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Re: Tradition vs. Plastic, The Hidden Irony
I see the eggs used in the following fashion; a hook is tied at the terminal end of the line, the egg is propped in place about a foot away with a tooth pick or the like, and closest to the angler is a weight. When the fish scarfs up the egg the angler sets the hook. The problem arises when (in this scenario) the hook is not in the Trout's mouth! It is about a foot away usually on the opposite side of the fish than is the angler. The result of this technique all too often is that the fish is not actually hooked inside the mouth but on the outside of the mouth or head. The pursuant damage is dependent on the individual incident. Some fare much worse than others.
I have seen this technique used by spin fisherman but not a fly fisher. Here is the method that many fly fishers use if they use a bead. A bare hook is fasten to the end of the leader. Some tie a short piece of yarn to the hook. The egg is attached about 1 1/2 to 2" above the hook. There is no weight and some use a sink tip line or Teeny style line according to the water depth. The fish is almost always hooked in the mouth. If weight is used it is a split shot at the tippet knot. I fished eggs a lot but I used a glow-bug yarn egg fly tied to a hook with a sink tip line. I have never used the plastic egg and bare hook system. Frank
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Re: Tradition vs. Plastic, The Hidden Irony
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You have to get those streamers down deep.
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I am hanging out at www.fflivewire.com/forums discussing fantasy football when i am not hanging out here. |
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Re: Tradition vs. Plastic, The Hidden Irony
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Great post, <°((((~{ Hey, even though I'm not in California where the lead THERE is dangerous...is there a subsitute out there for weighting flies? I know there's tungsten shot, tungsten beads and tungsten eye weights but what about the wire? |
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Re: Tradition vs. Plastic, The Hidden Irony
One of the undeniable truths about "art" is that it is in the eye of the beholder, and all of us have different concepts about what fly fishing is/should be. I am very sympathetic to your arguments, however.
This kind of debate is healthy and found in many different branches of sport, and lead me from rifle hunting to bow hunting with a compound bow to using only traditional equipment, and now to using a longbow with arrows that I craft myself from wood and feathers. I very seldom kill an elk anymore, but the purity of the pursuit has become as important as the outcome I have been fortunate enough to have been able to fish Alaska the last two summers, and the standard way of fishing for big rainbows on the Kenai is to use plastic beads pegged within an inch or so of a hook. This rig is fished pretty much the way I fish nymphs back home, and is deadly. The guides can get dudes on lots of big fish in a hurry, and everyone is happy. Is this fly fishing? I don't think so, and I did almost as well using my glo-bugs. Was I any more virtuous than the others? I didn't feel that I was. It was a personal choice. I didn't see any foul-hooked, or severely damaged fish in my boat, but it certainly is a possibility if the hook isn't within regulaton distance of the bead. You brought up the issue of "bobbers" and I was reminded of a trip to the Madison that my brother in law and I took 22 years ago just after I graduated from medical school. He was legally blind at the time, and I will never forget the scowl and comment he collected from the fish bum working in Bud Lillys shop when he picked out the biggest indicator he could find (and actually see) so that he could fish that day. Not only was it in poor taste, but if it wasn't "sporting", why the hell were they selling them in the first place? I learned to nymph before I even knew what an indicator was, but truth be told, learned to watch the tip of my fly line using a short leader, which is just an abbreviated version of a bobber. When I think of all the challenges we face as a community including environmental degradation, poaching, the population explosion and habitat loss--- I feel like we need to look for issues to unite behind rather than to become split up into factions based on how we fish. Maybe some of those folks fishing beads will evolve into dry fly purists who use cane rods in a few years! |
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Re: Tradition vs. Plastic, The Hidden Irony
the egg pinned method was started in alaska for bows feeding on salmon eggs. its moved to the great lakes region in recent years, can we say lifting fish..to me thats snagging have a hook behind the fly(bait) and not tied to the hook..
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sandfly/ bob Where Pine meets Marsh creek (bigmeadowsflyshop.com) N.J.B.B.A. #2215 Tiadaghton T.U. #688 P.C.F.F.P.&D.S. #3 I did not escape.....they gave me a day pass! Fly Shop Owner |
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Re: Tradition vs. Plastic, The Hidden Irony
Quote:
I couldn't have said that better myself Sandfly! I first sew it used with Slinky's on the Salmon River in 89'. The practitioners were using yarn on a knot with the hook some distance (?) away. Lifting was what I heard it called then. |
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Re: Tradition vs. Plastic, The Hidden Irony
So this type of "fishing" isn't seen much outside Alaska? I've seen it used a few times as well, always by visitors from out of town though. Perhaps that's why it's illegal to use the beads in fly-fishing only water here. I normally have no problem putting my patterns on the bottom without any extra weight, I certainly don't need a piece of lead to anchor it there until a fish swims by.
Another one I've seen here in the last couple of years is people putting spinners on their fly rods. I still can find no logic to that one, it just seems utterly pointless. I respect peoples desire to catch a fish, but to do so in such a manner I find not only disrespectful to the fish, but also destructive to the whole experience. Also entirely unnecessary - Most of the fly fishermen I see here easily out catch pretty much everyone except those who are intentionally snagging fish. It took me a *long* time to start catching fish with my fly rod, but I value all that time spent on the water. Fly fishing is about the entire experience, if all I wanted was a fish I'd get a subsistence permit. In the last couple of years I have learned many things that work on the fish here, and I try to pass on some of that to other fishermen. Perhaps the sharing of effective, traditional approaches will someday be able to eliminate those forms of "fishing". --W |
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Re: Tradition vs. Plastic, The Hidden Irony
This, for me, is an interesting string that gets to one of the core questions in our sport whose answer is highly likely to be different for almost every angler; although it's equally likely that those answers will fall into a very small group of common categories.
As far as hooking a fish is concerned, I'm in favor of whatever method causes the least damage to the hooked salmonid or char species. I'm assuming, based on the previous posts on this string, as well as on the natural feeding habit of those species, that that would be hooking by the mouth. I wince every time I fish a dry/dropper set-up and hook the fish on the dry; knowing that in it's efforts to escape the hook set, the fish is apt to impale itself on the barb of the dropper. I once had a fishing buddy tell me that he'd seen surgeons spend less attention to their patients than I was spending removing the dropper hook from the side of a rainbow. I file down the barbs on my nymphs for just that reason; I crimp down the barbs on my dries and streamers. The bigger questions is, essentially, why do you fish? And although the virtually universal answer at some level is: "to catch fish", there are other sub-answers, which, in some cases and for some anglers, will become, from time to time, significantly more important to them than the universal answer. For me, the "art" sub-answer falls into this category. However, I'm in the sub-answer group. For me when a buddy says: "let's go fishing", the sequence that hits my mind while I'm saying: "sure", is this: 1. the look and the feel of the stream, 2. casting to the lies, and 3. catching a fish. So, I'm going to align more closely with the art part of first post in this string. But, I'm reminded of two things. First, when I was a boy, I used to fish for only one reason; to catch fish. Second, some of my fishing buddies don't say to me me: "let's go fishing", they say: "let's go catch some fish". As said in another post on this string, art is in the eyes of the beholder. Every now and then it takes a simple comment like the one above re: catching some fish, to bring me back to what is, for me, an important reality. |
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