Fished the Stones River, under the J Percy Priest Dam, today. Was a little chilly. Not to bad though.
Caught some trout on a soft hackle and my 3WT. Took some photos of two of them
Fished the Stones River, under the J Percy Priest Dam, today. Was a little chilly. Not to bad though.
Caught some trout on a soft hackle and my 3WT. Took some photos of two of them
Looks like youâre settling in real fine!
Ron,
Nice fish! In my younger days I caught alot of rockfish (striper) in that same location when the generators were going.
I hope you have the Caney Fork on your future radar. Thereâs alot of fish to be caught there. Also, fishing the Cumberland (in Ky.) is not bad eaither.
Good luck.
I drove over that bridge Monday morning going home from work. Right now Iâm sitting in my cube about a mile from where you shot those pictures. If you stand there and face the dam, just up from the dam, on the right, is a park. There are often stripers feeding around that area in the dark of the morning. There are also often FFâers wading in the lake around 4 or 5 AM.
BTW, I see more FFâers chasing stockers just downstream of that bridgeâŚ
What time were you fishing. I might have driven right past you around 10:30 - 10:45 BTW,
Ed
gquails and EdD , thanks for the info.
Have plans for the Caney Fork. The realitor told me about Center Hill too. She likes trout fishing also.
Ed I was there between 1:30 and 4PM. They weânt generating. Saw quite a few going after something on the surface. Didnât try a dry fly though.
Was in the Duck River with Jack H last week.
Canât wait to get this looking for houses done, so I can get all my stuff down here.
Now that looks fun and I love soft hackles. As a begging fly tier I find them easy and fun to tie, and mine look pretty good if I do say so myself.
Now if the weather would just warm up I could go out and see if the fish like them as much as I do. LOL
Now, Scuba, from the past I KNOW you have a sense of humorâŚso youâll also know, (I hope), that Iâm not being mean, and/or, making REAL fun, butâŚ
your quote, really caught my eye as a âtrue Freudian slipââŚ
âAs a begging fly tier I find them easy and fun to tie, and mine look pretty good if I do say so myself.â
Does this âslipâ, perhaps mean that; "instead of being a âBEGINNING fly tierâ, youâre perhaps BEGGING for some nice wets, to be sent to you??
flybinder you are right in the fact that I do have a great sense of humor âŚ
but I do think my wetâs are looking pretty good. Maybe not show flies but I do believe in my heart that the fish will like them.
That being said if you feel the need to send me loads of beautiful wetâs or what the heck dry flies feel free to send a PM stating such a fact and I will send you my address and you can send me all you want. LOL
Tight Lines my Friend
Hi Scubatim,
If you really like tying spiders (soft hackles) and winged wets, check out Donaldâs site. He has a great collection of wet fly patterns:
http://www.dtnicolson.dial.pipex.com/
Also, for some historical patterns that still work a treat, check out the Pritt patterns and Edmonds and Leeâs patterns listed at:
http://www.wetfly.co.uk/
Iâve found Prittâs water cricket in yellow and with the black rib to be a very productive pattern on the rainbows in a spring creek I fish sometimes.
For the basic North country spider tie, the body extends back to just above the hook point (rather than the barb) and it is tied as slim as possible. The hackle is usully just one full turn of the feather (say partridge feather, or hen pheasant, etc), so itâs a very sparse collar. This style of fly can be tied on light wire hooks (dry fly hooks) and fished in the surface film, just under the surface, or with a heavier hook, deeper.
Hey Jeff thanks for the links, those look nice. Might have to try tie a few this evening.