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Aaron,
Yes it was right as the tide was going out. It was a tough wade since it was muddy and it was a higher than usual low tide. Also it was obviously pretty dark, definitely impossible without a strong headlamp. We used a Slow jerky retrieve with pauses on the clousers. Danny had to go out of town after we got back but im considering hitting it in the early morning again with my girlfriend. Im not sure yet though, getting up at 3am to do that this morning took it out of me.
On Fri, Feb 15, 2013 at 10:37 AM, Aaron O <aa...@jorgeinc.com> wrote:
Hey Sam and Dan,Great looking fish. Fishing at 4AM was in the middle of the outgoing tide, is that correct? What kind of retrieve were you using on the clousers? I was thinking about going there tomorrow afternoon but now you have me thinking about the morning instead. If you guys feel like going out again tomorrow morning, let me know.Aaron (we met at the beer tie) O
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the lights were still on and there was a decent amount of ambient light. but were you wading that night? I could see above the water fine but I couldn't see into the water without my headlamp and didn't want to wade right into a submerged log or one of those lovely 4mr shopping carts
On Fri, Feb 15, 2013 at 11:06 AM, Matthew Longley <matthew...@gmail.com> wrote:
Good to know you had such good luck on a chartreuse/white clouser--when I was there at night I kept to dark patterns, but will reconsider that next time.Do they shut off the perimeter lights that late? I fished from 8:30 to 10:30, and other than when tying on, I didn't need a torch or headlamp once, there was so much ambient light.
On Friday, February 15, 2013 10:50:15 AM UTC-5, Sam Hauser wrote:
Aaron,
Yes it was right as the tide was going out. It was a tough wade since it was muddy and it was a higher than usual low tide. Also it was obviously pretty dark, definitely impossible without a strong headlamp. We used a Slow jerky retrieve with pauses on the clousers. Danny had to go out of town after we got back but im considering hitting it in the early morning again with my girlfriend. Im not sure yet though, getting up at 3am to do that this morning took it out of me.
On Fri, Feb 15, 2013 at 10:37 AM, Aaron O <aa...@jorgeinc.com> wrote:
Hey Sam and Dan,Great looking fish. Fishing at 4AM was in the middle of the outgoing tide, is that correct? What kind of retrieve were you using on the clousers? I was thinking about going there tomorrow afternoon but now you have me thinking about the morning instead. If you guys feel like going out again tomorrow morning, let me know.Aaron (we met at the beer tie) O
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Good point Jeff. It actually makes sense when you think that the background from the fish's perspective is the sky, which holds a whole lot more light than the water. So black makes a really defined silhouette. That was my rationale for throwing dark streamers when I was out there, but not sure how deep in the water column that holds true.
On Fri, Feb 15, 2013 at 12:35 PM, Jeffrey Silvan <jeffre...@gmail.com> wrote:
One thing to keep in mind when fishing topwater at night is black tends to be the most visible color (to the fish). It seems counter intuitive, but it works.
On Fri, Feb 15, 2013 at 12:25 PM, Matthew Longley <matthew...@gmail.com> wrote:
Would be interested in what others think, but with nymphs its a lot harder to cover water at night, and somewhere open like 4MR you'll need to cover a lot of water as there aren't many obvious holding areas.
I know that in salt, poppers and gurglers are go-to flies at night, especially for stripers in the surf. Figures it would translate. The key is that you're increasing the exposure of the fly to fish through sound and moving water.
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On Friday, February 15, 2013 12:13:09 PM UTC-5, Aaron O wrote:Poppers and gurglers at night? is that common? I haven't done much fishing at night but I guessed that most of the fishing was streamers. What about nymphs?
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