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Wwelz | June 26th, 2008, 6:49 am | |
Posts: 2 | I was fishing the Natchaug river a steam in eastern ct on June 23 from five pm till dark. I saw a couple of sulphurs size 18 on the water at six pm. As the evening went on the fish were acting like they were chasing nymphs to the surface sometimes leaping totally out of the water. They were also swirling for something right under the surface. I caught a few fish on a sulphur dry fly but lots of refusals. I never saw a dun emerge after six pm or any sign of any insect emerging. I tried many emerger patterns under the surface with no luck. whats going on here? Behavioral drift? | |
GONZO | June 26th, 2008, 10:43 am | |
Site Editor "Bear Swamp," PAPosts: 1681 | Wwelz, What you describe sounds very much like what happens when a strong caddisfly emergence coincides with a minor emergence of mayflies. Here are the italicized headings Gary LaFontaine uses in the section "Learning to Recognize a Caddisfly Emergence" in Caddisflies: One, a trout occasionally leaps into the air. Two, most of the feeding trout are bulging or splashing. Three. There are no insects on the surface. Although these signs do not apply to all caddisfly emergences (some do not emerge on the surface), and other activity could also be the cause, it is a good possibility that this is what you witnessed. Unlike many mayfly emergences, adult caddisflies often are not as obvious on the surface or in the air during an emergence. The times when we see large numbers of caddisflies flying about are usually during mating flights. Unless these coincide with an emergence, they typically have little to do with the feeding activity of trout until the females start laying eggs. (There are a few exceptions to this. For example, I often see trout leaping for the tightly clustered adults in black dancer [Mystacides] mating swarms.) What I usually do when confronted with the situation you describe is to hold a pocket nymph seine at the surface in a strong line of drift. Sometimes emerging caddisflies are captured, but even when they are not, the filmy, transparent shucks left by emerging caddisflies often show up in the net. | |
Wwelz | June 26th, 2008, 1:54 pm | |
Posts: 2 | Thank you - I think you are right . I will try your suggestions | |
Title | Replies | Last Reply |
Re: La Fontaine Caddis patterns In General Discussion by Goose | 3 | Oct 19, 2006 by GONZO |
I agree with the nymph and emergence coments above In the Mayfly Species Litobrancha recurvata by Beardius | 0 | |
Re: Sulphurs In Fishing Reports by Wbranch | 1 | Jun 27, 2010 by Oldredbarn |
Re: Emerger pictures anyone??? In the Caddisfly Genus Chimarra by Hellgie | 7 | Apr 30, 2022 by Martinlf |
Re: Name that hatch? In General Discussion by Rbpcaddis | 1 | Jul 13, 2007 by Taxon |
Re: DO You Remember??? In the True Bug Family Cicadidae by JANNEY | 6 | Feb 7, 2007 by Konchu |
Re: what is this fly? In General Discussion by Jlw_5178 | 6 | Apr 22, 2010 by Jlw_5178 |
Bald Eagle Caddis In Brachycentrus appalachia Caddisfly Adult by Troutboomer | 0 | |
Re: Hydropsychid Ties: In General Discussion by PaulRoberts | 3 | Feb 22, 2012 by PaulRoberts |
Re: Behavioral Drift - With or Without Case? In the Insect Order Trichoptera by DaveC | 3 | Jul 3, 2007 by JeffK |