[quote riverdog] Hey Sinergy,
When you says it's fully adjustable what % of the time does that take if you want to hit a handful of different speeds and depths of water about a handful of times each from a single spot.[/quote]
Adjusting fly to different depths takes relatively no time a simple pull of the fly adjusts the top fly to any depth along the leader. If you look at the picture I posted below Fly "B" or the top fly can be pulled up and down the leader. The bottom fly stays stationary 6 to 12 inches from the bottom again fishing two areas of the water column were one subsurface nymph cant.
[quote riverdog] It seldom takes any adjustment with a single fly. 100% of that time is casting and drifting in a couple minute period of time. Then I can walk up and hit a new spot start all over again. In an outing of fishing a small river with variable condition interspersed I can repeat this hundreds of times without the need for any adjustment most of the time. [/quote]
Your statement is true and similar of the Provo bouncer not sure how you rig your setup but in your scenero were you only fish one nymph sub surface Fly B does exactly the same thing pull fly "B" up the leader and you fishing one of the flies right below the surface. Then you have and added advantage of fishing a second fly bouncing on the bottom.
[quote riverdog]The time you lose with the fully adjustable aspect is time not fishing and not catching. My point is do you really thing this rig will be able to make up for that on the typical small stream we have in Utah. [/quote]
Adjusting the fly takes literally seconds
[quote riverdog]Have you compared catch rates? When I do the single fly almost always outfishes this rigging overall whether I'm using it or someone else is using it with me. [/quote]
To many variables catching fish is determined by the skill of the fly fisherman not the rig
[quote riverdog]When my leader comes up short a buy a new one for nymphing and use the shortened one in a different application. I don't understand saving money on leaders as I will catch hundreds of fish before it's shortened much. Probably works out to less than a penny a fish ( much less than cost of flies) and then I can still use it for dries where tippet serves a purpose other than saving money. I just rather fish with a 5X that performs as a 5X than a rig where it's almost as good as as 7X without any other advantage. I guess I splurge a cent per fish to make sure the big ones aren't always the ones to get away by eliminating the weakest link in the system. [/quote]
Just curious on how you fish with out tippet
[quote riverdog]I know it's a well known system written up in magazines but do you see it perform better here in Utah than simpler systems that are more efficient in keeping the fly in the water. I just don't think I've ever seen it perform better in head to head comparisons on our smaller streams with the exception of schooling whitefish.[/quote]
Actually yes I do see it perform better here in Utah, regardless of the size of the stream Most trout feed subsurface this occurs in the lower third of the water column. Bouncer nymphing style keeps flies suspended close to the bottom, at nose level to the trout, much longer than regular nymphing.
So your saying your unweighted or weighted nymph gets down and stays down in the water column longer the a bottom bouncing rig .? Confused here...
[quote riverdog] On brushy smaller streams limiting your casting techniques like that and most trout will never even see your fly. [/quote]
Water hauling a nymph rig or any rig up stream is a proven technique practiced by many a pro and guide. The water haul eliminates 1. The need to back cast so no worries about the brush. 2. Reduces false casting thus spooking fish 3. If done correctly can be done from the shore no need to wade in the water emphasizing #2
Fishing 2 flies increases the visibility of the flies 100% over fishing 1 fly [cool]
[quote riverdog]Maybe we should do a youtube video comparing the 2 methods on various size rivers.[/quote]
Im Game
Not arguing fishing one nymph cant be successful you tie one on and your off fishing sometimes the simplest ways are the best ways but there are a number of benefits fishing bottom bouncing or tandem setups. Again to "each his own".
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