Fly Patterns
Fly Patterns
|
|
STEELHEAD/SALMON EGG PATTERNS 3 Flies $1.50 |
|
|
STEELHEAD/SALMON EGG PATTERNS 3 Flies $1.50 |
More Success Fly Fishing Lakes
Do you really want to have more success when you are fly fishing lakes? Lakes offer some tremendous opportunities for fly anglers and often, bigger fish than are typically found in small rivers and streams can be had. Even large ponds can hold some big old brutes of fish.
Although many anglers when fly fishing lakes will use traditional patterns such as Woolly Buggers, leeches and Wet Flies, often overlooked are chironoids.
This is a shame as chironomids are a large part of a fish’s diet in lakes. In North America, there are over a thousand varieties of these midges that don’t bite. They are also found in rivers and streams but are especially effective in stillwater fly fishing.
If you would like to have more catches when you visit lakes, it would be to your benefit to get to know more about chironomids and their various stages including the pupae and larva stage of their development. When the fish are taking them, chironomid fly fishing can be hot!
One of the nice things about chironomid fly patterns is their simplicity and ease to tie up. Effective patterns can be as simple as wrapping red stretchy material such as red Flextreme around a grub hook and securing it. The addition of a bead head and/or peacock herl at the head can add to the effectiveness of the pattern.
Another effective chironomid pattern is a simple tie of French Oval copper tinsel around the shank of a grub hook with a bead head and floss for breathers or gills. Of course, there are many other patterns that are simple to tie that you might have success with.
The best way to fish chironomid patterns is very slowly. Chironomids in a lake often have very little movement and are affected by the lake conditions and currents. When fishing them, give the line a quick twitch and then allow the fly to sink and move downward in the water and be moved around by the lake’s natural motions upon it. Often you will find a fish will take on this long pause after you’ve twitched your line.
Another effective way to fish them is to retrieve them very slowly.
Where legal, chironomids can be deadly when fished in a tandem of two or three flies. Experiment with them at various depths of the lake, and enjoy more success while stillwater fly fishing and try some of these midge and chironomid fly patterns.
About the Author
You are invited to learn more about fly fishing at All About Fly Fishing. Follow along on some of Ian’s fly fishing trips at his blog.
Learn How to Fly Fish
Have you ever been fishing? Many people would answer yes to this. In America alone, according to the American Sportfishing Association, there are nearly 40,000,000 anglers. But; have you ever tried Fly Fishing? Well, If you enjoy fishing of any kind I strongly suggest you try it. But, and this is very important. Learn How To Fly Fish Properly. If you go out with your new fly fishing gear, tie on your fly, cast, and hope, it’s likely that you’ll catch nothing, and then you’ll become disillusioned.
There are many things to learn first: Rod selection, line selection, leader and tippet selection, casting techniques. I could go on and on. But what I’m saying is, get the basics right first.
Fly Fishing is learning to imitate nature as you fool the fish into taking your carefully selected fly. Then feeling the exhilaration as you maybe hook a Smallmouth Bass and skilfully reel it in as it jumps and fights for all it’s worth on the surface, trying to throw the hook. Or perhaps a big trout that threatens to break your line.
O.k. so you can get the same thrill from bait fishing, and once you’ve hooked a fish, the way you reel it in is much the same. But it’s the skill of catching the fish which makes Fly Fishing so exhilarating.
So which is best, Bait Fishing or Fly Fishing? The answer is that neither one is better, or worse than the other. They’re just different. There is more to learn for successful Fly Fishing, it’s true, and some people just don’t want to learn about hatches, fly patterns etc. The skill of Fly Fishing is to make the fish see the fly and believe it’s a real insect and not a threat, or something to ignore. In my opinion, when you catch a fish this way, the feeling you get is 100 times that, of putting live bait in the water and waiting for the fish to bite.
Most novice anglers start with bait fishing. And it’s the best way to introduce children to fishing. But for me, and every Fly Fisherman I’ve ever talked to, bait fishing just doesn’t give the excitement of Fly Fishing.
Learn how to Fly Fish properly and it’s unlikely that you’ll ever want to go back to bait fishing.
About the Author
William Carter is an experienced Fly Fisherman who has spent many years teaching others how to improve their fly fishing. Starting from, getting the basics right, to using little known techniques and strategies that the Pro’s use, to catch those trophy fish. visit at: www.betterflyfishing.com
|
|
STEELHEAD/SALMON EGG PATTERNS 3 Flies $1.50 |
|
|
STEELHEAD/SALMON EGG PATTERNS 3 Flies $1.50 |
|
|
STEELHEAD/SALMON EGG PATTERNS 3 Flies $1.50 |
|
|
STEELHEAD/SALMON EGG PATTERNS 3 Flies $1.50 |
|
|
STEELHEAD/SALMON EGG PATTERNS 3 Flies $1.50 |
|
|
10x FLY FISHING FLIES FISHHOOK DRY PATTERN SIZE 8 NEW $0.77 |
|
|
Hand Tied Bass Flies Shimmer Eels New Pattern! set of 3 $3.99 |
|
|
10x FLY FISHING FLIES FISHHOOK DRY PATTERN SIZE 10 NEW $0.99 |
|
|
10x FLY FISHING FLIES FISHHOOK DRY PATTERN SIZE 2 NEW $0.99 |
|
|
Assorted Wet Flies – Qty. 50 – Various Sizes & Patterns $0.99 |
