Sylvaneous
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 11, 2006
- Messages
- 1,059
Last emergence, I found significantly more cicadas around Spring creek and the Little J. I was down there every week. This emergence, the weather and stream levels have been a major hinderance. But if you're taking a shot, all things being equal and you're looking for numbers of bugs, my personal experience says more towards the West of the overlaping area of our big limstoners and the current cicada brood.
One thing to rememeber, and I get as fixated or more as anyone does, it doesn't take all that many cicadas to inspire good trout activivy. These big beasties have been plopping into the water for about a month by now. Fish recognize that pattern/thing/fly is a big meal. Think about fishing the water with other terrrestrials. How often do you see a fish rise for a terrestrial? How many beetles do you see floating on the surface? But it is a good pattern. Just because you don't see them crashing into the water or fish up hammering them on the surface doesn't mean its not worth fishing a cicada.
Syl
One thing to rememeber, and I get as fixated or more as anyone does, it doesn't take all that many cicadas to inspire good trout activivy. These big beasties have been plopping into the water for about a month by now. Fish recognize that pattern/thing/fly is a big meal. Think about fishing the water with other terrrestrials. How often do you see a fish rise for a terrestrial? How many beetles do you see floating on the surface? But it is a good pattern. Just because you don't see them crashing into the water or fish up hammering them on the surface doesn't mean its not worth fishing a cicada.
Syl