you think to try casting live crickets with your fly gear? I would think any dark rectangular foam block with rubber legs would work, |
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wrote...
Is there pattern for a brown cricket that anyone has had success with??? Thanks Mike Terry and Roxanne Wilson wrote a book a few years ago on fly fishing for bluegill and the pattern he came up with is called Bully's Bluegill Spider. It does not look anything like a cricket, but is intended to sink the way a cricket does. It is weighted with most of the weight on the rear of the hook and a chenille body and some round rubber legs stacked on the front of the body so that the fly sinks with the butt sinking first. I find that it is sometimes very effective for bluegills if you fish it where you should. I find it works best around drop-offs. terry ties them in several colors, but the last time I watched him tying at a conclave he was tying them in a hot pink color. At that time that color had beek just slaying them for some unknown reason. I don't pretend to understand some of this **** sometimes. I tie them most often with variegated (sp) chenille. I tie them on size 10 dry fly hooks and they are easy to tie once you get used to the strange way of weighting the hook and it still feels a little odd trying to stack those round ruber legs. Big Dale |
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I have tied the "Bully Spider" but didn't have any to try. thanks for the
suggestion! MIKE "Big Dale" wrote in message ... wrote... Is there pattern for a brown cricket that anyone has had success with??? Thanks Mike Terry and Roxanne Wilson wrote a book a few years ago on fly fishing for bluegill and the pattern he came up with is called Bully's Bluegill Spider. It does not look anything like a cricket, but is intended to sink the way a cricket does. It is weighted with most of the weight on the rear of the hook and a chenille body and some round rubber legs stacked on the front of the body so that the fly sinks with the butt sinking first. I find that it is sometimes very effective for bluegills if you fish it where you should. I find it works best around drop-offs. terry ties them in several colors, but the last time I watched him tying at a conclave he was tying them in a hot pink color. At that time that color had beek just slaying them for some unknown reason. I don't pretend to understand some of this **** sometimes. I tie them most often with variegated (sp) chenille. I tie them on size 10 dry fly hooks and they are easy to tie once you get used to the strange way of weighting the hook and it still feels a little odd trying to stack those round ruber legs. Big Dale |
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Yep it was me that tied the "Jitterbee". {:O) I never thought about using
live bait on my flyrod....I guess I think it may be a sacrilege and me being hardheaded!! {:O)But I know people do it all the time. I did get a few fish with a sinking fly that had black foam on it and rubber legs. MIKE net.invalid wrote in message news ![]() wrote... Is there pattern for a brown cricket that anyone has had success with??? Thanks Mike "TimJ wrote: If you *really* want to catch bluegill on just about every cast, Here's the bluegill swap Stan hosted last year: http://tinyurl.com/24zqp I can honestly say I've tried all of these and caught bluegill with each. Note that Mike Bernardoni (mikeb) tied a Jitterbee for that swap. Mike: did you think to try casting live crickets with your fly gear? I would think any dark rectangular foam block with rubber legs would work, |
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----- Original Message -----
From: Newsgroups: rec.outdoors.fishing.fly Sent: Thursday, June 03, 2004 2:37 PM Subject: Cricket Pattern?? I was fishing this past weekend for bluegill. My wife was useing her Ultralight set up and live brown crickets. She was catching them with almost everycast. Me...fishing a few feet from her with my flyrod was catching just a few. I tried every pattern I had that resembled a cricket or something similiar. The fish would always go to the live cricket. I tried different presentation techniques. Different methods of retrievals....etc..etc.... To no avail. Is there pattern for a brown cricket that anyone has had success with??? Thanks Mike I've noticed (both outdoors and in a native fish aquarium) that bluegills have two modes of attack: immediate or checking things out first. If they're hungry and used to eating a certain thing, they'll hit it with little or no hesitation. If they're feeling picky or aren't sure something's edible, they'll slide up but stop dead several times to eyeball (and I'm sure sniff) it. With real crickets, everything's go at these inspections, whereas something with hook, foam, and feathers is likely to be rejected a certain fraction of the time. |
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Thanks for the response. I had never thought about it but where I was
fishing the water is crystal clear. I could spy a group of gills and would cast into or near them. They would immediatly start swimming to the fly. Mouth it and go (or spit out) or just turn away when they got a good look at it, 9 times out of 10 they would look and turn away. but with the live crickets...BOOM.....no hesitation. MIKE "Flying Squirrel" wrote in message ... ----- Original Message ----- From: Newsgroups: rec.outdoors.fishing.fly Sent: Thursday, June 03, 2004 2:37 PM Subject: Cricket Pattern?? I was fishing this past weekend for bluegill. My wife was useing her Ultralight set up and live brown crickets. She was catching them with almost everycast. Me...fishing a few feet from her with my flyrod was catching just a few. I tried every pattern I had that resembled a cricket or something similiar. The fish would always go to the live cricket. I tried different presentation techniques. Different methods of retrievals....etc..etc.... To no avail. Is there pattern for a brown cricket that anyone has had success with??? Thanks Mike I've noticed (both outdoors and in a native fish aquarium) that bluegills have two modes of attack: immediate or checking things out first. If they're hungry and used to eating a certain thing, they'll hit it with little or no hesitation. If they're feeling picky or aren't sure something's edible, they'll slide up but stop dead several times to eyeball (and I'm sure sniff) it. With real crickets, everything's go at these inspections, whereas something with hook, foam, and feathers is likely to be rejected a certain fraction of the time. |
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