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Monthly Archives: May 2012

My parents came in town for my cousin’s wedding this past weekend and my dad and I were able to find some time to sneak away and do some kayak fishing. I really wanted to put him on some redfish so we headed down to a favorite spot of mine in Lafourche parish and met Blake and his dad, plus a co-worked of his who is also a yak fisher. The weather was very nice with light winds and intermittent sunshine. There was a storm cell off to the south, but it didn’t look to be moving our way. The tide was a bit higher than my liking and was going to be rising throughout the day.

Dad started the day off hot and caught a trout on the first cast before I even launched, but we couldn’t follow that up with any subsequent trout so we set out for the same flats that I had success at on April 1st. They were in good shape, but not the same as last month. The clarity was much improved due to an abundance of submerged grass, Ruppia maritima or widgeongrass is what it’s called. The redfish weren’t as thick either. Alligator gar had moved in and were spawning. I’ve never seen so many 4-7 ft beasts in one place in my life. At times they were in piles, causing all sorts of commotion. Other times there would be six males chasing one female around ponds without a care in the world, except to procreate. The gar orgy was on and however entertaining it was, it made for some very poor redfishing. The redfish weren’t absent, there were some around, but every cast I made to a red with the fly rod would spook him. They were very wary. I hooked a couple buzzing a soft plastic above the grass and landed one, at 25″, landed a black drum too. I probably should have made the switch to conventional tackle earlier, but the weather was so nice, I felt I had to catch one on the fly. The odds were against me though and those were the only two fish I caught. Dad had similar results but did end up catching a 20″ red and a black drum as well. We had our variety, just not in quantity. To add insult to injury, not far away, Blake and his dad were having a great day catching reds and ended up with 5 apiece. I guess a career at being a guide is not in the cards for me. Still, it was a good day, like I said the weather was nice, it was a great day to be out in a kayak, hopefully next time Dad comes down we’ll have better luck.

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A little late for April’s fly tying segment, but I don’t think anyone will mind. Blake did a step by step on the fly that I had success with back in early April. I had no idea what it was called then, but we found out it’s true name and that it was originally tied by Johnny Miller and is available through Umpqua. This is Blake’s version. It is a killer fly for redfish.

Materials:

–          Mustad 34007 Size 2

–          Raccoon Tail

–          Saddle Hackle

–          Gold Mylar Tubing, Small

–          Dumbbell Eyes

Step 1. Start thread and put down a good base from the eye to somewhere near above the barb. I like to put a layer of super glue on the thread wraps for some extra security.

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Step 2. Cut a clump of raccoon fur and tie it in for the tail. Comb out some of the under fur so that there isn’t too much material on the hook shank. Any tailing material would work.

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Step 3. Tie in a saddle hackle by the tip and palmer it in close touching turns up the shank. Try to get the feather to lay back towards the tail by pulling the barbs back before each wrap. Tie down the stem and tidy up the shank. I like to wrap all the materials to a spot right behind where my dumbbell eyes will be tied in.

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Step 4. Bring thread right in front of the hackle and tie in the first section of gold tubing. The tubing I used comes with a synthetic core that needs to be removed before tying it in. I cut sections of tubing about 3/4” long for this fly. The length of the tubing sections depends on the shape that you want to trim them. I like to minimize the amount of waste. Repeat this step 3 more times. (or more, all depends on how long you want your body). Make sure to tie it in using figure eight wraps.

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Step 5. Tie in dumbbell eyes in front of the tubing. Hopefully, there is enough room left over to tie in a week guard if you want one.

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Step 6. Tie in a weed guard if you want one. Whip finish and part off the thread.

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Step 7. Trim the tubing on either side to whatever shape you want then tease out the braid of the tubing. I like to do either an oval or on an angle from front to back.

Before:

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After:

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I like to cover all the exposed thread with a good coating of hard as nails to protect it from teeth. Makes for a more durable fly. Enjoy.

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The sky was on fire yesterday evening as the sun set on the storm clouds surrounding Baton Rouge. I’ve never seen such a variety of color strewn about the sky on a day that was majority gray. It was a pretty awesome sight to see. I tried to capture it as best I could with my Pentax Optio, but a DSLR would have been great to have.

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