In my part of the country, the most anticipated annual event among trout fishers
is the late-spring emergence of the pale yellow mayflies commonly known as "sulfurs."
Once these bugs start popping, local anglers can look forward to a month of reliable
after-dinner action. The daily buffet of mayflies is so rich that even the largest
trout shove their way into the chow line.
Most of my friends prepare for the festivities by sitting down at their fly-tying
vises and cranking out dozens of dry flies with glossy dun hackles or upright
wings of buoyant deer hair, but I wade to a different drummer. I get ready for
the sulfur hatch by filling my fly boxes with artificial nymphs and emerger patterns
designed to imitate the shape and posture of the insects as they begin to sprout
wings and swim from the gravel bottom to the riffled surface of my favorite creek.
Oh,
I catch my share of fish on sulfur dry flies, and it is pure excitement to be
on the water at sunset when browns and rainbows line up in the tail-outs to intercept
columns of dying mayfly spinners, but you simply can't beat the sunken fly when
the hatch is at its peak. My biggest brown on a sulfur dry fly was a 17-incher,
but I've taken them up to 21 inches on sulfur nymphs, and one soggy pattern or
another typically accounts for three-fourths of my total catch during the hatch.
You can bet that
ratio holds true for most aquatic insect hatches in most trout waters throughout
the country.
LET
THE TROUT DECIDE
Trout, you see, are opportunists when the dinner bell rings, despite their well-earned
reputation for selective feeding. They take food where they can find it, and more
often than not the table is set beneath the surface, with mayfly and stonefly
nymphs, caddis larvae, minnows and other aquatic organisms on the menu.
Don't take literally
that famous dictum about 90 percent of a trout's diet consisting of subsurface
fare. Montana's Bighorn River and the West Branch of the Delaware in New York
and Pennsylvania are two of many fertile rivers where big trout frequently stuff
themselves on floating insects. However, it is safe to say that most trout in
most streams take a substantial majority of their meals down under. Knowing this,
any angler who does not become proficient at using nymphs and streamer patterns
is plain foolish. Fortunately, these skills are easy to acquire with a little
practice, and what fisherman doesn't love to practice?
FISHING
NYMPHS
As one who was weaned on worm-fishing for wild browns and brookies and later graduated
to drifting egg sacs for spring-spawning rainbows, I am amused when a neophyte
angler or a wizened outdoor writer declares that being a nymph-fisher is akin
to being a practitioner of Zen. But fishing with bait and fishing with artificial
nymphs are essentially the same drill. You cast, let your hook drift downstream
a bit slower than the current speed, and raise the rod sharply when something
latches on. Admittedly, it's a little harder to detect a strike on a nymph than
a tug on a worm, but you'll get the hang of it after a few hits and misses.
Over the years
I've taught several friends how to fly-fish. Because each of those anglers had
done a bit of bait-fishing, I broke them in with nymphs rather than dry flies.
All of them made an easy transition to the long rod.
NYMPH
TACTICS AND PATTERNS
There are many ways to fish nymphs, but I use a dead drift with a floating line,
a strike indicator and a weighted fly or leader. Specifically, I rig an 8- or
9-foot-long 5- or 6-weight rod with a matching floating weight-forward or double-taper
line.
To
my line is attached a 9- to 12-foot leader (the larger or clearer the stream the
longer the leader) that is tapered down to a 4X or 5X tippet. If the law permits,
I pinch from one to three BB split shot on the leader about 18 inches above the
fly. In the few places where weighted leaders are forbidden, I use weighted flies,
although I'd rather add weight to the leader because it is easier to add or remove
a sinker than to keep changing flies until I find one that scrapes the bottom
in a given pool.
For many years I caught a satisfying number of fish by simply watching the end
of my line, but for the last decade or so I've relied on foam or putty strike
indicators to detect the grab. I would never go back to my old ways. A properly
placed strike indicator will wiggle whenever the fly stops and thus alert you
to many trout that you would otherwise miss. I put mine about 1 1/2 times as many
feet up the leader as the water is deep. For example, in water that is 4 feet
deep, the indicator should be attached about six feet up the line.
Casts, for the most part, should be short, no more than 30 feet. They're directed
straight upstream or up and across, and as the fly and indicator drift down I
raise the rod tip and take in slack to reduce drag and facilitate a quick strike.
