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![]() "Mike Connor" wrote People have argued with me in the past, that it is essential to know how a trout sees. I disagree, it is essential to know what the things the trout take look like, and this is to a considerable extent independent of how the fish see them. This is only possible if you see them under the same conditions to which they and the trout are subjected. It has been proven time and time again, to my own and many other people´s satisfaction, that lures which look and behave correctly catch more fish. So I think the problem does not lie with what the trout sees, but with what WE DON`´T SEE !!!! Mainly for lack of looking! Regards and tight lines! my assumption, valid or not, has been that even though they probably see things differently .... the difference would be rather uniform so that two things that look nearly identical to me.... could possibly each look very different to a trout.... but they'd still look nearly identical to each other, for the trout hope that makes a tiny bit of sense G I habitually test my flies in a clear container of water ... usually lifting it over my head to get an underneath view too, and swirling it around to check for internal movement in the materials ..... and spilling water on my head. If catching fish was the most fun part of fly fishing I would rarely fish.... it's Mike's chess game, the thinking and experimenting and more than anything else it's trying to immerse ( literally at times) yourself in your prey's environment and micro ecology that make this sport ... for me |
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