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As we were driving over to Fishing Creek yesterday, a friend told me
he had recently landed a trout, hooked on one fly of a two-fly rig. When he released it, he felt a tug on his rod, and found that fish had immediately grabbed the other fly. Has anyone else ever had this exerience? PS: The fishing was poor. Neither of us caught a fish. vince |
#2
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![]() vincent p. norris wrote: As we were driving over to Fishing Creek yesterday, a friend told me he had recently landed a trout, hooked on one fly of a two-fly rig. When he released it, he felt a tug on his rod, and found that fish had immediately grabbed the other fly. Has anyone else ever had this exerience? PS: The fishing was poor. Neither of us caught a fish. vince No, but I fished Mud Run for three hours one morning without touching a fish. Then tied on a cinnamon ant, and when I released it from my hand a trout grabbed when it hit the water next to my right hip. Jeff |
#3
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wrote in message
oups.com... vincent p. norris wrote: As we were driving over to Fishing Creek yesterday, a friend told me he had recently landed a trout, hooked on one fly of a two-fly rig. When he released it, he felt a tug on his rod, and found that fish had immediately grabbed the other fly. Has anyone else ever had this exerience? PS: The fishing was poor. Neither of us caught a fish. vince No, but I fished Mud Run for three hours one morning without touching a fish. Then tied on a cinnamon ant, and when I released it from my hand a trout grabbed when it hit the water next to my right hip. Jeff When walking around a pool in the Gila River many years ago I was holding my rod out over the water to keep it away from all the overhanging brush. A 10" largemouth jumped completely out of the water to take the popping bug dangling from the end of my line about a foot above the water. -- Bob La Londe http://www.YumaBassMan.com |
#4
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![]() "Bob La Londe" When walking around a pool in the Gila River many years ago I was holding my rod out over the water to keep it away from all the overhanging brush. A 10" largemouth jumped completely out of the water to take the popping bug dangling from the end of my line about a foot above the water. Bob La Londe http://www.YumaBassMan.com I was fishing a grasshopper pattern (never caught anything on it that day) and was casting to a likely looking rock. Let the hopper land on the rock and then drop it gently into the water - right? I'll be danged if a smallish trout didn't try to get that hopper while it was on the rock! Reminded me of the way killer whales snatch baby seals off the beach. john |
#5
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I caught this war-mouth a couple weeks ago in a creek just down the road and
he'd taken the mosquito with considerable elacrity, sucked her so deep that I couldn't get the fly out without doing serious damage so I cut the fly off. Too pretty a fish to keep out of the water very long. He was two bends downstream swimming away before I can finish calling out "grow big". An hour or so later and a good quarter mile downstream, I'm working a wooly-bugger in fading light for the last fish of the day and I'm doing some stretching and walking to untangle the leader from the rocks and bring that last fish in. It's a classic, easy to release, corner of the mouth hook-up and I happen to look down his gullet and there's my damned mosquito still secure in his throat. I thought for second that I might be justified in digging around his craw to recover the first fly, and if he died, well that just might be eliminating some stupid genes from the pool and it's been ages since I cooked a fish I'd caught, but he was a particularly handsome fish and fought a lot tougher than you'd have expected from his length.... Grow big. -Doc |
#6
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![]() "asadi" wrote in message m... I was fishing a grasshopper pattern (never caught anything on it that day) and was casting to a likely looking rock. Let the hopper land on the rock and then drop it gently into the water - right? I'll be danged if a smallish trout didn't try to get that hopper while it was on the rock! Reminded me of the way killer whales snatch baby seals off the beach. john Reminds me of a happening on the Bitterroot River a couple years ago. We were at the end of our float about 50 yards from the takeout (Stevensville), it was getting fairly dim out. I noticed a small bird sitting on a rock sipping water from the river, seconds later a large brown tried to eat the bird. If I had to guess the size of the brown, I would say near 30 inches. My buddy in the front of the boat saw it too, we both looked at each other in amazement. JT |
#7
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... vincent p. norris wrote: As we were driving over to Fishing Creek yesterday, a friend told me he had recently landed a trout, hooked on one fly of a two-fly rig. When he released it, he felt a tug on his rod, and found that fish had immediately grabbed the other fly. Has anyone else ever had this exerience? PS: The fishing was poor. Neither of us caught a fish. vince No, but I fished Mud Run for three hours one morning without touching a fish. Then tied on a cinnamon ant, and when I released it from my hand a trout grabbed when it hit the water next to my right hip. Jeff I had the same thing happen on CT's Natchaug, way,way back on the first time I ever tied an ant to my leader........ |
#8
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... No, but I fished Mud Run for three hours one morning without touching a fish. Then tied on a cinnamon ant, and when I released it from my hand a trout grabbed when it hit the water next to my right hip. Jeff Had this happen to me on the St. Joe years ago when I was a kid fishing with my cousin. We would have our dad's drop us off up river and we would float down in a two man rubber raft stopping along the way to fish. I was standing in the middle of the river and tied on a renegade, dropped it in the water and a cutthroat took it as soon as it hit the water. The only thing I could figure, is that the fish was holding behind my legs as I had been standing in the same spot for some time? JT |
#9
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A number of years ago I was attempting to teach my wife's cousin to
flyfish. We were on the Mascoma River in central NH, and the kid was a tolal newbie to any type of fishing. I gad rigged him up with a 5 wt glass rod, overlined with a 6 wt line to make short casting easy. I was explaining the niceties of the roll cast to him, while he let his line, with a Wooly Bugger attatched trail in the current. I told him to raise his rod tip in preperation for the cast, when a 10" rainbow grabbed the fly. I said, "There you go...just keep doing that". Actually, the lessons continued, and he caught a couple more fish by more conventional means that day. Next morning, he was "too tired" to get up at 5:00, and that evening he balked at fishing until dark, ("too many bugs"), and as far as I know, he never fished again. George Adams aka |
#10
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... A number of years ago I was attempting to teach my wife's cousin to flyfish. We were on the Mascoma River in central NH, and the kid was a tolal newbie to any type of fishing. I gad rigged him up with a 5 wt glass rod, overlined with a 6 wt line to make short casting easy. I was explaining the niceties of the roll cast to him, while he let his line, with a Wooly Bugger attatched trail in the current. I told him to raise his rod tip in preperation for the cast, when a 10" rainbow grabbed the fly. I said, "There you go...just keep doing that". Actually, the lessons continued, and he caught a couple more fish by more conventional means that day. Next morning, he was "too tired" to get up at 5:00, and that evening he balked at fishing until dark, ("too many bugs"), and as far as I know, he never fished again. George Adams aka Fly fishing would not be my first choice for a raw beginner. I think its something a person draws themself into like some archane kinda zen thing. It can be taught, but only to somebody who is truly interested in it. Actually sounds like you did pretty good with it. -- Bob La Londe http://www.YumaBassMan.com |
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