Wednesday, February 5, 2014

A Team of Early Season Wet flies for Lough Fishing

The spring for me always brings lots of anticipation and expatiation's for the coming trout season. That first chilly and bumpy ride up across the Lakes of Ireland is a thrilling experience, with the rod made up in the boat and all the new wet flies in my boxes charged and prepared for a long season of trout hunting ahead. It often can be a slow and disappointing start as the trout are still in winter mode around the early part of February, but I have had a few good starts in this month and here is a couple of my trust worthy dressings that could very well make the starting line up this season.

                                                  THE POINT FLY

SLIVER DABBLER

Hook: size 12-10 B175 Kamasan 
Thread: Red twist thread 
Tail: UV polar chenille
Rib: Sliver wire 
Body: Flat sliver tinsel
Body Hackle:  Grizzle cock hackle 
Wing/ Cloak: Light bronze mallard  
Cheek : Split jungle cock feather in center and tie half on each side of the fly 



THE MIDDLE DROPPER
FIERY BROWN DABBLER

Hook: size 12-10 B175 Kamasan 
Thread: olive twist thread
Tail: natural pheasant tail 
Tag: Glo-brite no 8
Rib: Gold wire 
Dubbing: Brown blend dubbing 
Body Hackle: Dark ginger cock hackle
Wing: Bronze mallard 
Cheeks: Sunburst turkey biots  

THE TOP DROPPER 
GRIZZLE BIBIO

Hook: size 12-10 B175 Kamasan 
Thread: Black twist thread 
Tail: Natural golden pheasant tippets
Rib: Sliver wire 
Dubbing: In three parts black/red/black blend dubbing 
Body Hackle: Black and grizzle wound down the body together.
Shoulder Hackle: Jungle cock back feather

I have dozens of good trust worthy lake flies and theses are just three of the one for the early part of the season, I do like to fish these on a fast or slow intermediate line and I strip them back fast which I find is good for attracting follows from hungry trout at this time of the year. It is important though to dabble the fly's on the surface of the lake just before you lift off to recast, this is often the moment when the chasing trout will attack the fly. 
These flies will be used through out the season on different occasions as the sliver dabbler is a good fish catcher all year around; the Fiery dabbler is a good early and late season fly in September it has given me some great bags of fish. The top dropper fly I like it to be a bumble or bushy fly for two reasons, one is it makes good noise to attract fish and secondly it is a good structure of a fly to dabble at the end of a retrieve just like the Duck fly bumble in my eariler post, http://peterdriver.blogspot.ie/2014/02/duck-fly-bumble.htmlThese flies are worth giving a swim this February and hopefully you will enjoy these dressing as much as I have and with the same success. 
I hope you enjoy reading this post and if you have any comments or questions just drop me a line below, also if you would like to see whats coming next and what I am tying for the coming season just sign in and follow us. Thanks for reading.


2 comments:

  1. hi peter my name is clive,would u always use flies sizes 10/12 all year or is it early only?as i would norm use size 14/16 maybe thats why I dont catch,i fish lakes in kerry any tips what too use will be heading down west prob first week of march?

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  2. Hi Clive thanks for the comment. I mostly use 12s, 10s, and 8s on the lake for my wets only if I am fishing small smuts, dries, buzzers or midges will I go down in sizes. Now I do know that the southern Lakes fish well on the smaller stuff but I still rarely go smaller than a 12 on lakes in Ireland and especially in the west should be around the 10s mostly. Hope this helps you and if you need anymore info please give me a shout. Tight lines for 2014

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