
Originally Posted by
HolyGT
Don't misunderstand me, its a nice looking fly and it seems well tied as well.
But do they work, when, where and how?
BUT DO THEY WORK:(Anthony) I was still trying to catch my first spotted grunter on fly. Andrew had just released his 8th or 9th fish when he walked over to me and suggested I try one of his deerhair prawns. A few casts later I was into my first fly caught grunter. My second fish was a specimen of 7lbs.
When, where and how: Andrew achieved success by drifting the fly in the current, much the way you would fish a dry fly. Using the tidal flow to create a natural drift is a key element. Identify the area the grunter are feeding in and cast above it, allowing the fly to drift through the drift zone. The fly must drift naturally, and we very seldom impart any movement to the fly, merely taking in the slack line as it drifts into the feed zone. Any unnatural drag on the fly and they will not look at it. A prawn drifting in the current will usually lie motionless in an attempt to conceal its presence. Wherever you find mud banks with healthy populations of prawn, you are likely to find feeding grunter.
Hope this helps. If not, full article in T.C.F.F. August 2000, issue 76.
Dave
Handle every situation like a dog.- If you cant hump it, piss on it and walk away. --JASPER.
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