Re: Marking a Sinking Line
I would stay away from the super glue on the PVC personally.
I mark my floating and sinking line by using a dab of Knot Scenes. A little tiny bump that I can feel. Nice thing is, you can use a hair dryer and remove it without damaging the line.
Green line, is it by chance a type III?
I wanna hang on to this post and see what others do.
Re: Marking a Sinking Line
Why do you want to mark the line? I'm curious
You can put a nail knot on the line every ten feet. You will be able to feel it. If you need to see the mark from a short distance, use mono with some color such red or green amnesia or one of the yellow or red monofilament lines. Wrapped over a dark line they won't stand out much, but they may stand out enough to see from a few feet away. The nail knots wont significantly affect how the line casts and shoots.
Re: Marking a Sinking Line
We all know about the dot dash method...Roman Numeral... with the magic marker for marking our line weights....ala Lefty
Though I haven't done it yet I'm thinking of marking a thermometer probe line I just got similarly...e.g. one dash = 5ft....two dash = 10ft....use the dots if I want to get more specific...
Re: Marking a Sinking Line
Quote:
Originally Posted by Fly Goddess
I would stay away from the super glue on the PVC personally.
I mark my floating and sinking line by using a dab of Knot Scenes. A little tiny bump that I can feel. Nice thing is, you can use a hair dryer and remove it without damaging the line.
Green line, is it by chance a type III?
I wanna hang on to this post and see what others do.
I don't know. I'd like to say it is a type iv, I purchased it maybe 2 years ago, and the little tab that identifies it has long since fallen off - I had it pasted in back of the spool - This would probably make another good thread.
Re: Marking a Sinking Line
Quote:
Originally Posted by tailingloop
Why do you want to mark the line? I'm curious
You can put a nail knot on the line every ten feet. You will be able to feel it. If you need to see the mark from a short distance, use mono with some color such red or green amnesia or one of the yellow or red monofilament lines. Wrapped over a dark line they won't stand out much, but they may stand out enough to see from a few feet away. The nail knots wont significantly affect how the line casts and shoots.
Hmmm. I've been tying my own leaders lately (I must admit it's fun). Nail knots, and I don't care what size - like 5x to 6x - will catch your guides. I can only imagine what nail knots on my fly line will do to my Titanium guides.
Re: Marking a Sinking Line
Are you marking for Chan Deep Nymphing?
Re: Marking a Sinking Line
Quote:
Originally Posted by Fly Goddess
Are you marking for Chan Deep Nymphing?
Yep - I think that's what this is, please correct me if I'm wrong though - I'm going to try the technique of letting the chironomid (I think I finally got the spelling!) settle directly below me in 30+ feet of water, and then stripping ever so slowly so it swims upwards like the natural. I tried this two weeks a go, and I had a hard time knowing how much line I had out. Kept picturing in my mind that I had coils and coils of the stuff at the bottom. I'll be using a 7.5' leader with a 6x tippet and a sz 22-24 mosquito pupa (as a starting point). May go as light as 7x, and maybe even 8x if they have it available at the local fly shop tomorrow.
Before this, I've been using an indicator float. It's worked very well on bluegills, but now I'd like to go after the big boys (trout) swimming at the bottom and in the thermocline.
Below is a pic from the fish finder I stuck on my fC4. At this area of the pond the fish are all at the thermocline, and at the springs there are fish at the bottom (I'm assuming these are more than likely trout too). It's interesting that around sun down the fish start cruising in 10 to 3.5 ft of water.
[url=http://img523.imageshack.us/my.php?image=imgp1472kk4.jpg:c612d]http://img523.imageshack.us/img523/3...1472kk4.th.jpg[/url:c612d]
Click on the pic to get a bigger view.
Re: Marking a Sinking Line
You really don't need to do that light and you don't need a tapered leader. Try just a 4' piece of flourocarbon like P-Line or Vanish in a 6lb.
I agree that it is very hard to know how deep you are with that method. I think I read that he puts a weight on the end of the leader or flouro then ties the fly up from that. It is going to be tough cause you are going to be moving to some extent on Stillwater.
But I would think, with the weight on the end, let it drop, then slow retrieve you should get into fish, cause they are going to hit on the up sweep.
We went to a lake in Idaho over the weekend that I am familiar with, so I knew a 20' leader was what I needed and I knew where to go.
I put a black and white tungsten bead Chironomid on the bottom of the 20' piece of P-Line and then tied a tag that would hang down about 2' to 3' up from bottom flie and tied a Green Chironomid on that.
Dropped it down between my legs to 19' (one foot left before line) and put my slip indicator on. This is with a floating line. Pulled out some line and kicked back.....BAMB after BAMB even while it was dropping at times.
I was catch a fish every time I got the indicator on for about an hour and a half and nothing under 20". Man that is what I am talking about.
I like this method although you have to reel the fish in instead of stripping, then have to pull all the leader out again and set indicator, but you get it down after a couple of times. The good thing is no guessing if you are deep enough or too deep, and if there is a little chop on the water, those flies are bobbing up and down and action is on.
Sorry, that was a little long winded, I just really like this style of stillwater fishing.
Re: Marking a Sinking Line
FG...I hate the thought of an indicator ..can you tell me why you even need it with that method...can't you just watch the floating line?