by bassman » December 18th, 2012, 12:08 am
Okay, as a newcomer here and re-entry in trout fishing, I still have to get past the concept of "bobber" fishing to use indicators. I do know if I'd of used them on the White River awhile back I'd have caught a whole lot of the fish I just rolled. I guess my supersensitive hands aren't as sensitive to flies and trout as they are to 40# braid and a flippin' stick in the lilies. So, like a lot of oldtimers, I grew up tying all my own leaders. Now the youngsters and the older converts have me using furled leaders. I still step down from the furled leader with a length of 4x to 6x. If you use the system the guys in the video are using, aren't you limited by knots? Seems to me you can get by with a toothpick and float by moving it past knots, or are your indicators fairly close to the fly?
It's one of the many things I have to begin re-learning, which isn't always as easy as when I was a youngster. I missed a lot of fish on soft hackles, and didn't think of using a bobber......sorry......indicator with one. I also missed fish on nymphs that a bo...indicator would have helped me hook. I have caught more steelhead, salmon, and lake trout in running water than most people could dream of, but that was always with heavy lead and either yarn flies, rubber eggs, or....yes....spawn bags. Sorry, but that was 30 years ago in MN, WI, and MI and we didn't know any better. We used a lot of lead and heavy mono and you had a feel for the "munch" of steelhead, or the bang of a chinook, or the slurp of a lake trout so much better than floating these thread leaders with no weight. It's a bigger learning curve I'm undertaking than I thought it would be, but I'm willing to listen and learn.