RichardCullip wrote:Oh, the places and species I've tossed a fly at would drive the dry fly purest to drink but I do so love the challenge of bringing a fly rod to all sorts of water.
There ya go. Many places you just can't get to trout waters.
I realize that I may define "dry fly" a little different than most folks. For me, if it floats, it's dry- whether imitating insects, frogs, fish, even small birds.
We're fortunate to fish 12 months a year in about as many states, both freshwater and salt. Dry flies (as I define them) are a big part of that, because fish are often suckers for anything moving or sitting on the surface.
Last winter about half our Florida fishing was dries, especially Crease flies. To the best of my recollection I got snook, jacks, snapper and even a few tarpon on them. Talk about a hoot when any of those cut a hole in the surface. Back up in freshwater I caught bluegill, bass, snook and tarpon on dries too. Who knew that tarpon would hit a rubberleg frog pattern!
Here at home in Alaska I've managed to catch all 5 species of Pacific salmon plus steelhead on dries. Of course, the best dry for kings was a #2 floating Glo Bug waked across the surface in shallow water, but you never know what will work till you try it. In a "perversion" of dry fishing, sea run Dolly Varden mix with the swarming black schools of pink salmon in rivers, but ANY hook below the surface is going to snag a pink. Wake an EHC over the top of the schools though, and the Dollies roar right up to grab them. Similarly, pink salmon gather in those big black schools right in the river mouth, and any hook below the surface is going to snag up immediately. But put a mini Wog or Burning Man fly on and wake it over the school, and they come up to attack like alligators.
I guess my point is that a proscription AGAINST any means of fly fishing or prescription FOR one over all others is going to cost you. Not just in fish, but in fun. It pays to figure out how to make all of them work, then pick and choose between them as your mood and conditions dictate. I'm still just as happy to sit and watch fish as to fish for them, or to watch others catch fish when I know darned well I could be doing it too. Choosing not to fish at times is as entirely enjoyable as fishing.