What's Catching You Fish?

I’m starting to stock pile for the smoker😬View attachment 9801
They just don't grow 'em like that 'round these parts. My wife would die, I'll show her when she gets home. With no steelhead season I've been looking for something to smoke from the WDFW p-n-t lakes.
 
good old fashioned trash panda baitfish pattern caught an absolute pile of these today during a recon mission (more on the trip report)....until the first one got so mangled, I had to put another one one.
YxurRf4.jpg



bass thumb is real....
 
good old fashioned trash panda baitfish pattern caught an absolute pile of these today during a recon mission (more on the trip report)....until the first one got so mangled, I had to put another one one.
YxurRf4.jpg



bass thumb is real....
Would you be willing to do a sbs of that fly? I don't remember if you had one on the old site
 
Would you be willing to do a sbs of that fly? I don't remember if you had one on the old site
Sure. I'll throw one up in the next week.

I've tweaked a few things since I first started tying this style several years ago. Swims better, kicks better, holds its profile better. I dunno if it matters since the very first iterations caught the hell out of early season fish too.
 
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No pictures today but a flashback Halfback in size 14 saved the day on Tuesday. This week was my first time out this year and I visited a Spokane area lake known for it's good sized fish. I wasted nearly 2 hours using a couple of different sinking lines and a variety of flies without getting so much as a bump. Then changing to a floating line and fishing a level leech under an indicator I landed a 20" football shaped rainbow but couldn't repeat the action.

Then with time running out and having an appointment to keep, I tied on the little Halfback and started casting up to within about a foot of the bank. Results were immediate and I hooked 6 more fish in fairly short order, the smallest 16'' and the others about 18''. I had one spectacular breakoff when a fish hit the fly in the first second after it hit the water and snapped a 4x tippet.

Had I started with the Halfback it would probably have been a 10 or 12 fish day but at least I salvaged some of the day. It was curious to see bank fishermen casting as far out into the lake as they could while a couple of us were casting from 30' out into foot deep water at the bank.

Next month I'll be using the tiny flies for big trout act on a lake that Freestone and I both caught 25'' trout in last year. Halfbacks and soft hackles thrown near the weed beds produced big fish along with Carey Specials.
 
Have not been able to sleep, so I tied these last night. Sz 14 cdn blk simi leech. Wasn't paying attention and the 5/32" fl. orange bead is for 8-12, and popped off the first fly. Oh well, lets go for it. I've been going through my stock, alternating rods and lines, a 4 and a 6, or a fast and a slow, to compare so I fished two of them.
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both did well for such ugly flies
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beautiful morning, but at 28 degrees there was some guide ice this am.
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A good chunk of my fishing background is stillwater and that’s definitely where my fishing and tying comfort zone is. Having recently moved from the interior of BC to Vancouver Island and literally just a couple minutes from the bank of the Cowichan River, I’m learning to fish rivers and tie the right patterns. I’ve invested in a Czech nymph set up and just starting to get over the frustration of tangled tippet on the rod tip and flys slingshot from boulder snags to high tree branches. But I’m also discovering the beauty of brown trout and how addicting they are.
A recent trip and some rock turning gave me a valuable lesson on golden stonefly nymphs. So I came up with what I hoped would be a successful pattern and so far I haven’t been disappointed.
4D3DF3B1-094E-45DD-8F9C-74BB7E396268.jpeg32D382BE-2C57-45ED-A6BF-638B3E89804A.jpeg
 
A good chunk of my fishing background is stillwater and that’s definitely where my fishing and tying comfort zone is. Having recently moved from the interior of BC to Vancouver Island and literally just a couple minutes from the bank of the Cowichan River, I’m learning to fish rivers and tie the right patterns. I’ve invested in a Czech nymph set up and just starting to get over the frustration of tangled tippet on the rod tip and flys slingshot from boulder snags to high tree branches. But I’m also discovering the beauty of brown trout and how addicting they are.
A recent trip and some rock turning gave me a valuable lesson on golden stonefly nymphs. So I came up with what I hoped would be a successful pattern and so far I haven’t been disappointed.
View attachment 10467View attachment 10468
Great looking fly! What's that body material if you don't mind sharing?
 
A good chunk of my fishing background is stillwater and that’s definitely where my fishing and tying comfort zone is. Having recently moved from the interior of BC to Vancouver Island and literally just a couple minutes from the bank of the Cowichan River, I’m learning to fish rivers and tie the right patterns. I’ve invested in a Czech nymph set up and just starting to get over the frustration of tangled tippet on the rod tip and flys slingshot from boulder snags to high tree branches. But I’m also discovering the beauty of brown trout and how addicting they are.
A recent trip and some rock turning gave me a valuable lesson on golden stonefly nymphs. So I came up with what I hoped would be a successful pattern and so far I haven’t been disappointed.
View attachment 10467View attachment 10468
Really nice imitation of a golden stonefly.
 
Pleasant day with a central WA trout lake all to myself, so I put my All Songs playlist on shuffle and sang along :cool:
Strong, fat, jumpy stockers, so they all looked like this, in the 13-15" range (SO much stronger than the wetside ones!)
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As pictured, a red bead black leech was the most popular, with a few others getting random eats

Fish were taken with the following songs and flies (not reporting LDRs)

Ruby eyed leech, black:
• Pink; F**ckin Perfect
Springsteen; Point Blank
• Joan Jett; Hate Myself for Loving You
• Cash; Ring of Fire
• Dolly Parton; Coat of Many Colors

Maroon hair leech with pink soft hackle collar:
Aaron Tippin; Kiss This

Yellow/brown schlappen bugger:
The Knack; My Sharona

Yellow & olive soft hackle:
Miley & Noah Cyrus; I Got So High That I Saw Jesus
 
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