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I'll come up your way and show you how to catch them. I'll even touch them for youCarp are absolutely everywhere near me. Maybe i should get my guides license. But I ain't touching one...I suppose I should try for them seems super easy to me unless they are picky.
I think a day with Evan and Clarkman would be a much better investment than a guide trip
gross, they're disgusting!I'll even touch them for you![]()
HOTI'll even touch them for you![]()
Now thats funny.....sicko
They dont run two half day trips. Try and book the "second half".Just to be clear I dont dispute "experience" for me its about the math.
If I put some folks in my boat to guide my costs are the same concerning
liability etc. whether "full" or "half day'
What changes in my mind is the hourly rate I pay for the guides time.
Just for kicks imagine as a guide I have a "full day" booking.
I get ONE "full day" fee for lets say $500 bucks.
But if I charge $350 for a "half day" I can run two "half day" trips and earn $700 vs $500.
I think guides at PEAK times,
such as Buoy 10 for instance, love the opportunity for "half day"
bookings.
Cant blame them for trying to make a living.
I just think its disingenuous to call it "half day" when you compare it to "full day"
related to fee.
Other folks may have a different point of view.
oh i like the way you think, maybe you'll get a guide with half the experience (or less than that).They dont run two half day trips. Try and book the "second half".
This was my thought too.Also a guide taking a half day he might be losing out on a full day. He/might get two half days but I think that is unusual.
Seriously, @Rob Allen - let's go catch a Gorge carp or two.I'll come up your way and show you how to catch them. I'll even touch them for you![]()
Get a sinking fly of some sort - look at some bonefish flies as an idea. Or some kind of wormy-type fly with a bead head. Get it in front of the fish with their heads down, tails up waving at you. The ones just hanging out or mouthing the top of the water won't do much. Nor will the ones that are moving around. You have to find the comfy fish that are relaxed and vacuuming bugs off the bottom.I found a spot half hour from my house loaded with carp. I’ve fished it a half dozen times, emptied my fly box at them still with no luck. Undeterred I plan to go back this season when the ice comes off and keep trying. I know there are carp guides around but I think I’m content to keep at it until I can figure them out. I also don’t think I’d spend $500-$700 on a guide for carp, I’d rather spend that money on more toys even if it takes longer to actually catch one. Each to their own I suppose.
What Evan says. Be super quiet if you are wading and use care when casting; don't line the fish, let your fly drop softly, don't splat it down. If that carp is waving its tail at you that's the perfect setup, cast a couple feet in front of the fish, let the fly sink and slowly strip the fly towards the fish. Look for the fishes tail to change angles as that might indicate he's picked up the fly. Have fun.Get a sinking fly of some sort - look at some bonefish flies as an idea. Or some kind of wormy-type fly with a bead head. Get it in front of the fish with their heads down, tails up waving at you. The ones just hanging out or mouthing the top of the water won't do much. Nor will the ones that are moving around. You have to find the comfy fish that are relaxed and vacuuming bugs off the bottom.

I found a spot half hour from my house loaded with carp. I’ve fished it a half dozen times, emptied my fly box at them still with no luck. Undeterred I plan to go back this season when the ice comes off and keep trying. I know there are carp guides around but I think I’m content to keep at it until I can figure them out. I also don’t think I’d spend $500-$700 on a guide for carp, I’d rather spend that money on more toys even if it takes longer to actually catch one. Each to their own I suppose.
This is good advice. The fish in the spot you describe are likely bad targets. From my experience, if that is the case, you can change flies all day long, and you still won't catch them. Move on to a different area and look for fish with the posture Evan describes. Close to the bottom, heads down, tails up, stationary and rooting or moving slowly looking for food.Get a sinking fly of some sort - look at some bonefish flies as an idea. Or some kind of wormy-type fly with a bead head. Get it in front of the fish with their heads down, tails up waving at you. The ones just hanging out or mouthing the top of the water won't do much. Nor will the ones that are moving around. You have to find the comfy fish that are relaxed and vacuuming bugs off the bottom.
That's the way I like to carpCarp are best when face down, ass up