I am cleaning my room. At age 75 I finally need to see the floor to walk around safely.
Anyway, I found my extra Orvis dropper boxes. I usually pre-tie double chironomids and store them in the dropper box. I use a fas-snap and barrel swivel to quickly switch flies without the fuss of tying knots on the water.
However, I never had a rhyme or reason to the flies I chose to pair.
Anybody have thoughts on how to pair chironomids that make sense?
I did ask Google's Gemini AI service and it did give a couple of suggestions for pairing a Bleeding Elvis. Namely a Black or Olive for contrast or a Zebra Midge. The secondary suggestion was a Blood Worm or Bleeding Bucktail.
But I have never seen AI fishing on eastern Washington lakes. It also seems AI is fixated with blood.
Anyway, any thoughts for a two dropper fly combination to fill my dropper boxes???
Anyway, I found my extra Orvis dropper boxes. I usually pre-tie double chironomids and store them in the dropper box. I use a fas-snap and barrel swivel to quickly switch flies without the fuss of tying knots on the water.
However, I never had a rhyme or reason to the flies I chose to pair.
Anybody have thoughts on how to pair chironomids that make sense?
I did ask Google's Gemini AI service and it did give a couple of suggestions for pairing a Bleeding Elvis. Namely a Black or Olive for contrast or a Zebra Midge. The secondary suggestion was a Blood Worm or Bleeding Bucktail.
But I have never seen AI fishing on eastern Washington lakes. It also seems AI is fixated with blood.
Anyway, any thoughts for a two dropper fly combination to fill my dropper boxes???



