Showing posts with label nymph. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nymph. Show all posts

Saturday, November 22, 2014

Salmon River Stone

Hook: 2x long nymph, weighted with 2 strips of lead-free wire
Thread: fl. orange
Tail: wire ends painted black
Body: black Angora
Head: orange or red Angora w/ fl. orange thread hotspot.

Monday, June 23, 2014

West Branch Report

The gauge at Walton was down to 300CFS so the water was looking pretty decent tonight. It was still a little cloudy, but any clearer probably would just make the approaches harder at this point. As the weather has been a bit cooler as well, I was hoping the conditions would be ideal for a good night on the water.

JBP and I didn't get out to the river until after 6pm so we missed the afternoon hatches and surface activity was pretty much non-existent until dusk. I puttered around with a nymphing rig (light cahill dry above a gold-ribbed hare's ear) for a bit, but only managed a couple of chubs on that. Once dusk came on, things started picking up as there was a solid hatch of light cahills in about a size #14 coming off of the riffles.

I managed to land a couple of small browns, one on a mahogany dun and another on a light cahill, in the fast water and had at least one nice fish throw my fly. The prize of the night came at dark when a 17" brown gently slurped my cahill from a current seam leading into a large, slow eddy. At first it swam right towards me and I thought it was a smallish chub, but once it got a look at me, the fight was on. Thanks to JBP for manning the net and helping me land it. You shall have your reward, grilled with Lawry season and bacon!






Saturday, June 21, 2014

West Branch Report

Happy Solstice!

I woke up early this morning, something I don't normally advocate unless absolutely necessary, and made it down to Hamden in time to get on the water before the sun hit it. The water level was down and easily wadeable at just over 400 CFS at Walton, but the water was still very turbid. Insect activity was pretty low and the rises came only sporadically. Rather early on, I caught a pretty little brown on a rusty spinner, but that was about it. A second fish was rising, but it wasn't interested in the spinner or any of the other flies I drifted over it.

After a dozen different flies with no success, I decided to move on and do some prospecting. No other fish were rising that I saw so I tied on an Adams wet fly and started moving. Aside from an occasional chub and other small brown, I didn't have much luck. Around 10AM I was working my back to where I started the morning and noticed the same fish was still feeding in the same spot. At this point, the only thing I hadn't tried was nymphing, mostly since it's one method with which I'm not particularly comfortable. Basically on a whim I set up a nymphing rig with a light cahill on top and a hare's ear nymph about 2 feet below that. There were some nymphal shucks drifting by so it seemed like a decent idea.

The first experimental cast caught a large chub on the hare's ear. Not feeling all that optimistic, I decided to go after the fish that had been thwarting me all morning. Two casts later, I had the drift right and and a beautiful 15" brown hit the hare's ear. The hare's ear was deadly and landed a ton of chubs and few more small browns and the light cahill, tied with calf hair wings, was perfect on top. Highly visible, it floated like a cork and survived plenty of dunkings and snap-t's without needing to be retreated.

About when I was ready to depart, I noticed another fish rising in a small eddy. It took me a bit to creep over to within casting range, but once there, the first cast drifted past the edge of the eddy. I nearly jumped out of my skin as a large brown came clear out of the water to smash the cahill. Unfortunately, it quickly threw the hook and I figured that was that. Before leaving I decided to try another pass at the eddy and a second fish hammered the cahill as soon as it hit the water. This one I managed to land; another 15" female.

All in all, it was a fantastic way to spend the last morning of spring.

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

West Branch Report

I hit a few more spots upstream from Walton this evening. Stream flows are quite nice at ~500 CFS. Still a little sedimentation in the water, but clearing up fast.  The evening was cool and breezy so I got a lot of work on my side arm cast and double-haul to tuck that fly under the wind. I also spent some time fishing an area where the current was slow on the near bank, fast in the middle, and slow on the far bank where the water drained from one pool to another. To fish the seems I got a lot of practice on my aerial mends. I definitely recommend checking out Peter Kutzer's video for some tips on this:


Perhaps it was the breeze, but I didn't see much surface activity until after dusk. I fished the same patterns as Monday for the most part, though I did try my hand at nymphing with an indicator and a pheasant tail and I spent some time swinging an Adams wet fly. The nymphing didn't last long as I don't much enjoy casting the rig in the wind. Someday I will give nymphing a more thorough go. I know it is one of the most effective ways of catching trout, but I haven't had much luck with it to date. Swinging wet flies through riffles can be relaxing and easy, especially if the current makes get a drag-free float on your dry difficult.

