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  #11  
Old June 27th, 2004, 05:40 PM
rw
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Posts: n/a
Default Coolest hatches (was fishing, casting, and recruiting)

riverman wrote:

You can use the bird situation to model the 'diagonal rising zone'. If the
emergers were coming up at a certain spot in the river, and there was as
light breeze (say, blowing southwards), then the birds would not all be
congregating above that spot on the river, at all heights. The ones who were
feeding low to the water would be right above that spot, but the duns that
got past those birds would be blown to the south as they rose. So you'd
expect the birds at higher elevations to be farther to the south. This is
the 'diagonal rising zone' of the duns.

In the water, its the same. Imagine a deep pool of slow water, with an
outlet on the downstream side. If there are rising nymphs throughout the
water column in the deep pool, then there are nymphs getting sucked into the
outlet current at all levels. But, a few feet downstream from the pool,
there won't be any nymphs at the bottom; they will have risen a few inches,
so there will be an 'empty zone' along the bottom of the river from that
point on down. Dragging a nymph through that zone will be useless. The
'diagonal rising zone' is the diagonal zone where the nymphs are, starting
at the bottom near the pool and rising to the surface several meters
downstream, depending on the current.


That clears it up. As I understand what you're saying, the current is
taking the emerging nymphs downstream as they rise through the water
column, so you find them at different depths depending on how far
downstream they are from the bottom.

Fishing emergers is something that's mostly beyond my experience. I've
had some success with midge emergers on the San Juan, but I mostly try
to dead-drift nymphs near the bottom. Willi is the by far the best
emerger flyfisher I've ever seen. I've watched him catch some big fish
that way, when everyone else was getting frustrated fishing dry flies.
It seems to me like something that has to be learned with much
experience and great attention to what's going on with the bugs and the
fish.

I'm going to offer a question for ROFF: What are the coolest hatches
you've ever seen? Here's my list:

- Brown Drakes on Silver Creek, Idaho. These huge mayflies (#8) make a
phenomenal spinner fall in the evening, and continue through the night.
You can catch fish in the pitch black of night, striking by ear.

- Morning Tricos on Silver Creek. Another spinner fall. It requires a
dead calm, or the tiny bugs are blown off the water. The fish feed on
pods, hoovering in rafts of bugs. You fish downstream, aiming your fly
into a mouth.

- Salmonflies on Marsh Creek and the Middle Fork of the Salmon. Huge
gyrocopter-like bugs that always look on the verge of crashing.

- Black caddis on the Bighorn. Keep your mouth closed.

- Green drakes on the Big Wood.

--
Cut "to the chase" for my email address.
  #12  
Old June 27th, 2004, 08:06 PM
Mark H. Bowen
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Posts: n/a
Default Coolest hatches (was fishing, casting, and recruiting)

I'm not sure of the insect type, as it was early in my ff experience but I
saw a hatch on Wilson Creek one time. The bugs were comin' to the top of
the water and looked like popcorn poppin'--HONESTLY. Their wings would
unfold (?), they would float with the current momentarily and then fly off.
It was really neat, as I had never seen anything like it, and I wasn't sure
what was happenin' at first. Finally it dawned on me what was taking place.
I had only read about hatches, in books, at that time.

I have since seen many bugs emerge in numbers, but never like my first
experience.

Mark
"rw" wrote in message
m...
riverman wrote:

You can use the bird situation to model the 'diagonal rising zone'. If

the
emergers were coming up at a certain spot in the river, and there was as
light breeze (say, blowing southwards), then the birds would not all be
congregating above that spot on the river, at all heights. The ones who

were
feeding low to the water would be right above that spot, but the duns

that
got past those birds would be blown to the south as they rose. So you'd
expect the birds at higher elevations to be farther to the south. This

is
the 'diagonal rising zone' of the duns.

