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Thread: Old Dogs Still Hunt?

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  1. #1
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    Default Old Dogs Still Hunt?

    Hi,
    I know this is going to bring me some "hate posts", but here goes anyway:

    First, let me give a little background so you know where I am coming from with this. I grew into fly tying with idols like Lee Wulf, Jack Dennis, Charlie Brooks, etc. I tied their patterns and only wished I could tie as well as they do/did.

    A few years ago, I concluded that a lot of the flies they tied would not be as effective these days. For three reasons:
    1. The year after year; and increasing each year; fishing pressure on the streams and trout.
    2. The application of "relatively" recent understanding of insects, their behavior, etc.
    3. The development of new materials

    As an example, Lee would cast out a size 10 Wulf and catch a huge trout. I believe, these days, he most probably would have gone home skunked. I know it is sort of a sacrilege to say that, but I tend to think it has a lot of truth to it. The trout are much better educated these days. They see all sort of imitations thrown out there at them. They demand better today.

    As a bit of support for my theory, I give you Rene Harrop. A world-renowned tier and fisherman. He offers his flies (for a premium) at the Trout Hunter fly shop in Island Park, Id. There you will find patterns that are beautiful, look very much like the intended insect, and are tied in the appropriate sizes and stages of the insects. The whole fly tying community, including the big warehouses like Umpqua are moving this way.

    I firmly believe that if you were able to fish the major blue ribbon streams of 40 years ago, the size and pattern of fly would not be very important. Today, however, I believe it is nearly everything.

    Now everything I say assumes that the fisher has good presentation. So, it is a theory which says, all things equal (presentation of the fly), the fisher today must use much closer imitations to the trout's food than 40-50 years ago.

    Thanks for listening, now go ahead and blast me!
    Last edited by Byron haugh; 04-07-2012 at 03:11 AM.

  2. #2

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    IMO you are not correct. I fish almost exclusively with the old standard patterns with the exception of sparkle duns and the use of CDC on some patterns.. The rivers I fish are Blue Ribbon in the west and N.E. I have been fishing for about forty years and I really don't see any difference today than back in the day.

  3. #3

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    Byron,

    I think that presentation is by far the most important aspect, as you've aluded to. However, remember that those older tyers didn't have the materials and resources we do now. If Lee Wulff was here today, I doubt he'd be tying and fishing the same flies he fished during his era. As a pioneer in his time, if he were born in ours he'd be on the cutting edge trying the 'new stuff'. So would Carrie Stevens and Jack Dennis (one of my favorites mostly BECAUSE he did experiment a lot), et. al..

    I also strongly disagree that "the fisher today must use much closer imitations to the trout's food than 40-50 years ago." That's really the opposite of what I'm seeing out there on the wter. In many ways, the newer materials and flies that are catching fish today are actually LESS imitative than the older patterns. The overwhelming use of flashy stuff, beads, and bright colors in many of the most efffective patterns shows me that ATTRACTING the fish is more important than 'mimicking' its food. Trout especially are very susceptable to flash and bright hues. Remember that lots of anglers catch trout without resort to a fly rod, and things like spinners, spoons, glowing eggs, and bright colored dough baits are the top producers for them. NONE of these things look anything like a natural trout food. And you can take it as a fact that a ball of bright orange power bait will catch more fish overall than a highly detailed stonefly nymph.

    Many fly tiers get caught up in the classics, or the established patterns, thinking that somehow the evolution of tying is a bad thing. Even the simplest tie, if presented properly, will catch fish. My experience is that simplifying patterns and adding some bright colors or flash is way more effective on selective fish than a detailed 'imitation'.


    I'm sure others feel differently. That's okay too.

    Buddy
    It Just Doesn't Matter....

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by narcodog View Post
    IMO you are not correct. I fish almost exclusively with the old standard patterns with the exception of sparkle duns and the use of CDC on some patterns.. The rivers I fish are Blue Ribbon in the west and N.E. I have been fishing for about forty years and I really don't see any difference today than back in the day.
    Narc,
    If you were right, I believe the fly shops out west would primarily offer the "old standard patterns". Being an avid tier who hangs out a lot in the big fly shops in the West - around Yellowstone Park, I can tell you, you will not find a lot of the "old standard patterns". Believe me, if there wasn't much change between now and 40 yrs ago, everyone would be using Sandy Mites, Wulfs, and Catskill style dries. You won't find any of these offered in the fly shops out there today. I know, as I have looked.

  5. #5
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    Buddy,
    This is what you said, in part:
    "However, remember that those older tyers didn't have the materials and resources we do now. If Lee Wulff was here today, I doubt he'd be tying and fishing the same flies he fished during his era. As a pioneer in his time, if he were born in ours he'd be on the cutting edge trying the 'new stuff'. So would Carrie Stevens and Jack Dennis (one of my favorites mostly BECAUSE he did experiment a lot), et. al.."

    This is what I said:
    "A few years ago, I concluded that a lot of the flies they tied would not be as effective these days. For three reasons:
    1. The year after year; and increasing each year; fishing pressure on the streams and trout.
    2. The application of "relatively" recent understanding of insects, their behavior, etc.
    3. The development of new materials"

    My entire point is that the Wulfs, Sandy Mites, Hendricksons, etc. are no longer relied upon. And, believe me, if they worked as well today, that's what the guides would be putting on their clients' lines. It is not. They use hopper/droppers (with tiny flashback nymphs), sparkle duns, etc.
    And I agree totally that Lee Wulf and even Franz Potts would be tying different flies today!! My point exactly!!!!