In the end, it was a slow day for me with only a few small fingerlings and river chubs. My buddy did land a nice 13 incher on a hopper pattern of all things.


Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Simple Stone Fly


Hook: nymph 2x long
Thread: black or brown
Tail: black or brown goose biot
Abdomen: black or brown dubbin
Thorax: black or brown ice dubbin
Wing: black or brown goose biot

My attempt at the stone fly nymph that the guys at TU's Dave Brandt Chapter 210 swear by here in CNY. 

Gold-ribbed Hare's Ear


Hook: Nymph
Thread: Brown or black
Tail: Brown hackle fibers
Abdomen: Hare's Ear
Ribbing: Gold Wapsi wire
Wing Case: Pheasant tail
Thorax: Hare's Ear

Sunday, January 5, 2014

Pheasant Tail Patterns

Pheasant Tail Nymph:

Pattern:
Hook: Nymph
Thread: Olive or Brown
Tail: 3-4 Ring-neck Pheasant tail fibers
Ribbing: Copper Wire
Body: 10 pheasant tail fibers
Wing Casing: Pheasant tail fibers (same as body)
Thorax: Peacock Herl (traditional) or dubbed (IE hare's ear)
Legs: Pheasant tail fibers (same as body)

Instructions:
  • If desired, wind lead-free wire around hook to weight fly.
  • Bind down wire/wrap hook with thread to tail tie in.
  • Tie in tail.
  • Tie in ribbing wire on near side of hook (this way, counter wrap doesn't disturb tail).
  • Tie in pheasant tail for body and advance thread to thorax.
  • Wrap PT to thorox.  Tie off but DON'T TRIM PT.  Wrap twice in front of PT.
  • Counter wrap copper wire using palmer wraps. Tie in with PT and trim wire only.
  • Tie in Peacock Herl for thorax in front of PT.
  • Wrap herl forward leaving space behind hook eye, tie off, trim close. 
  • Fold PT fibers over top of peacock herl to form casing, tie off behind eye, DO NOT TRIM PT yet.
  • Using thumbnail, push PT butts pack. This should force them to fan out.  
  • Evenly divide PT to either side of the hook, hold with left hand, and bind in place with thread wraps.
  • Whip Finish and trim thread.
  • Trim PT legs such that they extend back about the length of the thorax.
  • Cement head and wing casing.



Parachute Pheasant Tail Emerger:

Pattern:
Hook: Emerger or Dry Fly
Thread: Olive or Brown
Tail: 10 pheasant tail fibers
Ribbing: Copper Wire
Body: 10 pheasant tail fibers (from tail)
Wing Post: Poly Yarn (or calf-tail or similar)
Hackle: Brown, tied parachute style

Instructions:
  • Start thread behind eye, wrap back halfway, then forward half-way back to eye.
  • Tie in Poly Yarn
  • Tie in Brown Hackle behind eye
  • Create post with Poly yarn and hackle (leave hackle dangling out of top of post for now)
  • Wrap thread back and tie in tail with 2-3 wraps but DO NOT TRIM PT.
  • Bend PT up and wrap twice in front.
  • Tie in ribbing on near side of hook.
  • Wrap PT forward to just behind hook eye, tie down and trim, leaving space for head.
  • Counter-wrap wire palmer-style and tie in with PT.
  • Wrap hackle parachute style 3-4 wraps, then tie in with two thread wraps around post.
  • Wrap thread behind eye, whip finish and cement.
  • Trim poly yarn to proper height (~ body length of fly)

For a great demo on creating parachute flies, check out this excellent instructional video from Tightline Productions.