In the water, its the same. Imagine a deep pool of slow water, with an
outlet on the downstream side. If there are rising nymphs throughout the
water column in the deep pool, then there are nymphs getting sucked into

the
outlet current at all levels. But, a few feet downstream from the pool,
there won't be any nymphs at the bottom; they will have risen a few

inches,
so there will be an 'empty zone' along the bottom of the river from that
point on down. Dragging a nymph through that zone will be useless. The
'diagonal rising zone' is the diagonal zone where the nymphs are,

starting
at the bottom near the pool and rising to the surface several meters
downstream, depending on the current.


That clears it up. As I understand what you're saying, the current is
taking the emerging nymphs downstream as they rise through the water
column, so you find them at different depths depending on how far
downstream they are from the bottom.

Fishing emergers is something that's mostly beyond my experience. I've
had some success with midge emergers on the San Juan, but I mostly try
to dead-drift nymphs near the bottom. Willi is the by far the best
emerger flyfisher I've ever seen. I've watched him catch some big fish
that way, when everyone else was getting frustrated fishing dry flies.
It seems to me like something that has to be learned with much
experience and great attention to what's going on with the bugs and the
fish.

I'm going to offer a question for ROFF: What are the coolest hatches
you've ever seen? Here's my list:

- Brown Drakes on Silver Creek, Idaho. These huge mayflies (#8) make a
phenomenal spinner fall in the evening, and continue through the night.
You can catch fish in the pitch black of night, striking by ear.

- Morning Tricos on Silver Creek. Another spinner fall. It requires a
dead calm, or the tiny bugs are blown off the water. The fish feed on
pods, hoovering in rafts of bugs. You fish downstream, aiming your fly
into a mouth.

- Salmonflies on Marsh Creek and the Middle Fork of the Salmon. Huge
gyrocopter-like bugs that always look on the verge of crashing.

- Black caddis on the Bighorn. Keep your mouth closed.

- Green drakes on the Big Wood.

--
Cut "to the chase" for my email address.



  #13  
Old June 27th, 2004, 08:40 PM
George Adams
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Posts: n/a
Default Coolest hatches (was fishing, casting, and recruiting)

From: rw


I'm going to offer a question for ROFF: What are the coolest hatches
you've ever seen? Here's my list:


- Brown Drakes on Silver Creek, Idaho. These huge mayflies (#8) make a
phenomenal spinner fall in the evening, and continue through the night.
You can catch fish in the pitch black of night, striking by ear.


- Morning Tricos on Silver Creek. Another spinner fall. It requires a
dead calm, or the tiny bugs are blown off the water. The fish feed on
pods, hoovering in rafts of bugs. You fish downstream, aiming your fly
into a mouth.



- Salmonflies on Marsh Creek and the Middle Fork of the Salmon. Huge
gyrocopter-like bugs that always look on the verge of crashing.


- Black caddis on the Bighorn. Keep your mouth closed.


- Green drakes on the Big Wood.


Siphlonurus Alternatus on the Swift in MA. The spinner fall rather than the
hatch. The big size 10 spinners drop right at dark, and sometimes in such
numbers that attempting to fish it is useless. Sadly, this hatch seems to be
disappearing on this river for no apparent reason.

Trico spinner fall on the Battenkill. Same as you described on Silver Creek.
The Eastern Tricos are *small*, 26 and 28 toward the end of the hatch. I used
to tie a "double" fly on an 18 or 20 so I could use a decent sized hook. Worked
to an extent, but was far from perfect.

Hendrickson/Red Quill hatch on the Farmington River in CT. Here again sometimes
so heavy at it's peak it is nearly impossible to fish.


