Posted by Jack | Posted in Trout Fishing Tips | Posted on 05-06-2008
Tags: camping, colorado trout fishing rivers, fishing, flyfishing, hiking, trout, trout fishing rivers nsw, trout fishing rivers tasmania
[affmage source="chitika" results="0"][/affmage]

Trout Fishing with dry flies on the lake.?
OK, I'm new to fly fishing and lake fishing for bluegill have and Bass. I also rivers for trout fishing. Now I have a new one. The Conservation Department will release the rainbow trout in 6 lakes near my home for a winter fishing program. Three of the lakes are Flyfishing only. Pretty Cool! Anyway how you go about fishing lakes for trout? Can I use dry flies as I do in the rivers? How can fish a dry fly in still water? Should I go with a serpentine like a Woolly Bugger and not use a dry fly? Float a nymph or Glo ball under a strike indicator?
Yes, this sounds like a great program – in a rainbow assortment fly fishing only lake!? Please tell me where! In any case, yes, you can fish with Stillwater dry, nymphs, streamers and other flies. Most of the available forage in a trout stream is in lakes, dams and many may be more abundant in a lake. There are only a couple of things you have to consider. First, in Stillwater, trout have a chance to be more discriminating and skeptical, so you have to sharpen when it comes to matching the hatch. You can understand why. The fish can swim to his departure, check it out, smell it, see it to friends, etc. before deciding if they were hit. The fly really has to look right. Secondly, you have more water to cover – is much more difficult to decide where to fish in a lake, especially if there is no obvious place or hatch. This is probably going to work best in a canoe or boat. Even when fish are growing near the coast, I cast more successfully on the banks of the wash water from the shore or wading. So the first approach is matching the hatch and increased quality of fish. When you this in a sequence of rapid movement, the march to coincide more or less, and hope that catching fish. Sometimes it can become lazy in his presentation, also – you can whip neglected by fly 10 feet above the fish that are of quality and let the fly drift down. In a lake, you have your game. You have to match with the presentation – If the hatch rings in the water recently, you have to do the same rings. If the hatch does not disturb the surface, neither can you. When casting to fish increasing, the place of their flight rings up or place between two rings if possible. Trout hate moving too far from food, so if you see the meals in the Instead, he was often turn around and take the next meal. Start with the water near you to the outside – not chase fish that are 15 feet by casting bands from 40 feet away. If you see obvious negative, change flies. Try different sizes, colors and patterns. Try to emerge and nymph patterns – try a dry-dropper nymph or dry fly to a point of emerging. Dry test two slightly different color, size, or whatever. Be creative. If there is no surface action, things are more difficult. In a stream, fish kept in place and see for fodder to reach them in today. In a lake trout patrolling, moving in circuits around the lake, hunting for food. If you look carefully you can see this happening, especially if you have boots or if you can get in the water. You can spot trout moving past the same direction every time. What you want to do is mimic prey items in the trout are likely to find – Scud, crabs, fish bait, leeches, insects, wind knocked over, etc. in the water down and try to determine what is available. Kick the weed and turn over rocks. A network of aquarium is good at finding what you get. Match forage to find. Scud with nymphs and streamers bait, the fly some action, stripping all the trout line travel in a way that is realistic. Panicked baitfish move far and fast. Scud move more slowly. With filtered, Dead Can drift. A strike indicator is very useful here, but you can also use a very dynamic, like flying a hopper or beetle. And if you hang a nymph in a strike indicator, as it could hang two – for example, a leech Big Bunny with a nymph dropper tiny black Woolly Bugger or a light color with Hare's Ear dropper. In large lakes can use three flies (or more?). Again, be creative, not stuck on a single fly, presentation, or area. On last thing. Lakes and ponds often hatching mosquitoes very small, and they are born every few days throughout the year from January 1 to December 31. These flies will be small, but you can imitate their groups mating with # 18-22 Griffith's gnats. I found that this method is very productive in the winter (in rivers and lakes), when other forage is scarce. These are the flies difficult to tie, hard to see, and difficult to ascertain, but the fish long enough and you'll get the hang of it. I usually just cast out and can not see exactly where the fly, but I just throw in any close up. Even wild brown fall into a very small fly – it seems the smaller the forage, is easier to fool the fish. Okay … I have walked enough. We hope you have some success. Good luck and lines of force to you!
[affmage source="amazon" results="5"]trout fishing rivers[/affmage]
[affmage source="cj" results="10"]trout fishing rivers[/affmage]
[affmage source="linkshare" results="10"]trout fishing rivers[/affmage]


















