cheeler Posted May 8, 2008 Posted May 8, 2008 Use water tension on the downstream side or behind you to load the rod on shorter casts if you're high sticking or czech nymphing. A double spey cast also works well for longer casts. Quote
fishfreak Posted May 8, 2008 Posted May 8, 2008 Make sure all of your line is behind you before you cast it forward. I'm finally at a point where I rarely "assume the position" to untangle my line. Quote
Brunsie Posted May 8, 2008 Posted May 8, 2008 Casting a double/triple nymph rig isn't really casting, it's more like lobbing it out there, especially if you add a corky to the mix. Keep your false casts to a minimum. If you have to, lay the line down in front of you and pick it up and recast rather than false cast it. At the end of your drift, rather than try and cast from downstream to upstream, strip in some line, pick the line up and lob it out in the genereal direction you want to cast, then with one false cast, shoot the rest of the line to where you want to be. Until you get the hang of it, keep your casts on the short side. Most of the casters who false cast a couple of times and really boom it out there have been doing it for years. Take small steps and you will get the hang of it. It ain't pretty but nobody else cares what your casts look like. Hope this helps BK Quote
fishfreak Posted May 8, 2008 Posted May 8, 2008 Fishing a double or triple rig ain't pretty, that's for sure! Quote
birchy Posted May 8, 2008 Posted May 8, 2008 Fishing a double or triple rig ain't pretty, that's for sure! Especially if you have a split shot or two on there as well!! Quote
Lundvike Posted May 8, 2008 Posted May 8, 2008 I gotta say practice. When I first started casting 2 nymph rigs I would get the biggest tangles and lots of them. Now I get only a few tangles per trip and they seem to be mostly of the easy to undo variety. I probably just horribly jinxed myself. 2 is definately easier than 3 and when it is windy (always blame the wind cause it is the problem ) I will mostly do 2 nymph rigs. Quote
Brownstone Posted May 8, 2008 Posted May 8, 2008 Roll casts with large loops will keep your rig from changing direction (which causes tangles) .. strip line and raise your rod tip until your rig is near the surface, wait half a second for the line to relax and continue with a regular cast, practice this and incorporate a little haul on the forward cast and you will eliminate 90% of your tangles.. I fish an indie, swivel, worm, and two nymphs pretty much exclusively and tangle very little .. one thing to watch for is that your rig does not land across your fly line, if this does happen recast or mend quickly or as your rig sinks it will tangle across your upper hardware .. weather it be your indie, worm or whatever .. Quote
chiasson Posted May 8, 2008 Author Posted May 8, 2008 Thanks for all the replies. I think I'm pretty close to figuring out what works. I wish it was a nice day so I could get out and try your suggestions. If anyone is interested I found these articles: http://www.adventuresportsonline.com/nymphrig.htm http://flyfisherman.com/skills/ltbouncenymphing/index1.html Quote
mkm Posted May 8, 2008 Posted May 8, 2008 Coming from a guy who tangles lots I have been tought one thing...if you tangle always tell yourself first "its never as bad as it looks". This seems to make taking the tangle out easy. Otherwise I get frustrated and this leads to more tangles. Good luck, you may see me on the river sometime...I'm the one talking to myself while taking the tangle out! Mike Quote
maxwell Posted May 8, 2008 Posted May 8, 2008 liek everyone siad open up youtr loops lob it a little mor eand false cast less.. only hting i can really add is u wnat a longer delay on teh backcast too allow the rig too straighten out more too.... wich goes hand and hand with big sloppy loops Quote
Garlicmarshmellow Posted May 8, 2008 Posted May 8, 2008 Best way I found is to use a roll cast. If there is any sign of trouble stop and check your line. That helps avoid huge tangles Quote
Hafi Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 Use a roller. It works great! http://www.hendsproducts.com/en/index.htm --> flyfishing --> index --> roller ><(((*> Hafi Quote
WesG Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 As few false casts as possible, the less chance you have to get it tangled into a huge ball of shmag Quote
markl Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 If you do have to make a backcast, to open the loop, try dropping the rod tip a bit. This should help to keep the loop open when the road loads. Cheers, Mark Quote
nick Posted May 13, 2008 Posted May 13, 2008 Just let the line straighten out behind you, then lob if back out there. Make sure the line straightens all the way or the nymphs will be all loosey goosey in the air and will go forward with little control -the makings of a good mess. Damned few tangles this way if done correctly, even fewer than straight roll casting. Nick Quote
Flash Posted May 14, 2008 Posted May 14, 2008 Use the heaviest tippet you can get away with. Fluorcarbon should eliminate and any fish spooking and it's stiffer. Actually, it's all about stiffness. A stiff tippet is less likely to tangle and when it does larger tippet is easier to untangle. Chuck and duck! Quote
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