The Joy of Fishing Stewarts Spiders
Posted: Sat Jun 21, 2014 9:09 pm
Dearest Friends,
In the last couple of outings to the pond, I have rediscovered the sheer joy of fishing and catching fish on Mr. Stewarts scantly clad spiders. I opened my orange wet fly box to try something different for a change and almost covered over by some other bolder patterns were a few spiders in black (my favorite) and blue dun in size 14's and 16's. For some reason, I did not have any brown (or red as Stewart would have called them) patterns at all. I will have to work on that soon. After all, they are a terribly difficult and time consuming pattern to tie (just kidding).
I knotted on a size 14 blue dun and flicked it out onto the water and it was immediately picked off by a 7" bluegill which made some decent power runs before coming to hand. The fun did not stop there. By the end of the evening 6 more were slid onto the grass and quickly admired and released. This was wet fly fishing at it's finest and the spiders were gobbled up in big, splashy rises. Black was also tried at the end of my evenings fishing but they did not envoke the barn burner rises that the blue dun did. I think this was due to the mood the fish were in and the lessening daylight (the gloaming). The blue dun pattern seemed to stick out just a bit more than the black although this is usually not the case. For me, just about any black colored pattern does really well until it's just to dark to see anymore.
Yes, I have been fishing more and tying less these past weeks but I think I will make it a point to load my wet fly box soon with some of the most famous spiders of all time!
What has been your favorite "go to" pattern lately?
I wish I could fish with all of you at some point in my career.....I have fished with some but not all that I want to!
Pal Doug
In the last couple of outings to the pond, I have rediscovered the sheer joy of fishing and catching fish on Mr. Stewarts scantly clad spiders. I opened my orange wet fly box to try something different for a change and almost covered over by some other bolder patterns were a few spiders in black (my favorite) and blue dun in size 14's and 16's. For some reason, I did not have any brown (or red as Stewart would have called them) patterns at all. I will have to work on that soon. After all, they are a terribly difficult and time consuming pattern to tie (just kidding).
I knotted on a size 14 blue dun and flicked it out onto the water and it was immediately picked off by a 7" bluegill which made some decent power runs before coming to hand. The fun did not stop there. By the end of the evening 6 more were slid onto the grass and quickly admired and released. This was wet fly fishing at it's finest and the spiders were gobbled up in big, splashy rises. Black was also tried at the end of my evenings fishing but they did not envoke the barn burner rises that the blue dun did. I think this was due to the mood the fish were in and the lessening daylight (the gloaming). The blue dun pattern seemed to stick out just a bit more than the black although this is usually not the case. For me, just about any black colored pattern does really well until it's just to dark to see anymore.
Yes, I have been fishing more and tying less these past weeks but I think I will make it a point to load my wet fly box soon with some of the most famous spiders of all time!
What has been your favorite "go to" pattern lately?
I wish I could fish with all of you at some point in my career.....I have fished with some but not all that I want to!
Pal Doug