Choosing trout flies simplified:
2 super-easy methods
By Shabbir
For this article, I invited
Bill Bernhardt, a professional guide and instructor with over 15
years of fishing experience to share a method he developed to
drastically reduce the number of flies you need to take with
you. Bill can be found on his website at
www.nc-flyfishing.com
Introduction
From today onwards, you'll never have to take multiple fly boxes
with you when you go fishing anymore.
In fact, you'll be able to fit everything you need in your
fishing vest, without making it feel like a backpack!
And all the while, you'll still be able to catch just as many
fish, if not more.
How the Three Color Attractor and Six Color Imitator method lets
me catch trout anytime of the year
15 years of experience has taught me that there are a few
specific colors of attractor and imitator flies that trout will
just jump at. I was able to drop so many flies from my tackle
box this way and it made my fly fishing so much easier and more
relaxed. I no longer have to manage those pesky aquatic insect
charts, either.
The three attractors and six imitators are pretty much what you
need to get trout to bite all year round.
Let's get into the nitty gritty, then, shall we?
How we ended up with so many flies(a short history)
Although we have records of the art of fly fishing dating back
as far as the Roman Empire, most fly fishing historians agree
that the art of fly fishing was truly developed by the English
who observed large brown trout feeding on mayflies in their
local chalk streams.
Being the inventive and enterprising folk they were, the English
people used hand-forged, iron hooks which they then wrapped with
bits of fur and feathers in an attempt to create an artificial
insect that appeared enough like a real insect to fool the trout
into striking it.
From there, they eventually developed long "spey" rods made from
multiple types of wood along with silk fly lines and leaders
made from animal intestine as outlined by Dame Juliana Berners
in her Treatyse on Fysshynge Wyth an Angle which was published
in The Boke of St. Albans in 1486.
This heritage is still with us today and, in fact, most any
modern book you choose to read on the topic of fly fishing will
instill in you the mantra of "match the hatch".
Consequently, this has led biologists to develop long lists of
the family, genus, and species of aquatic insects that inhabit
the trout streams in many regions of the world which
enterprising fly fishermen have used to create local hatch
charts.
Novice fly fisherman today are taught to consult these local
hatch charts and choose a fly selection accordingly and then,
once on the stream, to choose a fly from their selection that
"matches the hatch" according to the species, size, and color of
the insects that are hatching in that area during a given month.
However, this often leads to fly fishermen carrying multiple fly
boxes in their fly fishing vests stuffed with all of the various
fly patterns listed on their local hatch chart; many of which
they never use.
But what if there was a way to simplify the approach to fly
selection such that a fly fisherman could carry a single fly box
containing generic patterns of dry flies, nymphs, or streamers
that would enable him to catch trout anywhere in the world at
any time of the year?
A fly fisherman's odyssey
Like many novice fly fishermen, I too followed the time honored
method of obtaining a local hatch chart and then set about
collecting the many different fly patterns listed which, of
course, also made it necessary for me to purchase numerous
different fly boxes to hold them all.
Then, each time I would go fly fishing, I would approach the
stream and spend some time observing the air above the stream as
well as the streamside foliage and the current to see if I
noticed any flies hatching and, if so, I would then capture one
and note both its genus, size, and color.
Next, I would attempt to choose a fly from my extensive fly
collection that would closely match the fly I had captured just
as I had been taught.
Consequently, I eventually ended up carrying four or five
different fly boxes stuffed to the brim with numerous different
dry fly patterns which made my fly vest so heavy and bulky that
I often felt like I was wearing a backpack rather than a fly
vest!
However, as I gained streamside experience, I began to notice
that there were numerous fly patterns in my fly boxes that I
never used despite them being listed on my local hatch chart.
After spending fifteen years or so as an avid (or should I say
fanatical?) fly fisherman as well as learning everything I could
about the sport by reading every book on the topic that I could
get my hands on, I eventually decided that I should endeavor to
pass my knowledge and experience on to others who were
interested in learning the sport.
