JIm's smelt pattern is a very good one. I tye this one, and several other of Jim's patterns.
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JIm's smelt pattern is a very good one. I tye this one, and several other of Jim's patterns.
An excellent streamer.
As a smelt pattern it looks like the real thing.
lol!!!!! "The three stooges", wow!!! The places where the trout were caught are so obvious ( for trout fiherman)!!!!!
How can we get these in the US. Really need the preformed crab bodies for redfish in the gulf
hey i was wondering what the official name of that song you had in the background was. "throught the night"?.
Rick,
As mentioned in the article, you take it easy, cast with large open loops and use the wind to your advantage, having it from the back or from your "good" side, meaning on the opposite shoulder of your casting side. If you are a right hand caster a wind from the rear left will be a great help. And don't be too ambitious. Start with two flies and a shorter leader setup, and you will make things easier to yourself.
Martin
Rick,
I'm afraid that's like asking "what's the best car?". It depends... are you driving a race, fetching the kids at school or moving a piano?
Same thing with flies. It depends on circumstances, season, water conditions, weather, what the fish are eating, location and much more. You will have to ask locally (in flyshops), look at what other anglers are using, read books and magazines, go with some one who knows.
Martin
How do you cast/present to avoid tangles?
Many thanks Rick
As a fly fishing novice I am in search of the best fly: wet, dry, tie - to use in cold conditions - air/water temperature?
Many thanks
Lovely fly. The colors are outstanding. You did a great job on this fly!
Thanks Kelly. This was my fav of the first three in the series. I'm going to see how the fish like them in two weeks here. My 50th b-day present is a week on Mooselook so I'm pretty excited about that.
Great pattern Rick. Tied a dozen and fished it behind a Hendrickson Comparadun a couple weeks ago. Caught 14 beauties at Limestone, 11 on the midge and 3 on the dry. Worked great on the Farmington too!!.
Martin,
your answer doesn't confuse me, on the contrary, you gave some answers and/or advices I was hoping to get:
- tie some nice looking flies, go fish and see what happens!
- I have often simply chosen flies that I like and that "seemed right".....
My question intended, that I like the Sunray Shadow style a little bit more - it's only a question of taste for me and I really love shrimp flies on double or single hooks.
So your answer will really help me to fish "my" flies with more faith and so the danger of thinking "did I tie the right ones?" will hopefully be diminished.
Thanks for that.
Jan
Jan,
No question is too basic, and yes there is a difference... but like with all other aspects of fly tying and fly fishing, it's subtle and personal and maybe without real consequence when you fish!
The right fly style is the one that works (duh!).
The Sunrays work well in almost all waters all over the world - Iceland, Russia, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Canada.
The smaller flies also work in Iceland. Clear water and sometimes spooky fish call for weapons of a smaller caliber.
In the Danish and Swedish waters, which are often quite peaty and dark, people tend to select bushier and darker, brown, red, burnt orange and black flies while anglers in other places like the UK, Ireland and Scotland often select slimmer and brighter flies while the Norwegian and Russian preference is often larger. Colors are important I think, because the visibility of the fly relies on its color in comparison the the water color. In clear water all flies are easily seen, and people seem to go down in size. At night people select dark flies, often black - and large and bushy.
My personal experience is slightly offbeat, and depends on how limited my number of salmon fishing trips has been. I still have a notion that it's like with most other types of fishing: if the fish are biting, the fly choice isn't really that important.
Getting the fly to fish right is much more critical, fishing in the right depth, the presentation, not spooking the fish, the swing, fishing up- or downstream can have a much larger impact on your success than selecting exactly the right fly. Size can matter, and so can color as already mentioned and to some extent weight, but the exact style - slim, bushy, mobile, stiff - doesn't seem to me to play a really large role. I have often simply chosen flies that I like and that "seemed right" based on my own feeble logic and managed to produce fish, and at other times followed tradition and guide's advice and been skunked.
Unfortunately experience and routine is something that comes with... experience and routine, which equals hours on the water, and those of us that can't get enough hours will either have to listen to the locals or take the long shot and guess our way. The latter has often worked for me. Fish aren't that wise, and a somewhat skilled angler should be able to get them to bite - if they are in the mood.
The basic message is probably: tie some nice looking flies, go fish and see what happens!
Hope this long reply doesn't confuse more than it explains. Other more skilled salmon anglers might be able to chip in with more "reality based" answers.
Martin
Martin,
that's a really fine article, thanks for it!
I have a question about using different tube fly styles: is there a general difference in using tube flies in the style you describe here and the ones like Sunray shadow and the many variants of it (e.g. the very nice flies of Nils Joergensen - Migo NJ....). Could a salmon fisherman 'live' with flies in only one of these styles? Or are there big differences in using the flater winged Sunray shadow derivates against that Danish style tubes?
I hope my questions are not to basic for this comment field.
Best regards
Jan
Clayton,
I reckon that you mean "who" sells mkicrotube? Look for the product online and check out products such as Larva Lace, Flexi-Cord, Jelly Rope or other brands from other manufacturers. Microtube is probably too generic a term to search for.
Martin
Good news: Very very soon, FLEYE FOILS will be sold by: www.theflypeople.com (European market only). For further information, please write to theflypeople@web.de, dealer inqiries welcome!
Beauty fly Joel,have to try this one the colors are right for my fishing
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