My line is flipped, or "mended," upstream as necessary to keep things moving along
at current speed. Do you see the similarities to bait-fishing?
If the indicator dives, darts upstream, moves sideways or even pauses in its downstream
ride, I raise the rod with a quick movement of my forearm, as if I were drawing
back a hammer to drive a nail. No fish, no problem. When I come up empty, I just
lower the rod and finish out the drift. After a few sessions of such fishing,
most anglers can actually anticipate strikes at certain points in the drift. In
my experience, most hits come just after the fly has hit bottom and starts downstream,
or just as the drift has ended and the fly starts to rise up in the water column,
like a live nymph making its ascent to the surface during a hatch.
PICK
A PATTERN
Frankly, I have boxes full of nymphs and carry dozens of different patterns on
the stream because I enjoy experimenting with new, improved versions of old favorites.
But if I were forced to rely on just a few nymph patterns, I'd feel comfortable
on most rivers with a gold-ribbed Hare's Ear, a peeking caddis imitation of some
sort, and a fly of my own design called a snowshoe emerger. Of course, I'd insist
on stocking all three in a full run of hook sizes, from No. 10 through No. 18,
at least.
The Hare's Ear is a favorite of countless nymph-fishers, but its recipe varies.
My version has a small clump of webby brown hackle fibers for a tail and a body
made of fur clipped from the snout and ears of a European hare. I like a dark
gray-brown mix of fur. The abdomen, or rear half, of the nymph is ribbed with
several turns of fine oval gold wire. I make a humped wing case from a strip of
dark-gray duck primary feather. The nymph's "legs" are made by using a needle
to pick out a few guard hairs from the dubbed thorax.
The beauty of the Hare's Ear is that it looks a little like many small creatures
trout favor and is a reasonable facsimile of a mayfly or stone fly nymph. If you
squint really hard, it also resembles a scud (freshwater shrimp), a crane fly
larva or even a caddis larva crawling around in a sand-and-gravel case.
Hare's Ear nymphs
should not be tied too neatly. In fact, the more they've been chewed on, the better
they seem to work. I generally fish mine near the bottom with a split shot or
two on the leader, but other anglers also use unweighted Hare's Ears, sans the
gold rib, to imitate emergent mayflies that are drifting in the surface film.
The peeking caddis
I use makes a lifelike imitation of a larva bouncing along the river bottom with
its case intact. It's fashioned by wrapping a "case" of spiky gray squirrel body
fur with a few bits of tinsel mixed in. The case covers about two-thirds of the
hook shank. Next, I tie a short larva body of bright green or tan fur, add a short
head of black fur, and then finish with a few grouse or guinea hen-feather fibers
to represent tucked-up insect legs.
Peeking caddis nymphs, like the Hare's Ear, work very well in swift water, but
they also produce strikes when they're allowed to settle on the bottom of a deep,
slow pool and retrieved at a crawl. Watch the bottom in such a pool some time
and you'll notice that real caddis creep around like that. Mimicking that snail's
pace will take some practice and determination on your part.
My third nymph arguably is not a nymph at all, because it imitates a nymph that's
trying to fulfill its biological imperative of turning into a winged dun. Picture
the mayfly of your choice swimming toward the surface as it drifts downstream,
wings just starting to sprout. That's what a snowshoe emerger is supposed to look
like to a hungry trout.
To make it, construct a tail consisting of three pheasant center-feather fibers
or a small clump of wood duck flank fibers. Next, build a slender, fuzzy body
of seal fur or something like it in rusty brown, dark brown, gray or tan. My favorite
is rusty brown.
I happen to have a small stash of seal's fur left over from the good old days
before Bridget Bardot and her animal-protection cronies made the stuff impossible
to get. You or your local fly-tying connection will probably have to substitute
goat or some kind of synthetic fur in place of the glossy, spiky seal fibers.
Anyway, when you've
covered about 70 percent of the hook shank with fur, take a tiny swatch of natural
off-white or dun-dyed guard hairs from the underside of a snowshoe hare's foot
and tie it in by the butt ends to form a stubby "wing" on your fly. Add a bit
more body fur in front of the wing and then tie in several short pheasant or wood
duck fibers for legs.