George Adams

"All good fishermen stay young until they die, for fishing is the only dream of
youth that doth not grow stale with age."
---- J.W Muller

  #14  
Old June 27th, 2004, 08:43 PM
riverman
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Coolest hatches (was fishing, casting, and recruiting)


"Jeff Miller" wrote in message
news:RBFDc.5744$mN3.1637@lakeread06...
the only true "hatch" i've experienced was penns creek 2000, march
browns, sulphurs, black caddis, and grey caddis. a blizzard of bugs
that excited the fish for hours throughout the day, not just minutes
near dark. it's caused me to return each year since, but i've not seen
it repeated. this year, for about 20 minutes around dark was
close...even saw my first green drake.


I remember my first green drake, at least I think thats what it was. I
posted on roff about it. My overwhelming thought was of recognition from all
the pictures I had seen. It was an amazing feeling.

--riverman


  #15  
Old June 27th, 2004, 08:51 PM
Jeff Miller
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Posts: n/a
Default Coolest hatches (was fishing, casting, and recruiting)

the only true "hatch" i've experienced was penns creek 2000, march
browns, sulphurs, black caddis, and grey caddis. a blizzard of bugs
that excited the fish for hours throughout the day, not just minutes
near dark. it's caused me to return each year since, but i've not seen
it repeated. this year, for about 20 minutes around dark was
close...even saw my first green drake.

the waters, wildlife, and scenery of montana and idaho, not the hatches
(so far), have seduced me as well... maybe this year the bugs will sing
the sirens' song, eh?

jeff

rw wrote:

I'm going to offer a question for ROFF: What are the coolest hatches
you've ever seen? Here's my list:

- Brown Drakes on Silver Creek, Idaho. These huge mayflies (#8) make a
phenomenal spinner fall in the evening, and continue through the night.
You can catch fish in the pitch black of night, striking by ear.

- Morning Tricos on Silver Creek. Another spinner fall. It requires a
dead calm, or the tiny bugs are blown off the water. The fish feed on
pods, hoovering in rafts of bugs. You fish downstream, aiming your fly
into a mouth.

- Salmonflies on Marsh Creek and the Middle Fork of the Salmon. Huge
gyrocopter-like bugs that always look on the verge of crashing.

- Black caddis on the Bighorn. Keep your mouth closed.

- Green drakes on the Big Wood.


  #16  
Old June 27th, 2004, 09:42 PM
Wayne Harrison
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Coolest hatches (was fishing, casting, and recruiting)


"Mark H. Bowen" wrote in message
...
I'm not sure of the insect type, as it was early in my ff experience but I
saw a hatch on Wilson Creek one time.


i have only seen a literal handful of hatches (as might be classicly
considered) in the carolina appalachians. first time was on hazel, on one
of the few times we were on the creek near dark. they were creamy, probably
sulphurs, based on what i saw described as such on penns. fish rose
everywhere, we would catch the odd riser, but nothing spectacular.
then, about ten years ago, at snowbird, during the first weekend in
april, a sort of reverse drizzle of little blue duns just went on for a
couple hours or more; i can honestly say that, for the first time in my
north carolina experience, i truly "matched the hatch" with the smallest
adams para in my box, and actually caught more fish than with a standard
attractor.
couple years after that, there was a green drake hatch on lower hazel
that only lasted about 30 mins. i didn't see the first fish rise. the duns
looked like little toys, bouncing down the riffles.
i've probably forgotten a couple more events, but you get the drift.

yfitons
wayno


  #17  
Old June 28th, 2004, 12:09 AM
Tom Littleton
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Posts: n/a
Default Coolest hatches (was fishing, casting, and recruiting)

rw asks:
I'm going to offer a question for ROFF: What are the coolest hatches
you've ever seen?


1. Green Drakes at peak of hatch on Penn's(trestle pool). Literally, millions
of
extremely large white spinners, fish going berserk.

2.Sulfurs on Big Fishing Creek, three different species of duns hatching, two
species of spinners in the air. No clue what each fish wanted, and each
individual wanted something different. Put 20 different flies on that night.

3.First Penn's clave, March Brown spinner fall. These buggers are in the air a
lot of nights, but never fall. They did, in Poe Paddy, and yielded a few nice
fish, and one really nice fish. So disoriented, I got Handyman lost getting out
of Poe Paddy...

