Plse can you post some pics of your favourite surface flys - if you could include materials and hook sizes etc that would be fab.
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Hi Rex,
as a rule I don't use trebles any more except on surface lures and secret weapons - not that they effect the fish or the fishing, it's purely for aesthetical reasons. Having said that, I have always thought that the loose hook or hooks of the treble that haven't hooked the fish can, at time, loosen the hold on the hook that has penetrated. Whereas a double or a single hook especially wouldn't have this problem.
Further to that, I would always go slightly larger with a double or a treble, rather than smaller. Same rule would apply for surface lures, as the larger hook would help drag the back-end down. Using the larger hook also gives you more room to work with, creating additional target spots etc. and looping heavy nylon around smaller trebles can be a pain, and look untidy.
Steff.
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Here's one of the in fly at the moment 'THE JAMBO'.To be fair,it's taken a hell of alot of fish to date but! - Anything that causes a wake will usually get a responce.
I always fish two surface lures,a large one such as the Jambo,or,a plastic tube with deer hair just spun round it of around 3"inches in length on the point,and a smaller one of around a 1"inch on the dropper,this could be a muddler type pattern for exsample,but again,I usually use a plastic tube.
The results are rarther surprising fishing this method,as 90% of the fish I catch all come to the smaller pattern on the dropper.
DAZ.
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Interesting that Daz
Used to do something similar when trolling for Bass. Rapala on the point and a foot or so in front of that a small Mepps or a tiny plastic sandeel, same response the bass would a lot of the time have taken the teaser ahead of the rapala sometimes even a double hook up.
If the bass where on the surface and we were using bubble floats again a small teaser ahead of the platstic eel would often take the fish.
Always believed it was the bass seeing the smaller lure as the pursued prey and the shoal mentality took over "get it before one of the others do."
Moonshadow
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Originally posted by DAZ View PostHere's one of the in fly at the moment 'THE JAMBO'.To be fair,it's taken a hell of alot of fish to date but! - Anything that causes a wake will usually get a responce.
I always fish two surface lures,a large one such as the Jambo,or,a plastic tube with deer hair just spun round it of around 3"inches in length on the point,and a smaller one of around a 1"inch on the dropper,this could be a muddler type pattern for exsample,but again,I usually use a plastic tube.
The results are rarther surprising fishing this method,as 90% of the fish I catch all come to the smaller pattern on the dropper.
DAZ.
LL
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TT
Excellent articles m8 in FF&FT AND T+S this month...................learned a lot but am a bit worried didnt realise you had all these accolades and as it states your one of the finest casters in the u.k................... dont laugh too loudly when i finally wet a line with you .:/.:/.:/:}
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Originally posted by LuckyLuke View PostTT
Excellent articles m8 in FF&FT AND T+S this month...................learned a lot but am a bit worried didnt realise you had all these accolades and as it states your one of the finest casters in the u.k................... dont laugh too loudly when i finally wet a line with you .:/.:/.:/:}
Thanks for the comments, much appreciated. I hope that it helps some people who are not familiar with fishing surface lures to give them the confidence to give them a go etc. as they can be a deadly tactic on the right night, and even, at times, on the wrong nights!
Simon; used those patterns over in Argentina for the trout earlier this year, never thought a fish would take them to be honest, but they did. Must give an interesting surface pattern when fished and retrieved? Any success on it yet? other than otter attention? :>
UgieFisher; classic surface lure nights would be the warm, muggy late summer nights. The darker the night the better. However, they will draw fish out of the depths (and the shallows) in virtually any or all conditions, even bright moonlit nights. Just give them a swim, and see what happens. I wouldn't really start the night with a full surface lure, but would certainly start with a muddler pattern on the dropper, which can provide great sport. A simple rule that I adhere to with almost any type of sewin fishing that I do, but especially so with a surface lure where a wake must be created is; the slower the water the faster the retrieve - this may equate to a full roly-poly in dead water. Then, conversely, the faster the water the slower the retrieve - indeed, no retrieve at all may be required.
Not to plug it any further, but the article in this month's FF&FT may be of use, as it does cover their construction and fishing approaches.
Thanks,
TT.
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Originally posted by Teifi-Terrorist View Post
Simon; used those patterns over in Argentina for the trout earlier this year, never thought a fish would take them to be honest, but they did. Must give an interesting surface pattern when fished and retrieved? Any success on it yet? other than otter attention? :>
TT.
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And another thing!
Having just knocked up four "bog brushes or Jambos or whatever you wish to call them" - they hurt to make as you keep checking the sharpness of the trebles, and they eat up your deer hair supplies - Bambi's Mum is going naked tonight.
As a tip, for the neatest trimming of deer hair ( not that neatness matters a bugger with wake flies ), the best tool is an electric nasal hair trimmer, second best are beard or hair clippers.
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