The snowshoe emerger can be fished on a dead drift without weight when trout are
rising steadily, or with a small split shot prior to the onset of a heavy hatch.
In either case, let it hang in the current for a couple of seconds at the end
of each drift. That's when you're most apt to get a ripping strike on this particular
fly.
STREAMER
STRATEGIES
When trout grow too big to fill up easily on nymphs, they turn their attention
to baby suckers, shiners or miniature versions of themselves. Brown trout in particular
have a reputation for being "cannibals," but large rainbows and brookies have
piscivorous tendencies, too. Spin-fishers take advantage of these appetites by
flipping spoons and in-line spinners into deep, dark pools, but fly-fishers can
nab minnow-eaters, too, if they know how to use streamers and bucktails.
I must admit I
was not always much of a streamer-fisherman. Why bother, I figured, since I regularly
caught good-sized trout on nymphs? That attitude vanished one rainy day when the
water took on a milk-chocolate hue and my nymphs suddenly stopped producing. On
impulse, I tied on a big streamer and began working it through the head of a deep
pool. Bang! A 15-inch brown engulfed the fly. A few minutes later I was connected
to a 16-inch rainbow, and by the end of that afternoon I'd hooked a dozen trout
between 12 and 18 inches long, all on the same bedraggled fly.
Since then I've experimented frequently with streamers. In my opinion, these long-bodied
flies can take trout at any time, but they truly shine in two circumstances. One,
as indicated above, is when a storm has raised and roiled a river. The other opportunity
arises whenever you are on the water between dusk and dawn. These are the periods
when the biggest fish in your home waters are on the prowl, and large trout like
to take their meals a mouthful at a time.
There are many ways to work a streamer. My favorite method begins with a cast
aimed up and across. I normally use a floating line and a 9-foot leader, but you
might try a sink-tip and a 4-foot leader if you're fishing a wide, slow-flowing
river. In either case, let the fly sink for a second or two and then start an
erratic retrieve. Try to make the fly swim down and back across toward you and
use short upstream or downstream mends to slow or speed up its motion. Remember,
live minnows are more apt to be hugging the bottom than struggling at the surface,
so keep your fly as deep as possible.
Generally I make several casts to one spot and then move downstream a couple of
steps and do it all over again until I've covered the entire pool.
You can fish bucktails and streamers down and across or even straight downstream,
but if you do so let them drift back after every couple of pulls to mimic a tired,
struggling fish.
I'd have a hard time settling on any three favorite streamer flies but no trouble
at all picking just one. My pet streamer is the Woolly Bugger. A Bugger, with
its puffy marabou tail and palmered hackle, looks like nothing in nature but comes
alive when it's twitched crosscurrent.
A Woolly Bugger is made by lashing a big clump of marabou just ahead of the hook
bend and then palmering a webby saddle hackle over a chenille body. I like mine
with black marabou and black hackle wound over dark olive chenille. Some anglers
do well on sunny days with a white tail and body wound with red hackle.
Buggers work best
when a small split shot is pinched on the leader a mere half-inch from the hook
eye. This clumsy assembly is cast as gracefully as possible and retrieved back
across the stream in short, jigging hops. If you do it right, it looks more like
a retreating crawfish than anything else but will also pass for a food-grubbing
minnow or a wriggling leech.
My second-favorite streamer would be either a Muddler Minnow or a Black Ghost.
Everybody recognizes
the Muddler, with its clipped-deer-hair head and turkey feather wings, but many
have forgotten how it originated more than half a century ago. The legendary Dan
Gapen created the fly to imitate the sculpins that filled the bellies of big Canadian
brook trout. The Muddler is most effective when it's tied with weight on the shank
and jerked slowly along the rocky bottoms where sculpins hang out.
The Black Ghost, with its long white-feather wing, black-floss body and silver
ribbing, was originally fished in Maine as a smelt imitation, but it bears a strong
resemblance to many different minnows when it's wet. The white shows up well in
clear water and makes the fly a logical searching pattern on bright summer days.
Often, nice trout will make a half-hearted pass at a Black Ghost and then engulf
a nymph that's drifted down their feeding lane a few minutes later, so consider
using a nymph dropper (where legal).
*
* *
If
the flies described here don't help you take that big trout you spotted last summer,
don't blame the lures. Take some time to learn how to tie and fish underwater
flies and then hang on!