Today, I drove to a stream that I found cicadas on a few days earlier. I figured I would return now that the cicadas have had a little time to be out and about and maybe the trout have been seeing them. I tied up a single weird looking cicada fly that I invented earlier today and headed off to the creek. Even though the fly was only "so-so," I figured that the fish would eat it if they were keyed in on it. Well, I got to the stream and fished through light rain off and on again for the first few hours. The cicadas were humming so loudly in the trees. They would start a chorus and go wild, and then stop for a bit, and then start. Even though I was surrounded by cicadas, I only saw one, and that was dead one that was floating downs the stream, wings splayed out almost like a spent spinner.
I only cast my crude cicada fly for about 5 casts. The heaviest tippet I had was 4x, and it was twisting it up as if it were a wild growing jungle vine. It was unfishable. What I really needed was small micro swivel or something just a few inches ahead of my foam fly. I ended up fishing a mixture of dry/dropper, bobber fishing, and swimming a bugger around. I caught fish on a variety of nymphs, and the bugger was the real star of the day, but I couldn't get a fish to eat a dry fly. I only saw a few bugs, and I saw at least three different types of mayflies, but a trout wouldn't eat a dry. There were a few splashy rises, so trout were eating some sort of emerger occasionally, but it wasn't enough to make me swing soft hackles.
I ended having pretty good fishing despite the fact that I wasn't catching them on cicada dry flies as I had intended. I probably landed close to fifteen trout, and I caught two "good ones." The one fish was my best wild brown in years. It ate a woolly bugger being stripped through a little riffle, and I am guessing it was about 20", but really, really fat and well fed.
Although I couldn't catch them on cicadas, it was a good day. I will return to this stream in about a week and see if they are ready to eat cicadas then.
I only cast my crude cicada fly for about 5 casts. The heaviest tippet I had was 4x, and it was twisting it up as if it were a wild growing jungle vine. It was unfishable. What I really needed was small micro swivel or something just a few inches ahead of my foam fly. I ended up fishing a mixture of dry/dropper, bobber fishing, and swimming a bugger around. I caught fish on a variety of nymphs, and the bugger was the real star of the day, but I couldn't get a fish to eat a dry fly. I only saw a few bugs, and I saw at least three different types of mayflies, but a trout wouldn't eat a dry. There were a few splashy rises, so trout were eating some sort of emerger occasionally, but it wasn't enough to make me swing soft hackles.
I ended having pretty good fishing despite the fact that I wasn't catching them on cicada dry flies as I had intended. I probably landed close to fifteen trout, and I caught two "good ones." The one fish was my best wild brown in years. It ate a woolly bugger being stripped through a little riffle, and I am guessing it was about 20", but really, really fat and well fed.
Although I couldn't catch them on cicadas, it was a good day. I will return to this stream in about a week and see if they are ready to eat cicadas then.