by drabo2000 » October 28th, 2016, 5:09 pm
Thanks for all of the great suggestions!!
I think the primary problem is that I am not quite sure what I am looking for.
I have many of the suggested books - but not all, thanks. Has anyone read the new Bug Book or Hafele's 2006 book on nymphing
western streams? I have been burned by Hafele videos (too basic) so am reluctant to buy one of his books.
Thanks to Mark for the comments on doing just fine with 1 or 2 flies (I assume he is referring to his Frenchie
and Walt variations) and the link to Chouinard
and his return to simpler fishing. I have been fishing the FFF Kern Tourney for 6 or 7 years and was able
to do quite well Euro nymphing with generic Frenchies, etc but for now catching lots of fish is not my main aim.
Let me try to define what I want - maybe it's evolving with this thread.
I can often catch lots of fish with Euro without knowing much of anything about what's happeing
in the river - I want to know what's
going on in the river. More about nature. Why did I catch 40 fish instead of 2 or vice versa? Could I have done just
as well with 3 or 4 other flies, fly stages, and/or techniques. Is there a resource that explains how
to troubleshoot a "bad" day - could I get all my 2's or 0's to be 20's? Different flies, diff technique, bigger or smaller,
diff color, etc? But with changes driven by knowledge of what's happening in the river and
how fish react rather than a set system.
Maybe I'm interested in more "tricks" too that are observation based - when you see this, this is what's happening so this is what
you can try. Fish Food by Cutter discusses a few oddities - the "Cut Bug" - dragons mowing down bugs, forgot
the whole story. And why he would pick a size 12 dark gray bird's nest to fish the world over
if he had to pick just one fly - rationalized via bug knowledge.
Sorry to ramble, but when I see the book I need, I'll know. ha ha.
Tim - the "moths" seemed very light in color, and "yuge" - 1" from head to tail. If I had
to guess, I would say they were egg layers though I never saw them actually touch the water surface.
Thanks,
Steve P.