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Fly fishing streamers
is often over looked by fly anglers, especially trout
anglers. Streamers is a category of flies fly fisherman
have given to loosely mean food other than insects.
Generally, being smaller fish, it could also be crayfish,
leeches, and crustaceans. Bass and salt water anglers,
are more familiar with the theory that big fish eat
littler fish. However, as our sport is dominated by
trout anglers we think insect first and many times that
is as far as our thought process goes. However, big
fish eat little fish, always have and always will. Fish
are indiscriminate feeders and will eat what is presented
to them. They don't have preferences, they take what
they are given. And the nice thing about little fish
is they are always present.
In most rivers and lakes there will
be almost always be fish fry of one kind or another
present. With the predominant season for fish fry being
the spring, they easily will be present until late fall,
and often year around. But even if fry are not around,
minnows are present year around, sculpins, silversides,
alewives, smelt, the list is endless. And even if you
say there are no minnows available where you fish, well,
trout are cannibalistic, if your fishing waters have
big trout, then it also has little trout. In short,
the 'hatch' is always on when you are fishing streamers.
Besides year around availability, another
advantage of fishing streamers, is your average catch
is going to be larger. Fish are masters of energy conservation
and expenditure. They will not pursue food if it costs
more energy to catch then they will receive from its
consumption. That is why in the winter they will not
chase food, you literally have to hit them in the nose
with it. This fact, helps us to understand the feeding
habits of large trout. A large trout holed down deep,
not particularly interested in eating, will consume
a minnow, if given the opportunity, no matter what.
They might not rise up to devour size 22 Tricos, unless
they are in a feeding mode, but given a minnow that
they only have to lunge for, is an opportunity they
won't turn down very often. That is a lot of energy
consumed without a lot of energy exerted.
Techniques for fishing streamers vary
from nymphs somewhat. A little action imparted by your
rod tip, can help convince your targeted prey that the
minnow is injured, thereby increasing strike potential.
If casting into a river, the current will help you greatly
in imparting 'swimming' action onto your streamer. Raisng
and then lowering your rod tip, can also aid in the
action. Vary the tempo until you find something that
works. If fishing in lakes and ponds or from a boat
on a river, you will need to retrieve. Again vary the
tempo, using short bursts followed by a count or two
of idleness. Allow your streamer to fall, often times
the strikes happen when your fly is falling.
Favorite trout streamers include Woolly
Buggers, both beadhead and non-beadhead. Mickey Finns,
Jannsen's Minnows, and of course the veritable Muddler
Minnow and its cast of imitators. Bass fisherman have
also used the same patterns for years and years. Saltwater
patterns all virtually fall under the streamer category
with perennial favorites being the Lefty's Deceivers,
Clouser Minnows, and Crazy Charlies. As well as various
crab and shrimp patterns.
Trout fisherman might have to bulk up
their gear a little, depending on what they are used
to fishing with. 6 wt rods are usually preferable, with
enough stoutness to cast the bigger fly, and fight those
sure to come bigger fish.
About the Author
Cameron Larsen is a retired commericial fly tier and
fly fishing guide. He now operates The Big Y Fly Company.
http://www.bigyflyco.com/flyfishinghome.html
He can be reached at info@bigyflyco.com.
This article will appear in the Big Y Fly Fishing E-Zine
at Http://www.bigyflyco.com/Bigyflyfishingezine.html
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