EDIT: Fixed Capitalization in Title (See Rule 9)
Are you getting ready for the spring run off? Do you tie??
Are you getting ready for the spring run off? Do you tie??
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I thought long and hard about taking up flyfishing. I am a jeweler, so tying flies appeals to me. But, after pricing the gear and tackle... too rich for my blood. I am just getting ready for the crappie runs here, but I'll take them with a rod and reel, and let you millionaires have at the flyfishing.
When I was getting interested, I gave NPOD a call, as I knew from his posts that he was an avid flyfisherman that had written a few books on it. When he started suggesting the over $1000 poles, I started to taste bile. And, I visited a fly fisherman store here, and was floored by how outrageous everything costs. Tag Fly Fishing on the label, and the same product that sells for $5 at the tackleshop sells for $50.I tend to fly fish with a rod and reel...
When I was getting interested, I gave NPOD a call, as I knew from his posts that he was an avid flyfisherman that had written a few books on it. When he started suggesting the over $1000 poles, I started to taste bile. And, I visited a fly fisherman store here, and was floored by how outrageous everything costs. Tag Fly Fishing on the label, and the same product that sells for $5 at the tackleshop sells for $50.
It was just too much to start something that I wasn't even certain I was going to enjoy.
I do a lot of ultralight fishing. 3lb test line and such. Having a 10 pounder hit an ultralight setup is a rush, for sure. I wouldn't mind joining someone who has extra gear for a day at the river, but I think before I buy any more stock in a new technique, I'd like to try it first, so that i know what needs to have to be the best gear and what I can skimp by on.Totally. But I can find you a plethora of bass, catfish, deep sea, inshore, etc. gear at the same price points. It’s like everything else out there.
Sure, you might not get the exact same fit and finish in a $50 setup as you would with a $1,000+ setup; however, you’ll still be out fishing and seeing if you like it.
I think you’re in Alabama, if I remember correctly from the storm thread. Some of the best fun you can have is catching bass and bream on fly gear. If you get a really light setup and throw dry flies for bluegills, you’ll have an absolute blast and can usually hook them up when some of the more popular presentations have slowed down...
I do a lot of ultralight fishing. 3lb test line and such. Having a 10 pounder hit an ultralight setup is a rush, for sure. I wouldn't mind joining someone who has extra gear for a day at the river, but I think before I buy any more stock in a new technique, I'd like to try it first, so that i know what needs to have to be the best gear and what I can skimp by on.
With a weight, or maybe better a float, back of the fly, the flyfishing lure could be used with bait casting gear, I suppose. You'd need just enough weight to cast.
I will never understand the catch and release thing. Guys spending tens of thousands on boats and gear to just throw them back. I have a designated deep freeze full of milk jugs that I have cut the tops off of and frozen the fish inside of to eat throughout the year. If I was going to throw them back, why not just play golf? Golf would be a tad cheaper, but the clothes look better.Just free spool and let it float down a river. It works, but the hoity toity bug checkers will definitely have some dirty looks.
Depending on the setup, the weight can be counter productive to the presentation. It’s also worth noting that using the terms “float” and “bobber” will have you labeled a heretic. From high atop their catch and release thrones, and in order to maintain absolutely no connection with the average fishermen, the hoitiest of the toities have named their bobbers and floats “strike indicators.”
We had some fly-fishing puritans that’d be out and about in the various rivers when I lived in Montana. If you wanted to really get under their skin, show up at a river with a spinning reel, throw worms, and keep what you catch. You could cut the tension with a knife.
I love crappie fishing, because of their flavor, delicious fish, IMO. But, I wonder if flyfishing them would make them more fun. The Cajuns call the Sac de Lait (sack of milk) because as soon as you set the hook, they give up the fight and spread their legs for you, ha ha.
Simplicity at the same time tedious. Zen like thang!And while you're at it, what makes fly fishing special? I've done a little fishing, but always bait casting gear, very plain. Fly fishing gear is usually considerably more expensive and seems to have a panache for its practitioners that makes other forms of fishing seem a little below the salt. What's the special allure?
I will never understand the catch and release thing. Guys spending tens of thousands on boats and gear to just throw them back. I have a designated deep freeze full of milk jugs that I have cut the tops off of and frozen the fish inside of to eat throughout the year. If I was going to throw them back, why not just play golf? Golf would be a tad cheaper, but the clothes look better.
I mean, I will throw back bream and other trash fish that I don't like to eat, but not bass, crappie, or catfish. Never!
yes top fishing really my thing. agree! Try streamers with some flash?Personally I don’t think catching crappies on fly tackle would be any more fun. But that’s only because nearly all of my experience with crappie has been finding them on submerged structure and throwing jigs and/or jigs & minnows at them. For me, fly fishing is prime when you’re getting fish to hit on top. I can’t remember a time where I had a fantastic topwater crappie bite, so I can’t imagine it being a marked improvement over typical methods.
That said - I advocate all forms of fishing and enjoy them all. Saying that I don’t think catching crappies on fly tackle would be any more fun than on a spinning/casting, or even cane pole, setup, is not to say I don’t think it’d be fun. It’s definitely something I’d try. It’s just that I don’t think it’d provide a measurable improvement over the tried and true methods.
And while you're at it, what makes smoking a pipe special? Pipe smoking gear is usually considerably more expensive and seems to have a panache for its practitioners that makes other forms of smoking and seem a little below the salt. What's the special allure?
Now I can spell hoity toty. Good adj. lolI will never understand the catch and release thing. Guys spending tens of thousands on boats and gear to just throw them back. I have a designated deep freeze full of milk jugs that I have cut the tops off of and frozen the fish inside of to eat throughout the year. If I was going to throw them back, why not just play golf? Golf would be a tad cheaper, but the clothes look better.
I mean, I will throw back bream and other trash fish that I don't like to eat, but not bass, crappie, or catfish. Never!