On Monday, September 21, 2020 at 2:14:46 PM UTC-4 caca...@gmail.com wrote:
I am not an avid trout fisherman. But I do like to fish for bookies in the park several times a year. For that I started tying stimulators. I found that once I got good at those most other small dries seemed easier, or at least not as hard as they were before. I would also suggest foam ants. The cost savings of tying your own flys is a myth unless your tying foam ants.Warm Water- I tie what I like to tie, not always what fish want to eat....sometimes it comes together and I catch fishgame changers-- I catch more bass and bigger fish on this fly than any other.I tie a lot of dear hair bugs too, but don't catch nearly as much on them.Again Easy cheap and will catch anything. Wooly buggers.On Monday, September 21, 2020 at 12:54:05 PM UTC-4 James M. wrote:Hi Josh,I've really never tied (although the last 6 months have definitely gotten my interest up), so I really have no idea if these are easy to tie or not. I think you might be on to something with terrestrials, though - a foam beetle might be super effective and seems like it might be pretty easy to tie (but this is just me speculating).
Trout:Elk Hair CaddisStimulatorHare's earWarmwater:Green Damsel Nymph (I love this fly for bass)Wooly bugger (might be cool to experiment with kreelex, as well as tail length for leech/lizard/minnow emulation)Clouser minnowThe other thing that was all the rage about 5 years ago that might be really effective around here was the mop fly - they're just a nugget taken off one of those dust mops and lacquered to a hook, but the internet said they were really great. I would think they'd be ok for both trout and warmwater and instructions should be readily available online.Have fun- JOn Mon, Sep 21, 2020 at 7:54 AM Josh <joshua.fr...@gmail.com> wrote:While stuck at home these past couple of months I decided to try to teach myself how to tie flies. All of the resources I have been using have emphasized that beginning tiers should focus on the 4-6 patterns that are likely to be the most productive in your local area. I definitely have not done that so far, but after having varying success with a number of flies (great deer hair beetle that caught fish vs a terrible griffiths gnat that fell apart when I took it off the vice) I started to wonder what would be the best flies for me to practice tying for fishing in the DMV.Setting aside shad flies, which of course I will be tying in January and February, I'm wondering what the TPFR hive brain thinks are the best 3-4 trout flies and best 3-4 warm water flies that a beginning fly tier should focus on for fishing success in the DMV.Thanks in advance!Josh--
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