So I decided to become a professional fly fishing guide and
instructor which, in turn, enabled me to spend numerous hours
each week on the stream observing the habits of both trout and
the insects that they consume.
As I gained additonal knowledge and experience, I began to
realize that so much of what I had read in all of those fly
fishing books simply did not seem to apply to the southern
Appalachian trout streams where I fish.
I eventually decided to discard all of the conventional
knowledge that I had gained from reading all of those books and
instead use my experience and streamside observations to develop
my own method of fly selection.
Now, instead of carrying a whole fly shop's worth of flies in my
vest, I instead carry only four fly boxes which contain my dry
fly patterns, my nymph patterns, my terrestrial patterns, and my
streamer patterns.
The Three-Color Attractor System
So, in an effort simplify my approach to fly selection, I
started with the basic knowledge that trout flies are commonly
divided into two different categories consisting of "attractors"
and "imitators".
For those of you who are not familiar with these terms, an
"attractor" fly is a fly pattern such as the Royal Wulff
(developed by a fellow angler named Lee Wulff) that is tied.
Royal Wulff
It uses bright colors that "attract" the trout and cause them to
strike the fly even though it does not closely resemble any
natural insect that exists in any trout stream anywhere.
On the other hand, an "imitator" fly is a fly pattern such as
the Light Cahill that is instead tied using a much a more subtle
color scheme that is designed to closely resemble a natural
aquatic insect.
I combined this knowledge with the observation that trout in our
local southern Appalachian trout streams seem to be highly
attracted to the colors red, yellow, and green which, in turn,
led me to develop something that I call the Three-Color
Attractor System.
As the name implies, my Three-Color Attractor System consists of
fly patterns that are predominately red, yellow, or green such
as:
- The Royal Wulff (one of the most effective attractor fly
patterns ever developed) which uses red floss combined with
green peacock herl for the body and white Polar Bear fur for the
wings.
- The Carolina Wullf which uses yellow floss instead of red.
- The Tennessee Wullf which uses green floss or, the Humpy
pattern in red, yellow, and green.
I combine those patterns with red, yellow, and green Elk Hair
Caddis flies and red, yellow, and green Stimulator flies (even
though both are technically considered to be imitator patterns)
in sizes 12, 14, and 16 to complete my Three-Color Attractor
System.
I use my attractor flies during periods when there are no
insects presently hatching in order to entice the trout to
strike my flies. In addition, it is helpful to realize that my
three-color system can also be applied to nymphs in order to
help you locate actively feeding fish that will not respond to a
dry fly.
For instance, in order to create a three-color attractor system
using nymphs, you could choose a Royal Wulff nymph, a Pheasant
Tail Sulphur nymph, and a green Golden Ribbed Hair's Ear nymph
or, perhaps, a Firebug nymph, a Tellico nymph, and a Prince
nymph.
Also, if you have Caddis Flies in your local waters, you might
want to add a selection of Serendipity nymphs in red, yellow,
and olive as well a selection of Copper John nymphs in red,
copper, and green.
The Six-Color Imitator System
Although attractor patterns are very effective at catching trout
during non-hatch periods, because trout are sight feeders and,
because of a concept called the "Food vs. Energy Equation", they
quickly learn to differentiate between the family and genus of
the various aquatic and terrestrial insects that occur in their
locale.
They tend to become highly selective during periods when insects
such a May Flies, Caddis Flies, Damsel Flies, Dobson Flies, or
Stone Flies are hatching.
They then tend to ignore any fly that does not closely resemble
the insects that they are presently feeding on in shape, size,
and color. Therefore, many frustrated fly fisherman have
endeavored to develop realistic fly patterns that closely
resemble these insects which are called "imitator" patterns and
of which there is a seemingly infinite variety.
Light Cahill
Rather than consult a local hatch chart and then purchase
several dozen different fly patterns in order to imitate the
various species of aquatic insects that inhabit the trout
streams in a given region, I have instead developed a second fly
selection system that I call the Six-Color Imitator System.
