Fly fishing may be a very pleasant amusement; but angling or float
fishing I can only compare to a stick and a string, with a worm at
one end and a fool at the other. ~ Samuel Johnson
Trout fishing techniques are not warm water fishing techniques
and trout purists tell you don't confuse the two because
well, it would be very bad.
I was six, it was a Sunday in Florida at my great aunt's, and it had
been a long day church with the family, then lunch with the
family, then sitting around doing my best to ignore dull talk between
the family, the youngest of whom were my parents. Kids were notable
by their absence, none anywhere for blocks, except for me, the good
child, the quiet child, the patient child the fisherman. Over the previous
week, the lesson of bobber surveillance became a learned skill, a talent
now wasted in a sunny room full of jalousies windows and chatty adults.
I watched a palmetto bug climb down a leaf of the nearest banana tree
as I did my stealthy-as-a-kid-can-be escape to the carport, then struggled
to attach terminal tackle to the braided fishing line sold in my grandfather's
Western Auto store. A white and red cork the size of a ping pong ball
was strung a foot or so above a marble sized lead weight under which I
attached a large bronze hook with a pair of overhand knots.
The rod was a Western Auto Wizard brand, five feet of stiff white fiberglass with a faux
elk horn pistol grip. The reel was a Wizard too, a stainless steel casting variety
with a moving line guide and no backlash controls it was the most
beautiful thing I had ever owned. Bait meant white bread and bacon. My
aunt only used cardboard quality whole wheat and even fish had better taste
than that. But, next door, my great-grandmother lived, and had a pantry
stocked with white bread. It also had many foods only a great-grandmother
could swallow, and I cringed merely looking at can labels of spinach, beets
and lima beans. The bread was soft and doughy, the way store bread use
to be, and I took only one slice even though three or four more seemed to
jump out of the bag onto the floor when I opened it. The slice stuffed nicely
into the back pocket on my shorts next to a strip of fat-ribboned bacon from
the refrigerator drawer. Rolling sat-on bread into a ball is harder than it seems,
especially if you are six, and it took several tries and much spit to get a
satisfactory orb. Then it was another while to tear off bacon fat and wrap
it around the bread. Finally, a cast, then undoing the inevitable backlash,
and I watched the cork travel slowly out toward the Atlantic. No interest
by the fish. So again, cast, undo backlash, watch. Repeat. About the tenth
cast the cork stopped, then moved against the tide. I crossed my
ankles and jerked hard Yep, basic bobber rigand it caught fish.
Today the science of bobber fishing has evolved and, for trout fly fishing,
translates into "strike indicators" for nymphing. Fly fishing purists hate
nymphing, in part because most of the trout caught today are caught
using a strike indicator. Standard bobber fishing is nostalgic (we all
grew up on it) but not very romantic, otherwise it would appear in more
literature. It seems strike indicators are considered in that family of
equipment. On the other hand, the beauty and art of fly fishing is written
of throughout recorded history. Aelian (in the 3rd Century) described
Macedonians' skill at fly fishing and was so taken by their technique that
he went to great lengths to describe the tackle used. He does not mention
strike indicators. When Izaak Walton penned The Compleat
Angler he explained swan or goose quill floats were used for
worm fishing, but their mention is almost casual, while the descriptions
of flies he crafted and used is expansive and poetic. He does not mention
strike indicators. Fly fishing history tells us, nymph fishing came into use
(which means they were intentionally tying nymph replica flies for trout) as
early as the 1600s. No mention is made of strike indicators. Nymphs,
wet flies and streamers held the center of attention until dry flies gained
enormous popularity in the mid 1840s. From that point on, the
Johnny-come-lately dry fly purists proclaimed theirs to be the only
true fly fishing. Dry versus nymph was the subject of very unpleasant
debates among London's fly fishing aristocrats and there are those dry
fly purists who hold such beliefs even as I write.
On my first journey to Colorado's gold medal streams in the early 1980s,
I came across and older grizzled gentleman checkered flannel shirt, five
day old beard, moth eaten felt hat, dungarees, tattered vest and canvas
wading boots not sold since D-Day.
His bamboo rod was tucked under one arm as he was inspecting
the compartments of his Wheatly fly box on a bridge under which
I proposed to wade. I said hello, so he assumed I had a willing ear
and, full of fire and vinegar, he regaled me with his opinions on how
dry fly fishing was the only true fly fishing and how the "new generation"
of fishermen had ruined the sport and were stealing all of the good trout.
He damned all urbanites with their lack of skills and designer waders,
and he equated nymph fishing to dropping dynamite in the river. He
went on this way for several minutes, insisting that mechanical science
had no place in fly fishing and taking fish when they weren't rising was
uncivilized, and nymph fishermen should be banned from all waterways,
right after they were shot. Near the end of the tirade he noticed my
tackleeverything new and shiny and nymph-ish, with a bright
orange strike indicator, all products of modern science and tools of
the devil. His eyes widened to stare daggers before turning his back
to unleash a string of curses capable of melting paint off of the handrails.
I excused myself and went below the bridge to catch all the good trout
with my Satanic gear.
The advance of modern fly fishing is measured in the quality of scientific
achievements. The wonders of chemistry have unlocked problems that
have plagued bad casters and frustrated fly tyers for generations. The
once revered cracker barrel has been replaced by the lab conference
table.
Thibeaux was having terrible problems with his chickens. All of the
sudden, they got very sick and he didn't know what was wrong with
them. The local vet was baffled and, after trying all conventional means,
he called a biologist, a chemist, and a physicist to see if they can figure
out what was wrong. First the biologist looked at the chickens,
examined them a bit, and said he had no clue what could be wrong
with them. Then the chemist took some samples, made tests and
measurements, but he couldn't come to any conclusions either. Lastly,
the physicist tried. He stood and looked at the chickens for a long time
without touching them or doing anything. Suddenly, he started scribbling
away in a notebook. Finally, after several elaborate calculations, he
exclaimed, "I've got it! But it only works for spherical chickens in a
vacuum."
Nymph fishing is a result of science. About 90 percent of a trout's
diet are nymphs and the key to modern nymph fishing is the strike
indicator. Essentially, it performs the same function as the unromantic
bobber, but because it does so for fly fishing, it has more cache. Strike
indicators come in several varieties of closed cell foam, polypropylene
yarn, and floating putty, as well as large flies (usually a stimulator, sofa
pillow or hopper). Using a strike indicator for trout is a lot simpler
than some authors would have you believe: you attach it up on your
leader 2 ½ times the depth of the water you are fishing.
You rig below it one to three nymphs and, if necessary to get to
the bottom, add some split shot. As your line and flies move along
the stream you watch the strike indicator for the slightest of twitches
or when something "different" or just "not right" happens (perhaps
a barely noticeable hesitation). Okay, I admit the identifying-the-strike
part is really hard (for some anglers it's nearly impossible) because
a take is often incredibly subtle and the rest of the drift you are
bouncing the nymph off the bottom. But in Louisiana we are not
with concerned with delicate takes of nymph sucking trout.

Bluegill worth catching strike hard enough to pull down a plastic
bobber the size of a racketball, and bluegill strike indicators consist
of large floating flies most trout never see. Poppers, hoppers and
floating divers are the usual suspects with hooks Size 6 or larger.
Now, if you haven't noticed, I have managed to manipulate this article
over to my favorite warm water rig, the popper-dropper. If dry fly
purists consider nymphing damnable, multiple fly rigs must surely be
Lucifer's invention. Taking my chances on everlasting torment, I never
intentionally fish fresh water with only one fly unless tournament rules
or the law requires it. Howz it work? Poppers float. Droppers don't
and are the second and/or third fly on a 12" to 24" tippet that trails
after (drops from) other flies. There is no mandate about what kind
of flies must be used as a dropper, but nymph-ish patterns are the
most common.
KNOTTY ISSUES: There are three accepted approaches to tie on
a dropper: (A) the "tie to hook bend" approach where the dropper
tippet is knotted to the hook bend of the lead fly, (B) the "tie to tippet"
approach where the second tippet is looped over the first tippet just
ahead of the lead fly, the loop is closed on the first tippet and the knot
is drawn down to snug up against the knot by the eye of the lead fly,
and (C) the double knot approach where two knots are made in the
eye of the lead fly and are cinched down opposite each other (this can
be difficult with very small flies = very small eye). Some claim #1 will
cause the first fly to move unnaturally. Others claim the #2 line-to-line
connection is too weak. I use option (C) because it seems the strongest
with least adverse affect on the fly. For the knots I use the Pitzen because
it is a very reliable on-the-water tie, retains 95+ percent of the line strength,
and is usually the fastest and easiest on-the-water knot to tie. Here is how
to tie the Pitzen with empty line: 1. Take tippet and make a loop between
your middle fingers with the tag end on your right. (You will need your
forefingers and thumbs free to do later steps.)
2. Grasp the tag end with your right fore finger and thumb and wrap
the tag end four times around the loop clockwise (you'll need your left
finger and thumb to help) then run it back through the end of the loop
on your left, pushing it through with your right thumb and forefinger and
grabbing it with your left thumb and forefinger. 3. Moisten the line and
gently tighten keeping your right middle finger in the loop. Pull the tag
end of the line and the knot will snug
down. You can now take the empty loop you have just made and either
loop it onto the hook bend of the lead fly or over the fly and onto the tippet,
and tighten. NOTE: To use the Pitzen to tie a fly on your line, thread the
fly on the line first and when you make the loop, have the fly in the crook
of the knuckle of the middle finger of your right hand. When you finish
the steps above, the fly will be on the loop of the knot you have just made.
See me at the AFR or GCC Conclave for hands-on instruction.
FISHING THE POPPER-DROPPER: Trout fishermen who do
not use a strike indicator while nymphing either (1) tight-line (high
stick) with only leader and tippet in the water or (2) they focus on
the end of their fly line (above the leader) for tell-tale movement.
In truth, watching the line tip is essentially the same as using a strike
indicator, just without the bobber. Many trout guides insist that it is
impossible to detect strikes without an indicator if you are not
high-sticking. Similarly, a panfish take can be too subtle to detect
if there is any slack in the line. Video studies of bluegill confirm that
a bite can occur and the fly be ejected with no slack removed from
leader or tippet. If you can't feel it and don't see it, you won't catch
it. On the other hand, when a hopper imitation apparently flinches its
little rubber legs on its own, this means you have suddenly become
telekinetic or something is fiddling with your dropper.
When you finish rigging a popper-dropper, you have also created a
two or three fly combination rig that will allow you to dictate how deep
your nymphs fish (how long the drop is from the popper). Unlike fishing
nymphs alone (where your tippet and leader angles down into the water),
with the popper-dropper the nymphs can fall almost directly below the
popper when it is at rest (or between retrieval strips). Voila! You have
a bobber-like strike indicator is not only socially acceptable, but bass
are very fond of poppers. Very ambitious bluegill may opt to take the
popper and catching doubles (a fish on each hook) is not unusual.
Remember also that bass are opportunistic feeders and will often
take a nymph floating lazily in front of them.
Detecting strikes is usually responding to the obvious. As you retrieve
with small strips (it is not ruinous to make the popper splashy or ripplish,
but you should pause between strips) the droppers will rise and follow
the popper, then will fall when you pause. Most bluegill and bass hit
on the stop or drop. Strikes on the dropper will be noticeable by
twitching of the popper not caused by you. Larger bluegill may take
the popper down, sometimes with a splash from the force of the
popper entering the water backwards.
CASTING: Here's the rub. Laying out line with a 3 fly rig is very
different. Droppers are fond of catching up with the popper and
creating massive bow ties and tiny hard knots in your tippet.
Droppers also like playing tag with your rod. Fishermen who are
accustomed to tight loops may find their technique is not well suited
to the long and unusually weighted popper-dropper. Depending on
the weight of your droppers and the length of the drop, you may also
find roll casting difficult because the dropper acts like an anchor. To
successfully roll cast you have to make sure all flies are skimming the
surface as you bring the rod forward. A single dropper rolls easier
than a double dropper but even a single requires more force than usual
to keep the dropper from nailing the popper as they fall. Larger loops
and a double haul are almost mandatory. The size rod and line is wholly
dependent on the size of the popper, but large versions require a 6 wt.
rod and WF line.