  6. #6

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    this is exactly why i fish almost exclusively softhackles over heavily fished c+r waters here and out west on the rivers you fish twice a year. I will hook almost every rising fish i cast to on a soft hackle , my thinking behind this is that the fish have not become educated enough to to point of rejecting what i am presenting to them. your mileage may vary
    Last edited by flybugpa; 04-07-2012 at 02:20 PM.
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  7. #7
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    Default

    I think that the old patterns would work as well as ever. Part of the problem may be that folks are looking for the new and greatest thing to help them catch fish.
    We all know thgazt a new pattern will catch fish better. Is it presentation or the pattern? Some patterns work better than other on certain days.Still using somepattern that I did when I started fly fising.

    Rick

  8. #8
    AlanB Guest

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    Hi Byron,
    Here we have a very different access system for our rivers. On many there is no more fishing pressure than there was. One good example is the Chatsworth water on the river Wye in Derbyshire. The number of tickets available hasn't changed (the cost has gone up hugely instead). I was fortunate to be invited by a member some years ago (6 or 7), during the mayfly hatch (E. Vulgata). The most successful pattern was a white wulff on a L/S 8. Probably the same pattern that was used over the last 30 to 40 years. That shows that you are right in that fishing pressure affects the patterns needed.

    Just down stream the fishing pressure is greater than it was. On that length the old patterns do not work as well. I can quote quite a few instances of this kind of change in fish behaviour. It is the direct angling pressure that does it. Leave the river without fishing it for a year or two and the fish are as naive as they once were. Just as we did a few years ago, when there was an outbreak of foot and mouth disease. There was no access to the water for a season. The next year the trout were noticeably easier to fool.

    As to materials, well 300 years ago Stewart was tying his black spider with dark brown silk thread. Probably because he couldn't get a true black. I suspect that if he could get a good black then he would have used it. Classic salmon flies were tied with the materials available, mostly from the millinery industry. These were the latest materials at the time. Inventive fly tiers have always used the best materials they could get.

    The proliferation in tying materials is in some ways to the detriment of the skill of fly tying. 15 years ago I taught a fly tying class at a local shop. Then the Fritz material came along. Quite suddenly all people wanted was to lash marabou and Fritz to a hook. A year or so later, when these people had learned that flash isn't the only thing that trout take, the shops best selling fly tying material was... thread, ready dubbed with hare's ear.

    I shouldn't be surprised. I've just heard an advertisement on TV for an electronic game with which you can send, "Hand crafted communications to your friends". Funny I've been doing that for years with a pen and paper.

    Cheers,
    C.

  9. #9

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    Quote Originally Posted by Byron haugh View Post
    Being an avid tier who hangs out a lot in the big fly shops in the West - around Yellowstone Park, I can tell you, you will not find a lot of the "old standard patterns".
    Possibly because the "old standard patterns" dont catch fishermen as well as the newest, latest and greatest eye-catching patterns do?
    I think we over-emphasize fly patterns at times. We like new things and like to think we're evolving into better, smarter fly tyers and fishermen, when in fact the fish are the same as they were decades ago. I think that's quite possible.
    I've had days on the water where a chewed up, ratty-looking fly kept consistently catching fish, even when it hardly resembled the fly it looked like when fresh out of the fly box. But if it had looked that way new, I would have never tied it on. I believe the old traditional patterns are just as effective as they ever were, its just that folks dont fish them like they used to anymore. As fly fishermen, many of us are always on the lookout for the latest-n-greatest to help us catch fish....and there's nothing wrong with that either I suppose. Hey, it's fishing....and supposed to be something we do for enjoyment and pleasure, and if that is what makes us enjoy the sport, I say go for it and have fun!
    Mark 1:17

  10. #10

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    Quote Originally Posted by Byron haugh View Post
    Narc,
    If you were right, I believe the fly shops out west would primarily offer the "old standard patterns". Being an avid tier who hangs out a lot in the big fly shops in the West - around Yellowstone Park, I can tell you, you will not find a lot of the "old standard patterns". Believe me, if there wasn't much change between now and 40 yrs ago, everyone would be using Sandy Mites, Wulfs, and Catskill style dries. You won't find any of these offered in the fly shops out there today. I know, as I have looked.
    I'm not disputing that the newer patterns don't work at the same time I'm saying that the old patterns are still effective as they once were. Another aspect is that today the media plays a big part in what folks fish with. Every year new and improved patterns are introduced, do they catch more fish, I really don't think so. I also hang around the shops in the west and the availability of the older patterns is not there, because, I think the shops are pushing there newest and improved. For instance Blue Ribbon Flies comes out with a couple of new patterns every year and for the most part they just add some new material which is fine. The advertise them, video them and that has folks buying them.

    But for the new patterns to out fish the older patterns I don't think that is valid. If you go into the shops of south central PA or the shops of the Catskill's you will find a multitude of the old patterns being sold and used.

    If Walt Dette or some of the old tyers were still alive and tying I'm sure they would adapt some new materials to there flies. For instance the Dette's Coffin flies went from white wool to poly for a body so that is one advancement in his use of a newer material.

    There is another thing is that if you go into BRF's you will see that they are stocking more old pattern s/h's then they have in the past.

    The purple flies you tyed a few weeks ago is another example. Purple has been used for a hundred years in s/h's so it has been adapted for todays times.

    You mentioned the Sandy Mite, they are not offered any more as they are a very complicated and time consuming fly to tie. I watched Frnk johnson tye some at last years FFF get together, that is not a flie that can just be knocked out in a few minuets.
    Last edited by narcodog; 04-07-2012 at 03:40 PM.

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