Having reached my goal of 100 U.S. Freshwater Fish on Fly, I’ve considered changing my stance on micro-fishing. It wasn’t something I was particularly interested in, although I DO like seeing some of the cool micro species folks catch, such as the beautiful darter species. Most Micro-anglers use bait, often a tiny chunk of worm or even a piece of a grain of rice. I’m going to try it with micro “flies” on a fly rod. Something artificial (not bait) tied on a very small hook. Trout anglers have been using very small hooks for some midge dry flies and midge larva nymph flies for many years.Anyway… So I looked into micro-fishing a bit. Many micro & minnow species have TINY mouths. Gotta have a tiny hook they can get in their mouth. For my first go at this, I bought some Tanago hooks that are pre-snelled on a length of line/thread. I tied some material to 3 of the hooks (so far), each one a bit different material and different color. I took them fishing to a new-to-me creek.[
](https://gifyu.com/image/SU2KG)I fished for at least a couple couple hours, caught at least a dozen fish. Lost 2 of the 3 tanago flies to overhead trees after missed hooksets. Might be a little too aggressive… hey, I’m just learning! ![]()
One of the reasons micro fishing didn’t previously appeal to me, was that minnow species can be pretty hard to distinguish from each other. Today was a good example. There were 4 species I recognized (3 I’d caught before on larger flies), and then there were some I was not sure about… and still am not sure about.These 2 are Creek Chubs. Much smaller than I’m used to catching:
Mottled Sculpins:
Southern Redbelly Dace (just one):
Striped Shiner:
I would guess that to be “bait” fishing!
…lee s.
Definitely fishing for bait-sized quarry!
Obviously, I’m just in this for the epic battles! HA!!
I used to fish my home waters in NW Iowa for chubs, using a #18 woolly bugger. They put up a great fight for a small fish.
I remember you saying you would catch some suckers with that fly too, right? That’s pretty cool!I just got a pack of Daiichi 1130 #26 hooks here’s how it compares to the tanago hook. The tanago is finer gauge wire, and the distance from the hook bend to hook point is about 1/2! Should be able to catch some LEEEETLE FEEESH on these! 
Finger food! Nice catching Dave. Dennis





