Central Iowa OPEN WATER!

Evening, March 25:
The itch needed to be scratched, so I managed to get in about 45 minutes of fly-fishing on a public pond in one of the Des Moines suburbs last night.

The pond was completely ice-free, and the water was stained, with a visibility maybe to about 18".

I caught 13 bluegills and 3 crappies before it got too dark to see. HOORAY!

I was using one of these on my 5 wt rod:

I fished the same pond again on Wednesday (3/26/08) evening for a little over an hour. The same fly worked ok, but the water is a bit more stained now, so I switched to this fly and did quite well.
I ended up with 19 bluegills, 2 crappies, 1 largemouth bass.

I fished Sunday (3/30/08 ) afternoon at a different public pond. There were a number of folks fishing but nobody caught anything. I used that white fly in the above picture and landed 7 bluegills.

And then I tried that pond again today (Tuesday 4/1/08 ) during lunch. Same fly. It was COLD and WINDY today, and the water is getting murkier after the rain a couple days ago. I missed a few hits and then managed to land a feisty 11" crappie. Hooray!! :smiley:

I’m envious. We still have some ice here, but the waters are slowly opening up. i can hardly wait to get out.

BTW, welcome to the board from the Island Nation of Ohio, and teh Bad Boyz of FAOL.

Joe

Thanks for the welcome!
Joe Cornwall’s book is my warmwater stream “bible”!

What a difference a few days make…
The water in 2 of the public ponds I’ve fished has gotten “muddied up”. A recent trip to each of them yielded 2 bluegills from one, and a crappie from the other. A third pond had relatively clear water, but yielded one bass (lost a second bass).

I hope the patterns of the preceding flies are going to be posted.

Hey Joe, the only ice we ever see is in the freezer or an ice chest.

I’m working my way from Newbie up to Novice/Complete & Total Amateur. :rolleyes:
I can’t remember the names of these patterns, or if they even have one. I’ve called the former flies “flashbacks” or “sparkle flies”, but I think those names have likely been assigned to other fine fly creations.
At any rate, you take a half-dozen strands or so of some sort of mylar flash material and tie it to the shank of a size 10 nymph or streamer hook, so 2" sticks out backward past the bend of the hook. Tie on chenille up to near the hook eye, then bring those mylar strands up to near the eye and secure with 3 turns of thread. Then fold the mylar back towards the tail again and make several turns of thread a bit further back on the hook shank. This gets the mylar strands to flare a bit towards the rear of the fly. Then I trim them to just short of the hook bend.
VERY quick & easy fly to tie, hope that’s clear enough. :smiley:

The second fly is…well…I don’t know what it might be or should be called. :confused:
Its a beadhead, short marabou tail, and pearl mylar tubing body.

Dave -

No yellow perch?

Although a few of the lakes around here DO have yellow perch, the ponds I fly-fish do not. Also the perch in the lakes tend to be fairly deep…difficult for me to reach with my fly gear. :rolleyes:

A public pond in Ankeny, Iowa
4-7-2008
Wind: 14mph WNW
Mostly Sunny, 46 F

I fly-fished this pond today during lunch. Sure seemed a lot windier than 14mph!!! The wind about blew me over and nearly took my hat off a few times just walking back to the car!

It was slow, but I managed 2 bluegills, 2 bass, and 1 crappie. Also lost a fish partway in the looked to be a crappie as well. Used a purple wooly worm.

Here’s a picture of the crappie, it was just under 12" long. Poor picture quality, since I used my cell phone.

nice fish and flies Dave, things are starting to heat up out here in west central Iowa too!!! Hope this cold snap won’t back things up again.

Tim

It was 37 degrees and raining yesterday during lunchtime, so I didn’t get to fish then. But in between shuttling my kids around to various activities, I stopped by a public city pond and fly-fished from 7:30pm-8:15pm. Although it was still darned cold, I was surprised to find the water clarity on this pond had improved, and the fish were active!

In 45 minutes I landed 30 bluegills, 1 hybrid sunfish, and 1 largemouth bass. I was using a fly with silver mylar tubing for the body, a purple glass(or plastic?) bead-head, and chartreuse marabou tail.

silver, purple, and chartreuse??? is it legal to fish something with that color combo in Iowa???:lol: lol

:stuck_out_tongue:
Good call! I agree its not a conventional color scheme. :rolleyes:

The purple-ish colored beads are the only non-metal beads I’ve bought so far. I have metal ones, but I wanted the slower sink rate of the plastic/glass beads, and that part seems to be working just about right. Really, the bead color probably isn’t important on this particular pattern.

The chartreuse tail on the silver mylar tubing body makes the fly nicely visible in the dingy waters, and cloudy / evening conditions I was fishing in. I will also say that I tied that chartreuse marabou short and spare. Just enought to get the fish interested.

I fished a public pond during luch yesterday for bluegills, and ended up with 1 bluegill, 3 bass (on a different fly). Then I tried another pond after work, and couldn’t catch ANYTHING…except I rescued this giant crayfish from some fishing line he was tangled in: