Fish Sniffer On Demand Digital Edition Issue 3901 Dec 20-Jan 3 | Page 11
FRESHWATER
VOL.39 • ISS. 1
Dec 20, 2019 - Jan 3, 2020
9
Catch & Release Fishing!
Hook More & Bigger Fish With Flies...
Sponsored by Kiene’s Fly Shop
916-483-1222 • www.Kienesflyshop.com
9550 Micron Ave. Suite B • Sacramento, CA
Flies For Conventional Tackle Fishing?
Why does an angler start using flies? That question has a lot of
different answers depending on who you ask. Some folks see fly fishing
as a more challenging way to fish. Others perceive it as a more sophis-
ticated approach. There are even some people out there using flies or at
least hybrid flies without even realizing it.
Don’t those hoochies your pull for trout, kokanee and ocean salmon
look a whole lot like streamers flies? And those marabou crappie jigs
sure look like bead head Woolly Bugger flies, or do those Woolly
Buggers look a lot like crappie jigs….Hmmmm the lines just got a little
blurred for both the dyed in the wool fly guys and the gear guys reading
these words!
Here are some of the offerings I use during any given fishing season.
Live 3-pound rockfish, 7-inch-long minnow plugs, flies, big 3 and
4-inch-long trout spoons, 2-pound frozen mackerel and 7-inch-long
plastic worms.
I use all these baits and lures in different situations for one reason and
one reason only, to catch more and bigger fish. I view all the offerings
I’ve listed as tools that make me more effective on the water in certain
situations.
I’ve been using flies and fly gear since my early teens. During my
college years, I was tying and selling about 10,000 flies per year. In
fact, my first paid job in the fishing industry was selling my hand tied
flies at the old Castro Valley Sportsman Shop in the East Bay. The point
is, that I know a little bit about flies and fly fishing.
Is using flies and/or fly gear more challenging or more sophisticated than fishing
with gear? Not in my expe-
rience. What I can tell you
is that if you are a multiple
species angler residing in
California and flies are not
part of your arsenal, you aren’t
catching as many fish as you
could be throughout the year.
That’s a fact!
As I said above, I use flies
to catch more and bigger
fish. In reality, there are a lot
of situations when fish are
ridiculously easy to catch on
flies and in other situations
you can catch fish on flies that you’d struggle to hook using lures or bait. Flies are
an especially good tool for hooking pressured fish. Here are a couple examples that
will strike a chord with the trout anglers out there.
You’re up on a Sierra lake and you are doing well hooking fish trolling lures,
casting lures or soaking bait and then it happens…Mayflies start hatching, the trout
start dimpling the surface and the bite complete shuts down for you.
If you want to go on hooking fish, the solution is simple. Break out a fly rod or
rig up a spinning rod with a “bubble and fly” and get a fly out on the water that
imitates the basic size and color of the mayflies the trout are eating. It’s as simple
as that…Fish On!
When we go from getting hit to getting ignored it’s easy to
think that trout or other fish are really smart, but that isn’t the
case. In the case of the trout eating mayflies the opposite is
actually true. The behavior is described as “selective feeding”. At
that moment, the most abundant forage is those mayflies and the
Fun Fly Fishing
experiences for
Beginners and
Experienced
Anglers.
WE TEACH
FLY FISHING!
www.mojobella.com
Steve Crosetti | 530-333-3484 • mojobella@gmail.com
3810
By Cal Kellogg
fish will ignore anything else.
If you and I were standing next to a conveyor belt covered with Jelly Beans and
a cheese burger came along we might grab it for a change of pace. Trout aren’t that
smart. They’d keep on eating the same boring Jelly Beans…
Moving on, imagine a destination
teaming with freshly planted trout.
It could be a stream or an urban
lake. There are lots of trout in the
water and you can actually see
them. They’ve been pounded with
every sort of spinner, spoon and
trout bait that spinning rod armed
anglers typically carry and the bite
has completely shut down.
If you start presenting those trout
with flies, particularly small flies
you’ll hook fish after fish after fish
to the point that the folks around
you will start shooting you the
stink eye. Why?
The trout are hungry, but after a
while they’ve started associating
standard offerings with danger, but they will happily suck in that No. 14 light color
caddis nymph again and again and again…LOL!
Upcoming we’ll be talking about gear, flies, different species of fish, different
situations and how flies and
fly gear fit into the broader
puzzle of becoming the
most effective angler you
can be.
Heck, I might even
recount the story when
my Dad and I caught and
released over 250 trout in
a single day on the heavily
planted waters of Hat
Creek using flies. When’s
the last time you are your
partner trolled up 250 plus
rainbows during a single
outing on minnow plugs or
threaded ‘crawlers?