Again starting with the observation that the very large majority
of the flies that I see on our local trout streams regardless of
family or genus tend to predominately display one of six
different colors consisting of cream, yellow, green, grey,
brown, or black, I developed my Six-Color Imitator System to
include the Light Cahill, the Sulphur Dun, the Blue Winged
Olive, the Female Adams, the March Brown, and the Black Gnat fly
patterns in sizes 12, 14, and 16.
In addition, most swiftly flowing streams here in the Southeast
harbor large populations of Caddis Flies and thus, a selection
of Elk Hair Caddis patterns in cinnamon, yellow, olive, gray,
brown, and black is also very handy to have. Plus, my Six-Color
Imitator System can also be applied to nymphs by including a
Light Cahill nymph, a Pheasant Tail Sulphur nymph, a green
Golden Ribbed Hair's Ear nymph, an Adams nymph, a March Brown
nymph, and a black Golden Ribbed Hair's Ear nymph.
By observing the family, genus, size, and color of the flies
that are hatching on the rare occasions that I actually run
across a hatch, I can usually select a fly from my Six-Color
Imitator System that resembles the hatching insects closely
enough to fool the trout without having to resort to carrying
enough specific fly patterns to supply a whole horde of fly
fishermen.
Black Nosed Dace
Terrestrial and Streamer Fly Selection
It has also been my experience that despite the plethora of May
Fly nymphs, Stone Fly nymphs, Dobson Fly nymphs, and Caddis Fly
larva I see inhabiting the substrate in our local trout streams,
I very seldom see a hatch of any insect coming off during the
day on our local waters.
In fact, on the rare occasions that I do see a hatch coming off,
it's usually either just after dawn or just before dusk. In
addition, when I seine the current during the day, I very seldom
capture either May Fly, Stone Fly, or Dobson Fly nymphs or
Caddis Fly larvae.
Consequently, this leads me to believe that there is commonly
very little nymphal drift present in southern Appalachian trout
streams during the day and thus, terrestrial insects, forage
fish, crustaceans, and even mollusks are an important food
source for trout in our local waters.
So it is also a wise idea to carry a small fly box containing
grasshopper, cricket, yellow jacket, cicada, beetle, ant, and
inchworm patterns in addition to the Three-Color Attractor
System and the Six-Color Imitator System mentioned above.
It should also be noted that both the Black Gnat and black Humpy
patterns serve as a passable imitation of a common House Fly
which seems to be present everywhere.
In addition, trout also feed avidly on forage fish such as
Darters, Dace, Sculpins, and even juvenile Trout. I would
suggest that you carry Black Nosed Dace patterns to imitate Dace
and Darters, Conehead Muddler Minnows to imitate Sculpins, Royal
Wulffs and/or Spruce Flies to imitate juvenile Chubs, Enrico's
Trout Streamer to imitate juvenile Smallmouth Bass, and both
Dark and Light Edison Yellow Tigers as well as Black Ghosts and
Mickey Finns for use as attractor flies.
Last, it should also be noted that trout tend to view crayfish
in the same way that humans view steak and thus, carrying a
selection of small crayfish flies is also an excellent idea.
Conclusion
So, if you are a novice just now entering the sport of fly
fishing and are confused by the myriad of fly patterns available
or, if you are simply one of those fly fishermen who has more
flies than you know what to do with, then you might want to give
my simple approach to trout fly selection a try.
The entire dry fly system can be contained in a single 18
compartment box for the larger flies and a single 12 compartment
box for the smaller flies. Also, by applying this system to
nymphs and steamers as well, you can drastically reduce your fly
selection to a simple, compact, system that occupies far less
room in you fly vest than the traditional approach of carrying
specific fly patterns to imitate specific species of aquatic
insects.
By Shabbir 2016
http://www.fishfindersource.com/
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