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Flyfisher

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Posts posted by Flyfisher

  1. Blue wing olives are remarkable. I've been on late season hatches (rather light hatches mind you) when the afternoon air temp. tops out at about 3 C. Most duns over feeding fish never make it off the water before being picked off. Those that do might make it onto a cold rock only to sit there shivering if Mays shiver haha. Some do make flight.

  2. In my experience late fall is when you find fish spending more time in tailouts more so than other times of the year. I recall one stellar afternoon on the Livingstone during a hatch of mahogany duns. Many fish feeding in very shallow tailouts. Stealth was key.

  3. On 1/14/2019 at 7:01 AM, DonAndersen said:

    Maybe as many as seven.

    Don

    Could be just how the image appears on my screen but I see 3 for sures (large fish) and 2 smaller maybes downstream of the 3. No visual clue as to 2 more somewhere. Good post. Got anymore similar photos?

  4. Began learning some new casting techniques last season. Was shown a roll cast mend that keeps a dry fly drifting drag free in conflicting currents much longer than say a reach cast followed by regular mending. Working on and making good progress at placing my offering in tight places such as narrow openings in log jams and tight spots, in and between large woody debis cover and under over hanging vegetation. Those seemingly frustrating and inacessible places westslopes hideout. In. The Arrow Cast comes to mind. Lots of fun stepping up the skill set.

  5. 5 hours ago, BigFoamy said:

    7MaLR9H.jpg

    Skinny George, got this pattern off that Leroy Hyatt show on Saturday mornings. Was prolly the most productive lake fly I fished last year. This is a killer pattern and super simple. Ive also tied it weighted. Also killer but, not as skinny. 

    Is that a marabou tail and beard?

  6. One easy change would be to start making people aware of these issues beginning early days in school. Otherwise I think a change of ways may well be a lost cause. The motor head culture (ORV) is a relatively modern day prime example of reckless ignorance gone awry.  

    • Like 4
  7. Yes, they need to be identified and protected. However I think it is questionable that in all cases they should be closed to angling if a localized population can support a well managed C&R fishery. Of course fundamental to this would be defining and implementing "well managed".

     

    If the assumptions are that a PURE strain of Westslope Cutthroat and not a hybrid is all that is important to the conservationists, than those streams need to be identified and protected from any man made intrusion.

  8.  

    Moving forward: should the foothill streams have a shorter season to protect anywhere there is a possibility for cutthroat trout to survive. Possibly 30 days?

     

    In of itself a shorter season won't do much. The scope of threats to westslope survival goes well beyond angling pressure. Resource management has to change.

    • Like 2
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