by Papasequoia » September 9th, 2008, 7:57 am
Like all rigs, much depends on the stream or river you are fishing too, as well as the section of it you are fishing. Case in point was this past weekend on our backpacking trip. Nice creek, easy to wade, decent amount of water for this time of year. There were areas where the terrain was relatively level and you could find riffles with lots of pocket water and pools that weren't too deep. There were other sections where the terrain got quite steep. In those sections there were short runs followed by small waterfalls and deep plunge pools.
In the more level parts I used a very short bit of tippet, max 18" maybe even a bit shorter. I used a bead head fly but no weight. The nymph was almost a wet fly at times, trailing behind the dry (a bushy stimulator) and not bumping along the bottom as you would normally do when nymphing. Since these fish were not in deep water you didn't have to worry as much about getting it deep and on the bottom. They hit both dry and nymph.
In the deeper plunge pools I switched to a larger dry (foam hopper mostly) that could survive the white water better, and be seen by me and hopefully fish better as well. I still used a bead head, but went up one size (from an 18 to a 16) and I pinched on a very small split shot a few inches ahead of the nymph. Finally, I increased the tippet to about three feet. Since these were fairly short casts and drifts I didn't have too much problem with the longer line. The dry was more of an indicator here as the fish took the nymph more often in these deep pools, but they were agressive, wild, backcountry trout, so they attacked that hopper too!
Nature always wins.
> miles = < people
Camp in the mountains, not the left lane!