Pete: Thanks for the tips.. BTW, how do you palmer Badger?? It is hair right??? 
Thanks, Chuck

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Peter Gramp 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, May 18, 2007 7:26 PM
  Subject: Re: [VFB] Bluegills and water color


  I don't know if this has anything to do with their biting or not, but what 
few panfish I have caught lately- on still or clear water - were on one of two 
fly patterns:  

  First:  A Rubber- foam "spider" (thanks to Rick Zeiger for that pattern!) 
that's minimally modified -- the second set (of 3 per side) of legs being a 
generic krystal- flash substitute while the front and back are red rubber 
legs... fished on or in the surface film with a 'tripple twitch and pause' 
retrieve. 

  Second:  A mini (size 12 or 14) chartreuse-bodied wooly bugger with a 
fire-orange marabou tail, peacock neck feather as a collar,  and golden badger 
palmered hackle wound tip-at-tail to stem-at-hook-eye... fished in a vertical 
jig- like retrieve.  

  For what it's worth, try adding snippits of mini rubber hackle (I think one 
brand calls them "centipede legs") to your body dubbing to make a zillion 
leg-like protrusions.  Really, anything that will add motion seems to get their 
attention.  Clear water, in my experience, tends to be slow- flowing or still- 
water, so the motion factor tends to need all the help I can give it... I'm 
still learning, don't get me wrong, but what I have observed so far is that 
motion, at least for panfish, is one of - if not THE - biggest factors for 
getting attention from the fish.  Soft hackle never was my thing, per se, but 
lately I can really see and appreciate the simple effectiveness in it.  Rubber 
hackle/ rubber legs are a panfish's best friend, or so I've seen.  Anyhow - 
motion works wonders, in my opinion. 

  Best of luck on the water, and please let me know what you discover,
  Pete

Reply via email to