Fish Sniffer On Demand Digital Edition Issue 3825 Nov 22- Dec 6 | Page 13
FRESHWATER
VOL.38 • ISS. 25
Nov 22 - Dec 6, 2019
11
Catch & Release Fishing!
Hook More & Bigger Fish With Flies...
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The Fly & Bubble: The Ultimate Tool For
The Spinning Gear Fly Angler By Cal Kellogg
I’d like to shake the guy’s hand that invented modern spinning tackle. The
modern spinning setup is light, strong, simple to use for novices and experts
alike and reliability approaches 100%.
If spinning gear, or any type of conventional gear has an inherent weakness it’s
the inability to toss really small lightweight trout baits like flies.
The best solution to the problem comes in the form of a clear plastic bobber
or “casting bubble” as they’ve been dubbed by some. I call the approach the ‘ol
clear bubble trick. The clear bubbles that I’m referring to are oval in shape. The
bubble has a hole at either end and a tapered hollow spike wedges into those
holes. Your main line can be threaded through the spike.
Basic bubble rigging goes like this. Take your bubble and pull the spike out
exposing the holes. Submerge the bobber in water and shake it around to force
out the air and let in water. The holes are small and it can be tough to get the
water to flow in so you’ll have to work at it a little. I like to fill my bobbers
completely, but we’ll talk more about that in a bit.
Without removing the bobber from the water, shove the hollow spike through
the holes
until it
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and started clearing the other rods…
We’ll get back to the big fish in a bit,
because I’ve got to share the drama that
took place before we’d hit the water at
about 1 pm. We’d arrived at the lake the
afternoon before and hit the water to do a
little scouting. We’d caught a small trout
on a spoon and located some promising
areas for the next morning.
Our plan was to get an early start, hit
the water just after sunrise and to hunt for
big trout all day. Everything was going
as planned until we rolled up to the West
Shore boat ramp about a half hour after
daylight. That’s when things went from
perfect to horrible in seconds when my
Suburban’s fan belt disintegrated.
I didn’t know it at the time, but the
tensioner wheel had failed and ate up the
belt. I don’t know anything about cars
save for the fact that when the fan belt is
laying on the ground below the vehicle
that it’s not good…LOL!
Gena got on the phone and got things
happening quickly. She located a garage
and lined up a tow within minutes. I’d
always wondered what would happen
if you broke down towing a boat, now I
know…
Dan the tow truck man showed up with
one of those giant tilting bed trucks. He
unhitched the boat, winched the SUV
up onto the deck of his truck and then
attached the boat to the hitch on his huge
tow truck. It took Dan about 15 minutes to
get everything situated and off we went.
When we got dropped off at the garage
the mechanic told me we needed to work
quickly.
“This is going to be a pretty minor
repair, but we’ve got to figure out what
we need,” he said. “Parts come from
Chico and they
only deliver up here
in Chester once a
week. The delivery
truck is set to leave
Chico in a few
minutes, but I’ve
called and asked
them to wait.”
Minutes later he
called in what he
needed and the parts
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3825
Next thread
your main line
through the hollow
spike impaled in
the bubble. After
passing the line though the spike thread on a plastic bead and then knot on a
small black swivel. Your leader will attach the other end of the swivel….We’ll
get back to the leader soon.
You’ve probably been wondering why I fill the bubble completely full with
water? Here’s the deal. Sometimes I want to present my offering just a hair below
the surface. Other times I’ll want to get it down a bit. If there is air in your bubble
the bubble is going to float. That’s fine if you want to fish just under the surface,
but you won’t be able to get any depth.
On the other hand a full bubble has zero buoyancy. If you allow a full bubble
to set in one spot without retrieving it, it will slowly sink and you can count it
down. When using flies teamed with a full bubble a deadly trick is to stop your
retrieve periodically and allow the bubble to sink, slowly drawing the fly down
with it. Lots of times the sight of that slowly descending fly is tempting enough
to turn followers into hooked fish.
When I rig up for bubble fishing I use a reel spooled with standard high quality
mono, but I use 6 or 8 pound fluorocarbon for my leader. I’ve used leaders as
long as 5 feet and as short as 18 inches. Overall I think leaders in the 24 to 36
inch range work best. These leaders are long enough to get the bait away from
the bubble a bit, but not so long as to make casting difficult.
When targeting trout the number one offering you can employ is a streamer
style fly that incorporates marabou. My favorites are either woolly buggers or
Sep’s trolling flies. Big flies will catch fish, but if big flies fail don’t be afraid to
go smaller and smaller until you get hit. In high mountain lakes I’ve found No.
14 and 16 aquatic beetle imitations to be deadly.
continued from page 1
get you back on the road by the time we
close tonight.. I’ll drive back to your hotel
and pick you up when we are done.”
Gena and I would have rather been out
fishing for sure, but things were working
out. Back at the hotel, we left Lucy in the
room and headed out for breakfast.
We’d just finished eating and were
looking around in a gift shop, when the
garage called. The truck was finished!
The parts truck had driven directly to
Chester and our garage was their first stop.
The Fishing Gods were smiling down on
us.
The mechanic picked us up. I paid the
bill and we were off to the lake. By 1
o’clock we were motoring across open
water headed for the fish I’d located along
the peninsula. I couldn’t believe we’d
made it out on the water! Back to Gena
and the big trout….
As the fish made a fierce J shaped run
that culminated in a series of wild jumps, I
dropped the big motor into neutral, set the
Minn Kota to move us forward slowly and
started reeling in the second leadcore rod.
Right then the trout turned on a dime and
bolted right at the boat. Gena is a veteran
and she kept slack from forming in the
line. I grabbed the net and got ready.
“We’ve got two lines out and a down-
rigger cable to deal with. We’ll probably
only get one shot at landing this fish,” I
said.
I jumped up on the transom with the net.
I could see the fish below the boat in the
clear water, Gena couldn’t so she had to
rely on me to tell her how to position the
rod tip. The big trout was making repeated
power dives between the second leadcore
line and the downrigger cable. He’d surge
down, lose steam against the drag and
then head shake violently. I could see that
he was barely hooked and my heart was
in my throat. My goal was to keep Gena
cranking the reel while using side pressure
to keep the fish away from the downrigger
cable, the motor and the other line.
After a couple minutes that seemed like
an hour, the big rainbow gave up and
came to the surface. It crossed the other
downrigger line at the last second, but it
didn’t matter. I made the scoop, the spoon
instantly shook free and the celebrating
began!
The fish was massive, just over 23
inches long and well over 5 pounds.
The rainbow had tremendous girth that
made its head look tiny in comparison to
its huge body. It was an epic freshwater
predator and true eating machine living in
a lake ripe with forage.
I’d like to report that we kept on trolling
and kept on landing fish, but that wasn’t
the case. Minutes after Gena landed her
monster a hellacious wind came up and
we were soon slugging through 3 and 4
foot rollers to get back to the West Shore
and shelter. We trolled there for a while
with zero results save for a swing and a
miss on my trolling fly.
With the sun slipping behind the trees,
we slid the boat back on the trailer and
called it a trip. Despite big wind and
mechanical drama, we’d got it done. We’ll
be serving Gena’s trophy wild rainbows
for dinner tonight!