I guess that would work -- I've occasionally laid the line over 1 or more rocks on upstream or across-upstream casts and it provides a great drift.
-- I'll try the popper thing next time just for the heck of it -- why not?
Trent (all): Any of you tinker with furled leaders for dry fly fishing? I have several of them (made from uni thread) treated with red mucilin, but I can't decide if I like it any better than the 30 > 20 > 10 > 8 > 4 > 5-6X ones I seem to be using lately out there. I get the "they turn over" better portion, but in the end - you end up with a fairly visible 6' leader with 3-6' tippet vs. the traditional, mostly invisible tapered leader.
Plus, dry fly leaders with 3-4' tippet to pile up....it doesn't seem that turn-over is necessarily a benefit, at least within the last several feet on the fly-end. I dunno -- haven't decided yet.
Gene
On Thursday, August 21, 2014 9:01:55 PM UTC-4, Trent Jones wrote:
On Thursday, August 21, 2014 9:01:55 PM UTC-4, Trent Jones wrote:
I had never really tossed much big stuff either, but figured it would be fun to try. If I had a mouse pattern I would have put that on at the end. Teeth? I must have gone through a half dozen ant/beetles because they kept chewing the indicator off!
I usually fish the tail by angling a cast from the right or left so I can drape most or all of the fly line over rocks and just have leader on the water. Its best when you have a nice big flat rock in the 5-hole (Terry & Hockey fans). I almost always get the alpha fish to eat in that type of pool configuration.
In an effort to confuse the boundaries between Bronzeback and Vermiculatedback fishing, I want to take a Brookie on a blue popper in the future. If you pull it off this weekend and have a photo, I will have a dollar bill with your name on it at the next Beer tie Gene....or Beth. contestvalidtogeneandbethonlyonedollarbillpayablepercoupleno tliableforinjuireswhileinpursu itofbrookies onpoppersoffervoidwhereprohibited.
-Trent
On Thursday, August 21, 2014 5:16:44 AM UTC-4, TurbineBlade wrote:Beth and I found the same thing to be true recently as well (spookier than normal fish with low water in SNP, but still some decent action). I've never tried anything as large as you describe, but recently I've added parachute ants into the mix and they seem to catch just as well as the usual EHC I tend to always tie on. I should experiment more -- Maybe we'll be able to sneak out between the rain this weekend...Fishing the tails of pools is hard, but I did take a big one out of a tail a few trips ago (cut me with its teeth). Usually the tail is spilling over with enough flow to make an upstream cast difficult without instant drag, and sometimes there isn't enough cover to sneak in there for an across or across/down cast. Though I've spooked enough of them to know they hang there ;).Holy cow, fishing some of the tribs to the Savage taught us how clumsy and careless we were! Those were the most spooky brook trout I've ever seen --Gene
On Wednesday, August 20, 2014 9:15:49 PM UTC-4, Trent Jones wrote:I know summertime generally has people out chasing bronzebacks, but I have been unable to cast a fly at a trout in a couple months and had a really bad jones for some Vermiculatedbacks. Given that it has been a cool summer I headed out to Shenandoah National Park for some brook trouting, figuring the water may be low but should be cool. Thermo read 63f at 2:00pm. I missed the first few strikes until I got my timing back. Ants, Beetles, and Hoppers all worked. The best fun of the day was when I put on a size 6 or 8 cartoon hopper... it was big and obnoxious, but the big fish took savage strikes at it. The water was low and the fish were spookier than normal, but the fishing was still good. LOTS of rain on the drive back, I would bet the large influx of cool water will have the northern park streams fishing well the next few days. Walk slow to pick off the big fish at the tail of the pool.
-Trent
http://www.tpfr.org
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