danhunt Posted July 5, 2019 Posted July 5, 2019 I sat down at the vise last night to tie up some damsels and as I was picking through my marabou looking for the "right shade of green" it occurred to me that in lakes where I've seen a damsel migration I've often seen the nymphs in various shades from dark olive to almost chartreuse during the same event. Has anyone else noticed this and/or has anyone noticed an appreciable difference in effectiveness using different colors? I think Dave Whitlock had a two tone light & dark olive pattern, maybe this is the way to go and save some space in the fly box instead of having multiple patterns? Quote
Frenchcreek Posted July 6, 2019 Posted July 6, 2019 I do mine in a two tone version, dark on top and lighter on bottom. I use PT for the top and mini wing case and marabou for the bottom and tail Quote
SilverDoctor Posted July 6, 2019 Posted July 6, 2019 I do mine with 2 mixed colors of Olive marabou for the tail and body, and a flashback using Flashabu. Mixes it up nicely. Quote
DonAndersen Posted July 12, 2019 Posted July 12, 2019 Dan, ive seen the same thing. Lots of colours but mostly on the light green colour. I wonder if it related to the adults. There are dark olive and bright blue. They seem to be of either sex if using “who is on top” criteria. Don 2 Quote
Current Posted July 19, 2019 Posted July 19, 2019 Brian C figures fish become more fussy about size, shape, & colour as the larval emergence progresses. Good little article here: http://www.gofishbc.com/Blog/Fishing-Tips/Blog-5-(3).aspx Quote
ericlin0122 Posted July 23, 2019 Posted July 23, 2019 i have very good luck with small and slim damsel nymph (size 12 c49s/gold rib/marabou/bead) in mountain lakes. light green is the colour i have most success with. through out the past years fishing ab/bc lakes, most common damsel sampled from fish were baby damsel in light green - to pale or almost transparent colour. Quote
DonAndersen Posted July 24, 2019 Posted July 24, 2019 On 7/15/2019 at 12:27 PM, monger said: Blue ones are the males Monger, lib that case, there are a lot of gay ones particularly in southern Alberta. Don 1 Quote
Sparkplug Posted July 24, 2019 Posted July 24, 2019 5 hours ago, DonAndersen said: Monger, lib that case, there are a lot of gay ones particularly in southern Alberta. Don Figured that suggestion was inevitably going to be made sooner or later in this thread... Been seeing a lot of adults in past week in Calgary (damsels that is), not going to speculate as to male or female, almost all of them blue. I would guess that regardless of adult coloration, the nymphs are all in that light green - dark olive/brown color? Quote
DonAndersen Posted July 25, 2019 Posted July 25, 2019 Some years ago on CBC I learned that damsels have two colours which can be either male or female. The researcher believed it was a defensive move to confuse predators. Females are better groceries due to egg mass. Don Quote
monger Posted July 26, 2019 Posted July 26, 2019 Looks like they are lighter soon after molting. I guess you would have to see how they are joined together to ID sex. Sorry for the bad info Quote
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