Red Tag Coachman. |
There
are few things you can do indoors that tie you as closely to the outdoors as tying flies. You can be tying flies to imitate the insects that hatched last
week or the ones that are prophesied for next week, it doesn’t matter. Fly tying
can get you through the cold of winter or a rainy stretch any time of the year.
The flies can be for trout, the bonefish down on that flat down in the Florida
Keys, or striped bass up in the rip outside of Boston Harbor.
Right
now it is August. Most of the time it is on the warm side for trout fishing.
The hot sticky temperatures take the fun out of it and catching to release in
heated streams stresses the trout. Small back country creeks, where the water is
still cold, provide about the only real trout fishing around. The big river is
fickle, depending on the weather.
Outside
it is pouring. A front is moving through to wipe away the hot sticky weather of
the last few days. If we get two or three chilly nights in a row and the river
will fish well.
So
it’s a prefect night to tie up some hopper patterns. A few of the live ones are
huge, almost as big as a grown man’s pinky finger. We’ll hope for a cool
stretch and then flop some of those enormous flies in the water. Maybe a few of
those giant old brown trout will wake up hungry.
Tomah Jo |
Last
winter an urge to tie the old classic wet flies hit me. There’s a whole box
full in my vest now. Sometimes I fish them and they seem to catch as many fish
as anything else I toss. I love history and those flies are history
For
much of February I tied Clouser minnows, dozens of them. No, dozens of dozens of them.
I haven’t fished them much and I’ve given away many. Then I finished out the
winter tying my favorite dry fly patterns. You can’t have too many, not the way I catch tree limbs.
Down
in the basement is a Wheatley fly box full of salmon flies, just in case
someone invites me along. They are all nearly thirty years old and never have
been wet. I can dream, can’t I? There’s boxes of saltwater flies too. Some of those
have been fished. Did I ever tell you about the day where I caught six striped
bass over thirty inches long? I'm allowed to dream about doing it again, aren't I?
Maybe
that is what tying flies is all about. Dreaming. I think both hunters and fisherman
spend a lot of time dreaming.
Dreams. |
No comments:
Post a Comment