Bucho
Member
Hi everybody!
I once took a fly fishing seminar/guided trip with Bernd Ziesche with first cast fly fishing school. Bernd is the single most successfull guy I know when it is about catching large, silvery sea run brown trout on a fly. In a nutshell, he breaks it down to this:
-a very, very fast retrieve
-a lot of lead in the nose of the large "fly", up to 1/16th oz, for jigging action
-a very long, very soft tailwing - spey, marabou, arctic fox, polar fiber, racoon dog...
-the fly must dart by itself in order to straighten the leader
-a tying gimmick that keeps the wing from tailing -e.g. a funnel, glue, an extention...
-natural colors, very sparse flassh
-big trout >20" are fish feeders. When they´re around, the´ll always go for a sand eel. Use a big fly that resembles one!
When I learned this succesful kind of flyfishing, heavy flyes, constant wind, waves, a lot of casts and even more exhausting retrieves - I must admit I found it samewhat hard and thought to myself: why not cast the stupid thing with a spin rod in the first place?
Problem was, I didn`t know where to look for the right hair bait for this kind of fhishing. Nobody`s done it before. After goofing around with clumsy, far too heavy saltwater-style bucktails - that got me a lot of cod in deeper water - I finally gave up. Until I found this site...
A 1/16th marabou spinner gave me a following fish on the fisrt cast and a 22" trout on the second. promising! I then tried a 1/8th boolie version of a Popovic classic, the surf candy or the "baltic" candy as we call the soft-tailed polar-hair version around here.
Again, it succeded on its first try. Today, I went out with my kayak again and used it all day, mainly jigging it while trolling. It gave me 3 more fish in total, including a 24,5" herring-fed whoppper. Please excuse the nose-blood in the picture, I am going to perform a 2 1/2 day curing and cold-smoking ceremony to honour its sacrifice.
Line was 8lbs Nanofil, I don´t think I can go much thinner in the salt. Playing the fish took about 15 min although I nettet it ASAP, I had no controll over it whatsoever. Been shaky for about an hour or so.
I`m about to start fishing a large freshwater lake this year, wonder how the browns will respond there. Anyone doing something similar? would love to exchange some patterns and experience! Heard they were after frogs now that those migrate back into the lakes...




P.S. I need other sickles, I love the Matzuos but got only bronze which rust after just a few hours in the salt!!!
I once took a fly fishing seminar/guided trip with Bernd Ziesche with first cast fly fishing school. Bernd is the single most successfull guy I know when it is about catching large, silvery sea run brown trout on a fly. In a nutshell, he breaks it down to this:
-a very, very fast retrieve
-a lot of lead in the nose of the large "fly", up to 1/16th oz, for jigging action
-a very long, very soft tailwing - spey, marabou, arctic fox, polar fiber, racoon dog...
-the fly must dart by itself in order to straighten the leader
-a tying gimmick that keeps the wing from tailing -e.g. a funnel, glue, an extention...
-natural colors, very sparse flassh
-big trout >20" are fish feeders. When they´re around, the´ll always go for a sand eel. Use a big fly that resembles one!
When I learned this succesful kind of flyfishing, heavy flyes, constant wind, waves, a lot of casts and even more exhausting retrieves - I must admit I found it samewhat hard and thought to myself: why not cast the stupid thing with a spin rod in the first place?
Problem was, I didn`t know where to look for the right hair bait for this kind of fhishing. Nobody`s done it before. After goofing around with clumsy, far too heavy saltwater-style bucktails - that got me a lot of cod in deeper water - I finally gave up. Until I found this site...
A 1/16th marabou spinner gave me a following fish on the fisrt cast and a 22" trout on the second. promising! I then tried a 1/8th boolie version of a Popovic classic, the surf candy or the "baltic" candy as we call the soft-tailed polar-hair version around here.
Again, it succeded on its first try. Today, I went out with my kayak again and used it all day, mainly jigging it while trolling. It gave me 3 more fish in total, including a 24,5" herring-fed whoppper. Please excuse the nose-blood in the picture, I am going to perform a 2 1/2 day curing and cold-smoking ceremony to honour its sacrifice.
Line was 8lbs Nanofil, I don´t think I can go much thinner in the salt. Playing the fish took about 15 min although I nettet it ASAP, I had no controll over it whatsoever. Been shaky for about an hour or so.
I`m about to start fishing a large freshwater lake this year, wonder how the browns will respond there. Anyone doing something similar? would love to exchange some patterns and experience! Heard they were after frogs now that those migrate back into the lakes...




P.S. I need other sickles, I love the Matzuos but got only bronze which rust after just a few hours in the salt!!!