Bass fly fishing
- Flyfisher87
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Bass fly fishing
Went fishing for bass with my fly rod today in a local creek. I would say it was a productive day even though I had only one bite. My casting needs improvement dramatically. I not really familiar with what kinda flies to use. I was using a deer hair diver but I was thinking a weedless clouser or deceiver would do just as good if not better. I just worked both banks on the out skirts of the weeds and under trees. Any tips or advice y'all can give me would be very helpful thank you.
Re: Bass fly fishing
Consider a popper or a slider with a balsa or foam body and rubber legs or a frog pattern with rubber legs for motion. For sub-surface you can't beat a wooly bugger in black or olive (weed guard advised). Another idea would be a crayfish pattern.
- Flyfisher87
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Re: Bass fly fishing
Thank you Salt.
Re: Bass fly fishing
What is the creek you are fishing like (i.e., deep, shallow, clear, murky, narrow, etc)?
For the creeks I fish they are normally pretty shallow 4ft and under in depth with most being around 2ft and under and crystal clear. I have a lot of success with Turks Turantuala, Sneaky petes in chartruese and white, small olive, white, black wooly's, near nuff craws (for the deeper sections), and for large bass you want some kind of neutrally buoyant fly that you can let sit in front of their face with out moving it and it still wiggles. That is really the only flies you would ever need for that type of creek (imo), unless of course you are like me and that would be about 200 flies short of what you will take with you. You should also think about using a dry dropper technique as it can work well on a creek, use the popper on top like a popping cork at the coast and then have the bass hit the subsurface fly if they won't hit the top for you.
For the creeks I fish they are normally pretty shallow 4ft and under in depth with most being around 2ft and under and crystal clear. I have a lot of success with Turks Turantuala, Sneaky petes in chartruese and white, small olive, white, black wooly's, near nuff craws (for the deeper sections), and for large bass you want some kind of neutrally buoyant fly that you can let sit in front of their face with out moving it and it still wiggles. That is really the only flies you would ever need for that type of creek (imo), unless of course you are like me and that would be about 200 flies short of what you will take with you. You should also think about using a dry dropper technique as it can work well on a creek, use the popper on top like a popping cork at the coast and then have the bass hit the subsurface fly if they won't hit the top for you.
Re: Bass fly fishing
Sam's One Bug, and Pete's Gurgle Pop Ppopper, along with bendbacks are some of my favorites for LMB (large mouth bass)
Other advise...
Check out Texas FlyFishers for more hints, meeting places, and fishing trips.
Puck
Other advise...
Check out Texas FlyFishers for more hints, meeting places, and fishing trips.
Puck
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Re: Bass fly fishing
A black wooly bugger in no doubt the best bass fly I've used. I just strip it slow and steady and they hammer it. My second favorite is a chart./white clouser minnow. I work that by two quick strips followed by a short pause. And as the others said a popper is good when they are on the surface. Good luck!
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Re: Bass fly fishing
Hi Flyfisher87
What I use 80% of the time is a simple beadhead , size 6-8 hook with a tinsel tail , and 6-8 legs on it. . My first trip to the Llano River I asked the guide , what I should throw? " Any thing with lots of legs." It worked and I have been using them, ever since.
They are small enough , for pan fish, but also attract the attention of bass, and catfish .
Lockjaw_Tx
What I use 80% of the time is a simple beadhead , size 6-8 hook with a tinsel tail , and 6-8 legs on it. . My first trip to the Llano River I asked the guide , what I should throw? " Any thing with lots of legs." It worked and I have been using them, ever since.
They are small enough , for pan fish, but also attract the attention of bass, and catfish .
Lockjaw_Tx
- joebeasley
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Re: Bass fly fishing
I use a popper for bass and bluegills. A black wooly bugger will catch almost anything, even catfish.
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Re: Bass fly fishing
heres a few that ive been hammering fish at ponds and streams with both bluegill and bass...
deer hair chugger/pooper style frog. easy to tie and very effectice, also weedless so you can throw in grass, lilly pads, and even on rocks.
the adams. although its a dry trout fly, tied on a no 10 or 12 dry fly hook, this can be excellent for bluegill fly as well as a bass fly as it has an almost perfect profile of a fly. also simple to tie.
the ep bluegill. not really hard to tie, but slightly time consuming if youre starting out, this is excellent for those bigger bass, especially if the topwater bite has slowed down, you can weight these accordingly to get the fly to the proper depth where the larger bass are sure to lurk.- On the Guad
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Re: Bass fly fishing
Nice looking work.jimithing wrote:heres a few that ive been hammering fish at ponds and streams with both bluegill and bass...deer hair chugger/pooper style frog. easy to tie and very effectice, also weedless so you can throw in grass, lilly pads, and even on rocks. the adams. although its a dry trout fly, tied on a no 10 or 12 dry fly hook, this can be excellent for bluegill fly as well as a bass fly as it has an almost perfect profile of a fly. also simple to tie. the ep bluegill. not really hard to tie, but slightly time consuming if youre starting out, this is excellent for those bigger bass, especially if the topwater bite has slowed down, you can weight these accordingly to get the fly to the proper depth where the larger bass are sure to lurk.