CHOOSING FLIES: The selection of the flies you use depends on:
(1) Insects on which panfish feed in the water you are fishing. This means
that if you have waters where bream have never seen a black #10 stonefly,
they may ignore it in favor of a #18 olive midge. On an unfamiliar pond/lake
you cannot know what the menu de jour might be, but a multi-fly rig allows
you to try more than one pattern at the same time. Any nymph pattern is
likely to work so be willing to experiment. Beadhead nymphs (e.g. prince
or pheasant tail) are excellent droppers because of the weight of the bead.
Because a Pitzen is a fast and easy knot to tie, you should be more willing
to change droppers every 30 or so fishless casts.
(2) Size of the popper and weight of the dropper. Droppers must sink,
which means lead wraps on the hook shank or a bead head. However,
putting two size 8 bead head nymphs with 7 wraps of lead under a size
10 hopper is almost guaranteed to sink them all. Choose a fly of a size
and weight suited to your popper. Any dropper will have some effect
on the action of the popper, but you want the strike indicator to perform
as near as possible to its non-dropper state. There is no real concern
about going too big with the popperexcept, too much
disturbance from the popping action of a huge bass bug can be
distracting to some bluegill.
(3) Having a good selection of flies, but you are not required to tie flies.
Several on-line discount fly shops can load up on a dozen nymphs for
a few bucks and hoppers or poppers for not much more.
HINTS that will make your strike indicator fishing more enjoyable:
- Be patient. Working a popper-dropper too fast is the cardinal sin.
Let the droppers drop.
- Using a popper or hopper with rubber legs is more sensitive than
one without. A subtle take by a bluegill may cause legs to wiggle when
nothing else moves.
- Use flourocarbon line on your droppers. Use 6-8# test line because
you want to set the hook hard. Flourocarbon essentially disappears in the
water which means you can use heavier line without it being apparent to the
fish. Bluegill are not particularly line shy, but standard 8# test line can be
obvious. However, don't buy flourocarbon tippet. Buy Berkley Vanish in
regular spools and share (as in split costs) with your friends.
- Popper-droppers are for short water. You may have to guess
at depth but most large bluegill will stay within the bottom foot of water
in a pond so you want to fish as near the bottom as possible. If the middle
of the pond is 15' deep you are simply not going to fish a popper-dropper
there and should concentrate nearer the edges.
- Use barbless hooks or crimp down the barb on regular hooks.
Hooking yourself casting a multi-fly rig is not uncommon and barbs
make it very painful to remove hooks. Don't worry, your catch
percentage will not suffer.
- Bring forceps and clippers to the pond. Bluegill often take a
dropper deep and you will need forceps to remove the hook (which
is much easier with barbless hooks). You will also be changing
droppers frequently until you find the right pattern. Clippers should
be close at hand. ~ Bob
About Bob:
Robert Lamar Boese has fly fished for five decades. He is an
environmental negotiator, attorney and educator who has provided
environmental legal services for more than thirty-three years including
active duty with the U.S. Coast Guard and Department of Justice. He is a
well known fly tyer with several unique patterns to his credit. He has
developed and authored federal and state regulatory programs
encompassing a broad spectrum of environmental disciplines, has
litigated environmental matters at all levels of the federal and state
court systems, and is a qualified expert for testimony in environmental
law. He has authored over 60 published text chapters, comments or
articles on environmental matters, is a member of the Colorado, District
of Columbia and Louisiana Bar Associations, and is a certified mediator.
In addition to his legal practice, Mr. Boese has been a high school
teacher, an associate professor of Environmental Law and Public Health,
has authored numerous fiction and sports publications, and is a softball
coach and nationally certified volleyball referee. He is the president
of the Acadiana Fly Rodders in Lafayette, Louisiana and editor of
Acadiana on the Fly. He has been married for thirty years and is the
father of two fly fishing girls (25 and 21). For additional information
contact: Boese Environmental Law, 103 Riviera Court, Broussard, LA 70518
or call 337.856.7890 or email coachbob@ymail.com.
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