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Being able to recognizesings of feeding is vital. The secret is to scan the surface prior to casting. The trout give themselves away in many ways, the most obvious being the rise,or surface disturbance. This can vary from a hige water upheaval to subtle sips. An understanding of the trout's diet and the way food is ingested also important, as is the ability to spot and respond quickly to the trout's rise after the presentation. That phase of a cast when the lines traightens and the fly descends to the water be ready to respond to the rise, which is followed by the trout inspecting the fly and either accepting ot rejecting it.
If your dry fly or emerger has been refused, try a smaller version or reduce tippet diameter. Flies trapped in the surface film tend to work better than floating types.Stay alert to the rises or trout position. <
If the trout is ultracautious, it will go through the inspection procedure of he simple and compound rise, drifting very far to the end up facing downstream before accepting your offering.
When the trout is uncertain about the food form, it will go through the routine of the simple rise but drift back with the current, only taking the fly when it is sure of its validity. Make sure your fly does not drag.
The trout trawls through the surface feeding on spinners, emergers, or casualties of the hatch. This form of rise normally occers during the soft light of morning and evening and in dull, cloudy weather. Use a fly that sits low in the surface film, such as a suspender, Parachute, or no-hackle style.
Indicated by rings widening across the surface, the shape of the rise can be the key to insect stage and type a kidney-shaped whorl indicates emergers or spinners the nose pushing through the surface is a sign of hatched adults.
One of the hardest rises to read. This occers when trout takes nymphs subsurface. Watch for a lump in the water, a flattening of a wave, or little waves amid a big one.
Grayling are an "alternative" game fish, coming into seaso, and are best fished for, in the summer and during warm winter days. Although mid-to late summer is a favored time in many parts of Europe. Both eagerly take the dry fly, but sunk nymph offer the greater opportunity for a fine catch.Grayling known as the lady of the stream are silvery washed with pale purple and sprinkled with tiny black spots.The jaw suggests it feeds below rather than the surface. For tips on fishing - North Country(Aussie) "spider" patterns are used to great effect. Both species respond to dead-driftef gold bead head nymphs. They will take dry flies with a little color, such as red or so on.
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