When mending my fly line, where should that pivot point of the line be? Do you want the mend to pivot where the fly line meets the leader? Close to the indicator? Or some where in the leader? Often when I mend, it will move my indicator or dry fly a bit, I pretend its just putting a bit of action on the fly, but im not sure if its actually ruining my presentation.
Depends on how far you are casting and how much leader is on the water. Ideally, yes you would want to move all your fly line and a bit of your leader without moving the fly. But most of the time, its okay if your fly or indicator moves a little bit (as long as its able to drift naturally for an extended period of time afterwards).
2:13 I’m not sure about that logic. Yes there’s minimal bug activity and the fish will be holding deeper but at least where I’m from I can throw a streamer or a wooly in February and expect to do well. Just saying that fish are extremely opportunistic especially browns bows and Brookie’s
True. Streamers work great in the winter. I would add the same principle applies. Gotta get it into the strike zone (somewhat close to the bottom during the winter). And they are more willing to move for a big chunk of protein (more bang for their buck) vs moving large distances for a little nymph.
🐟 Meet other anglers and level up your fly fishing skills! Join the VFC Online Community ➡ rebrand.ly/VFC-Community
Ton of info in 10 minute vid, love it, will watch it half dozen times, thanks.
Another great video. You can never stress the fundamentals enough and you always add content to keep it fresh. Thanks.
Back to the basics! haha Appreciate it.
That overhead mend view was money!
Haha appreciate it! Drone for the win!
Thanks for the great video!
Appreciate your feedback! More coming your way!
Thanks again. Great Video...tight lines except when mending 😁
haha for sure. Glad you enjoyed it! 😎🤙🏽
Spinning rod & reel float leader fly has worked for me
Love you guys
🤙🏽
Great video! Thanks
Glad you enjoyed it! 😎🤙🏽
When mending my fly line, where should that pivot point of the line be? Do you want the mend to pivot where the fly line meets the leader? Close to the indicator? Or some where in the leader?
Often when I mend, it will move my indicator or dry fly a bit, I pretend its just putting a bit of action on the fly, but im not sure if its actually ruining my presentation.
ideally you dont want your indicator or dry fly to move at all, but sometimes a little bit of movement isn't the end of the world.
Depends on how far you are casting and how much leader is on the water. Ideally, yes you would want to move all your fly line and a bit of your leader without moving the fly. But most of the time, its okay if your fly or indicator moves a little bit (as long as its able to drift naturally for an extended period of time afterwards).
What a nice Sunday morning surprise. Thanks Alex. Definitely A two Coke Zero's vid.
Cheers Team Pepsi.
You mean Diet Coke, right? HA!!!!!
@@SylviaRR Absolutely!! Spell check was off and I might have possibly had a brain fart.😆🤣
Nahhhhh. 100% Coke Zero. Spencer can drink that other stuff during the podcast, but not when we're out on the river. 😂 - Alex
@@SylviaRR Apparently i was hoodwinked!!! Coke Zero was correct. Cheers Sylvia.LOL
@@venturesflyco Sorry Alex I have changed it back to Coke Zero!!! 🤣🤣
Love the vids. Please keep up the great work.
You can get super nerdy and pick out the perfect bug but if you can’t fish it….well getting out is always a good thing
Agreed!
2:13 I’m not sure about that logic. Yes there’s minimal bug activity and the fish will be holding deeper but at least where I’m from I can throw a streamer or a wooly in February and expect to do well. Just saying that fish are extremely opportunistic especially browns bows and Brookie’s
True. Streamers work great in the winter. I would add the same principle applies. Gotta get it into the strike zone (somewhat close to the bottom during the winter). And they are more willing to move for a big chunk of protein (more bang for their buck) vs moving large distances for a little nymph.