Indeed, I believe that is the case with the vast majority of anglers, they have a certain perception of how an artificial fly should appear. Unfortunately this blinds many to how a natural fly actually appears. This also affects artificial fly design and choice by those anglers.Otter wrote:Thats about as simple as it can get , nice photos Philip.
Often in such conversations the idea of a trouts prey image is discussed, Mike may have mentioned it above, an interesting item to discuss in its own right.
Could there be a case to be answered that many anglers / fly tiers have an equivalent fly image based on the types of flys they prefer to use or have been brought up using and so end up with a box where often one size fits all for various families of flies.
Take spiders for example, many have an image that a spider should be skinny silk body, one and a half or two turns of concentric hackle - throw in a little bit of dubbing behind the hackle or use three or four turns of hackle and it looks wrong because of the preconcieved image.
While the one size fits all, works in many instances, is it a calculated thing that has many anglers going this route or is it a case of the preconcieved fly image dictates what an individual will fish with any confidence.
Just a thought !!!
The major point here being that one needs artificial flies that look like natural flies to the fish. Of course one can only make these in accordance with human perceptions, and in a lot of cases this obviously works very well otherwise people would not catch fish on the results. However, too strong an "idealisation" or preconception of various flies tends to result in very poor imitations. Observations are not made carefully, things are not thought out, merely the preconception is propagated.
TL
MC