trout_stalker wrote:
I, like must ff, know when to use nymph or dry flies, but when it comes to scuds and other crustaceans I'm lost. How do you use/rig these flies? Do you blindly use them only if there are significant weed beds present? Would you use them like nymphs on nutrient rich waters like Fishing Creek, Penns, etc.
You hit on a good point with the weed beds. Scuds and sowbugs are more available and/or get to larger sizes in more fertile waters. More fertile waters typically have higher nutrients available for the grass, thus more grass. Scuds thrive in nutrient rich waters with higher alkalinity. The calcium that creates the alkalinity needs to be there for the scuds to develop their shells. So you got your weeds for food, calcium for exoskeleton growth and rapid growth which makes for happy trout. Scuds are poor swimmers and therefore should be dead drifted much like the average mayfly nymph. Scuds frequently turn orange when they die, thus you will see guys fishing orange hot spot or solid orange scuds. Use enough shot/tung to get them down. Bead midsections work to that end, as does creative use of weight, however those really cool looking scud tung bodies that you think would be so great aren't. They cause the scud to ride upside. Anyone want to buy some tung scud bodies?
Scuds are generally found in more watersheds and in greater abundance than sowbugs. Most of the scud logic applies to sowbugs.
When to use scuds/sowbugs? When they are present, duh. LOL. You know the streams that have them (through written documentation or on stream research). In those streams that have high concentrations of these critters, they will represent a large portion of the average sized fishes diet.
It is also suggested that these protein rich nuggets color up trout beautifully. My small sample size confirms this.
I prefer not to blindly use them. I prefer to fish these to actively feeding fish. This applies to clear, limestone spring creeks. Scuds in tailwaters is generally a different subject imo and can often result more in prospecting than sight fishing to grubbing fish.
Fishing Creek, a lot of tailwaters, limestone springs are all loaded with scuds. I understand that Penns is as well.