4.Penn's again, April 2003, Grannom Caddis. Hatching adults were clustered so
thick on my wader legs(brown neoprene, maybe they thought I was a tree?) that
Makela easily scooped two handfuls off the back of my right leg(about 500 bugs)
and didn't make a dent in the total, and that was just the few who clambered
onto me.

5. Hendricksons on Little Schuyllkill River.
Breezy day, heavy hatch was blown all over the creek. Fish went nuts chasing
blown-over and drowned adults. This went on for nearly 3 hours.








  #18  
Old June 28th, 2004, 03:08 AM
Tim J.
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Posts: n/a
Default Coolest hatches (was fishing, casting, and recruiting)


"rw" wrote...
snip

I'm going to offer a question for ROFF: What are the coolest hatches
you've ever seen?


Besides seeing some minor hatches, I ended up in the middle of a massive sulphur
hatch on the Swift River in Massachusetts a few years ago that was phenomenal. I
almost forgot to fish, I was so taken by the event.
--
TL,
Tim
http://css.sbcma.com/timj


  #19  
Old June 28th, 2004, 03:13 AM
Frank Reid
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Posts: n/a
Default Coolest hatches (was fishing, casting, and recruiting)

1. Green Drakes at peak of hatch on Penn's
2.Sulfurs on Big Fishing Creek,
3.First Penn's clave, March Brown spinner fall.
4.Penn's again, April 2003, Grannom Caddis.
5. Hendricksons on Little Schuyllkill River.


I'll see your 5 and raise you the white miller hatch on either the Potomac
or the Rappahannock River. I have caught it in both places. 30 feet out
from shore, you loose track of where you are. You can no longer see the
shore. You need a scarf or settle on coughing up bugs for the next week,
'cause they're so thick you can't breath.
I think the one on the Rappahnnock was the most intense as you added
darkness into the picture. In both cases, if you had anything white on the
end of your line, it wasn't on the water for more than 30 seconds.
Smallies, bluegill, carp, chub, anything in the water were all on the
surface feeding.


  #20  
Old June 28th, 2004, 03:53 AM
a-happy-up-yours
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Posts: n/a
Default Coolest hatches (was fishing, casting, and recruiting)

Frank Reid wrote:

1. Green Drakes at peak of hatch on Penn's
2.Sulfurs on Big Fishing Creek,
3.First Penn's clave, March Brown spinner fall.
4.Penn's again, April 2003, Grannom Caddis.
5. Hendricksons on Little Schuyllkill River.



I'll see your 5 and raise you the white miller hatch on either the Potomac
or the Rappahannock River. I have caught it in both places. 30 feet out
from shore, you loose track of where you are. You can no longer see the
shore. You need a scarf or settle on coughing up bugs for the next week,
'cause they're so thick you can't breath.
I think the one on the Rappahnnock was the most intense as you added
darkness into the picture. In both cases, if you had anything white on the
end of your line, it wasn't on the water for more than 30 seconds.
Smallies, bluegill, carp, chub, anything in the water were all on the
surface feeding.




First, I'm not easily surprised/amazed/puzzled.....

.....First Penns Clave (2000), first day - Saturday, about 5 PM. I stepped off the
island behind the Cherry Run cabin and I thought, for a few seconds, that I was
having a TIE. There was a step function from daylight to near-total darkness. March
Brown hatch all around me. Absolutely astounding. Never before or after have I seen
any such concentration of insects. Had to be a hundred thousand big flys involved,
at least. By the time I realized what had occurred, spit out all of the bugs and
fumbled through my fly boxes, searching for the March Brown imitations that were
still in the cabin, the event was concluded.

In the Carolinas, "hatches" are seldom seen, if they occur. This was a halcyon
moment, for me and an event I'll never forget.

Tom

n4tab at earthlink dot net
 




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