I was fishing two rods but only one fly per rod. We are allowed to do that in 
BC if alone in a boat, but we cannot have more than one fly per rod. I fished a 
floating line with a 23 foot 6 pound fluorocarbon leader on the main rod and 
the sinking line for just part of the trip as stated below. I caught all my 
fish on the floating line rod, but I would have liked to have landed that last 
fish that hit the deep fished chironomid.  I suspect that it would have proved 
to be the best fish of the trip, but that's the way it goes.  My boat is not 
really set up for this kind of deep water fishing. Many rods have been lost as 
they are pulled overboard if not secured or grabbed quickly.

Nev


On 2012-05-18, at 9:44 AM, Anthony Spezio wrote:

> That seems like an odd way to fish a fly.
> Tony
> 
> From: Neville Gosling <[email protected]>
> To: Vfb-Mail <[email protected]> 
> Sent: Friday, May 18, 2012 11:06 AM
> Subject: [VFB] Fishing report
> 
> I have just returned from a week long fishing trip to a lake that I have 
> never fished before. It is a good sized and attractive lake with gin clear 
> water.  It is known as a very "technical" lake. The fishing was not as "hot" 
> as I was hoping and one had to work hard to catch fish. The first night there 
> was cold and I believe there was a frost. The cool weather has delayed 
> hatches of mayflies although there were plenty of chironomid hatching. The 
> lake had turned over following ice out but the fishing was not as good as 
> anticipated.  The best fish for me was a 17 incher  - smallish but it fought 
> hard for its size. We found that mayfly nymphs were more effective than the 
> usual chironomids, however there were few mayflies hatching. The lake is very 
> deep and I tried out a deep line - something I have not tried before. To do 
> this one needs to attach a 2 ounce lead eight to the fly and then lower the 
> fast sinking line over the side of the boat until it reaches bottom (approx 
> 40 feet or so).  One then places a marker on the line and reels in to remove 
> the weight and recast so that the fly ( normally a chironomid) is 18 to 24 
> inches above the bottom, and then place the rod in a rod rest and wait.  I 
> had two hits which were both sudden and violent that pulled the tip of the 
> rod under water. I made contact with the second hit which felt heavy but the 
> hook came out after a few seconds. That one had taken a bloodworm imitation.  
> I suspect that as the weather becomes warmer, the hatches and fishing will 
> improve.  Sometimes this occurs in early May and sometimes later May. I 
> guessed wrong this year!
> 
> Neville Gosling
> Greater Vancouver
> BC  Canada

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