Boards.ie uses cookies. By continuing to browse this site you are agreeing to our use of cookies. Click here to find out more x
Post Reply  
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
07-08-2012, 22:24   #1
bayliner
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: athlone
Posts: 547
best flies this time of year on wild trout lake

thinking of hitting the local lake with the fly rod but no idea what flies to use, daddy's ? grasshopper? muddlers? the odd mayfly is still popping up on lough ree i noticed today, but i know there not feeding on them itchin to throw a fly might get up 2moro or friday....

was trolling today with my daughter,plenty of fish
bayliner is offline  
Advertisement
07-08-2012, 23:44   #2
viper123
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 222
Quote:
Originally Posted by bayliner View Post
thinking of hitting the local lake with the fly rod but no idea what flies to use, daddy's ? grasshopper? muddlers? the odd mayfly is still popping up on lough ree i noticed today, but i know there not feeding on them itchin to throw a fly might get up 2moro or friday....

was trolling today with my daughter,plenty of fish
For me this time of the year is all about evening hatches of buzzers, it's different for different lakes though and I've never fished Lough Ree before..
viper123 is offline  
Thanks from:
08-08-2012, 00:15   #3
bayliner
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: athlone
Posts: 547
just been told daddys or grasshopper may work .... could ya fish a buzzer or 2 under a daddy? not an expert as you no doubt have realised by now
bayliner is offline  
08-08-2012, 11:33   #4
viper123
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 222
Quote:
Originally Posted by bayliner View Post
just been told daddys or grasshopper may work .... could ya fish a buzzer or 2 under a daddy? not an expert as you no doubt have realised by now
Dont see why not. The style for the two flies would be different but unless you're targetting rising trout I don't think it'll matter too much. I'd suggest something smaller than a daddy though, maybe a sedge pattern?
viper123 is offline  
Thanks from:
08-08-2012, 17:07   #5
bayliner
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: athlone
Posts: 547
Quote:
Originally Posted by viper123 View Post
Dont see why not. The style for the two flies would be different but unless you're targetting rising trout I don't think it'll matter too much. I'd suggest something smaller than a daddy though, maybe a sedge pattern?
yeah cheers for that, i've got plenty of those too, black or brown? or both?.... i never fish more than 2 flies, i find for me its enough, knots would be the reason behind that theory ha ha
bayliner is offline  
Advertisement
08-08-2012, 18:43   #6
viper123
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 222
Quote:
Originally Posted by bayliner View Post
yeah cheers for that, i've got plenty of those too, black or brown? or both?.... i never fish more than 2 flies, i find for me its enough, knots would be the reason behind that theory ha ha
Nearly always black or green, depends on the predomanent fly colour. The lakes I fish in in the west are always black.
viper123 is offline  
08-08-2012, 20:23   #7
BoarHunter
Registered User
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 1,036
Perch fry imitation should yield some results
BoarHunter is offline  
Thanks from:
Post Reply

Quick Reply
Message:
Remove Text Formatting
Bold
Italic
Underline

Insert Image
Wrap [QUOTE] tags around selected text
 
Decrease Size
Increase Size
Please sign up or log in to join the discussion

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search