Thursday, September 21, 2017

We Are Using the Same Lure...Right?

The Lure In Question a Frank Nale Design

We are using the same lure...right?  I chuckled when the question was asked half-jokingly by my fishing partner.  I had just gotten done pulling a decent fish from a small pocket under some overhanging branches on a tiny stream, the kind you can step across.

The Stream

My partner, a new fishing convert, was baffled.  Why was I catching a fish almost every cast while he had only caught two?  The answers, stealth and casting ability.



What do I mean by stealth?  Well, I don't mean crawling around like a ninja, although it takes that on some occasions.  Instead, I am talking about keeping a low profile along with a bit of distance between you and your target.  The amount of distance varies depending on the type of water fishing.  For instance, in heavy riffles, you can approach much more closely than you can when fishing a glassy run.


More important than stealth is casting ability.  Casting ability gives you the opportunity to be stealthy.  If you can pitch a spinner into a likely looking spot accurately and from a distance, you almost certainly will get a strike.  Having good casting technique also allows for hitting a spot on the first attempt.  Often you only get one chance to pull a trout from their original location.  Repeated attempts after an errant first cast usually result in your trout smiling at your lure from the comfort of a root tangle.


My partner not catching fish despite the fact that we were using the same lure was due almost entirely to the fact that his novice casting ability meant that he had to move closer to his target.  On a small stream, moving equals more disturbance, and more disturbance equals less fish in the net.

*Contact me if you are interested in any of the spinners I make for fishing small streams.


Monday, September 18, 2017

Gold on the Little J

What happens when you get pissed off after fishing several promising looking runs, cut your nymph off of your Euronymphing leader that ends in 5X, and attach a Sculpin colored Sparkle Minnow without changing tippet?


That's right.  Little J Gold!

The fly that got it done (Sparkle Minnow)...

Contact me if your interested in a few.

Wednesday, September 6, 2017

What If a Blood Knot Wasn't a Blood Knot?

Have you ever seen one of these.  Yeah that is a torture device tool used to tie blood knots.  When I started fly fishing I made one of these contraptions using nails, alligator clips with heat shrink tubing, and a chunk of 2X4.  Those were the days when I thought fly fishing meant making Brad Pittesque casts to rising trout.  Not only is the name "Blood" Knot intimidating, but when you see one of these torture devices, it is no wonder people go running for the hills when they need to fix or, worse yet, build one of  their own leaders from scratch.

Luckily, blood knots don't need to be complicated.  Analyze the tying process for a minute.  


That's right.  Forget about blood knots and instead think about tying back-to-back clinch knots; everyone can tie one of those.  Yeah, that knot you've been using since you started slinging worms to attach snelled hooks to your line.  When you think of a blood knot this way they become much easier to tie.  Give it a try the next time you are building a leader, or better yet, use a Uni-Knot.