Friday, November 23, 2012

CT Salmon Fishing News - Late November


Yet another victim of the infamous HM Sunray Variant 

Warm, cold, warm, cold...I think we've about seen the last of the warm weather until April or so. Fishing, however, has been red hot. My last day out saw four hooked and all four landed, the smallest being around 7# and the largest a hefty male in the 16-18# class. Three of the fights were nothing to write home about, but the big boy fought well, jumping over 10 times. I saw four other fish hooked that day, three of them landed.

Fly wise, it was a day of stark contrast. My first fish was caught on a small #10 wet fly called the M1 Killer. I was fishing a very shallow riffle, so I decided to go small and subtle. The next three fish came from a deeper run with a much heavier current. The two middle fish (including the big guy) were taken on a Gold Bodied Willy Gunn tied on a brass tube. The total length of the fly was about 3.5"-4". The fourth fish took the orange HM Sunray Variant, a tube pattern which has been one of my top two salmon flies this fall (as well as being one of my top trout flies this past spring).

The other fly which has produced quite well for me is the venerable Ally's Shrimp. Still nothing on the Sugerman Shrimp since Russia, but I haven't been fishing it much this season for some reason. When I've needed a dark fly, I've been fishing the Same Thing Murray. Flies with orange in them have been producing so well, it's hard for me to fish with anything else.

Between playing gigs, teaching and fishing, I've been burning the candle at both ends lately. In between the insanity, I've been busy at the vise, tying flies for custom orders. As it gets colder, the less I fish with conventional flies and the more I fish with various tube flies. As far as single hooks go, I've been really happy with the Owner SSW straight eye hooks and I have been including them on all my tube fly orders lately.

Get out there and make sure you try some orange flies/tubes!

Expanded Naugatuck River Fly Assortment




Saturday, November 17, 2012

Brûlé McSprat

Both classic and modern

The Brûle McSprat is a spey fly conceived by my good friend, fishing partner and sometimes bandmate, Doug Schlink. This fly has proven itself very valuable on Quebec's Petit Cascapedia River. The full story of this fly can be found on the Angler Adventures Blog.

Brûlé McSprat

Tip: gold oval tinsel
Rear Body: bright green floss (Gordon Griffiths, if available)
Body Veil: bright green floss
Hackle: blue eared pheasant
Front Body: peacock herl
Throat: teal
Wing: bronze mallard
Head: black

Framed and on display at Camp Brûlé, Quebec