Through a full season the person catching the most carp on the fly on ANY body of water is the one who knows how to induce takes from passive carp and detect subtle takes from all carp.I have fished allot of aggressive carp this year. I spent a week in Lake MI and have found some fun new water here in CO. I have found that even when I find large populations of aggressive carp when I REALLY start laying the smack-down is when I am generously mixing in techniques that I have learned for passive carp.
When I am talking about mixing in techniques for passive carp I am talking about:
- Dead-dropped the fly onto the feeding zone with no action or letting the fly go dead after one twitch or SLOWLY swimming it into the feeding zone.
- Getting as close as possible in order to present the fly very very closely.
- Using indirect presentations in order to present the fly very very closely.
- Switching from crayfish to nymph, worm or hybrid patterns at the drop of a hat.
- Believing that if the carp twitches a quarter inch towards my fly or pulses it's lips in my flies general direction it ate. PERIOD. And then making a point of setting the hook on a hair trigger (often with a small pause).
Gotta get better at that last bullet point. I think I miss a lot of subtle takes. For me that has been one of the toughest skills to master. I'm always waiting for more confirmation from the fish.
ReplyDeleteDead drop and watching the fish's reaction, and possibly subtley moving the fly/egg in a more correct path has caught my most fish this year. Usually by the nature of my water I am already close, sometimes hard to manage close, to the fish. Good on ya for aggressive fish though!
ReplyDeleteGregg
50 foot casts? I dap my crayfish patterns.
ReplyDeleteI agree with you and Ty, my higher handicap is to detect subtle takes. Sun position, presence/absense of clouds, water colour and wind are factors that prevent take detection and closer presentations ease to detect them. Great post Trevor
ReplyDeleteI've been having more bluegill interfere with my casts than anything. They get to the fly before the carp. This last time I hooked a gill and almost didn't throw it back in the water I was so annoyed.
ReplyDeleteright on!!
ReplyDeleteI have had more success this year in regards to bullet #5 leaving "curls" in my leader to help me detect takes.