This is PAflyfish.comWhat?? No Rooster Tails, Mepps, or Joe Flies?!?!?
RRT ALSO ADDED:Darn it. I was hoping for flashy rotating metal blades.
Actually I added what Afish said: This is PAFlyfish.com.
😊My Bad!
Sometimes I arrive early and just sit on the bank . The balls of spinners can be seen high over the trees and they slowly make their way down. I wait and wait and they never get on the water and soon it is too dark.
Just think of it as a really heavy streamer. All the reasons I like a great streamer take are the same reasons I also occasionally chuck a rooster tail or blue fox. Sometimes the fish want some flashy meat.RRT ALSO ADDED:
What?? No Rooster Tails, Mepps, or Joe Flies?!?!?
So glad to see mine was not the ony mind that went that direction!
My experience is, unless a sudden change in weather, they do indeed hit the water. But it might be after dark and a lot of people leave too early.
MB's notably stay in the air a long time and hit late. It's very frequent you watch them hovering around for more than an hour, the sulphers are hatching. Then suddenly a boat load of sulpher spinners comes out and gets on the water quick. Then the MB's finally hit.
Wive's tale. I have very dark eyes as well and had excellent night vision until I developed cataracts.I have really bad night vision. Genetics? I have very dark eyes…Have heard that’s bad for night vision. Legit or wives tale?
Wive's tale. I have very dark eyes as well and had excellent night vision until I developed cataracts.
Well, excellent is relative term. I have lousy daytime vision.
Agreed. I have also had it happen with Green Drakes and Brown Drakes. A lot of spinner fall feeding activity happens after dark. I just don't enjoy fishing in the dark. I do always carry a "night fly", especially when Coffin Flies are about.I feel like this happens a lot while the March Brown spinners are overlapping with the beginning of the Sulphur emergence. Mid to late May-ish. All you see is March Brown spinners, everywhere in the air. But none are on the water. You see the occasional Sulphur, but it’s like 1000:1 MB’s to Sulphurs. But, the Sulphurs are emerging, and are what the fish are able to actually eat. When I fish the second half of May on the big limestoners now, if there is any evidence of Sulphur activity, I don’t even try to fish a MB spinner anymore.
Some nights the MB spinners hit the water, right at, or after dark, but many nights they don’t.
I have really bad night vision. Genetics?