Yeah I'm gonna have to up my tippet, I was using 12 lb and it snapped like it was 7X. Thanks for the tip. This fish hit at the tailout of a long pool behind a couple of boulders. Do you look for anything specific in the water that you swing? Or is it just trial and error to find those areas where they seem to be more aggresive?IR4J said:Yes its a pretty effective method, using big intruder style flies can certainly pay off when a big aggressive salmon eats. The hardest part is finding appropriate water to swing.... I tend to run a 20lb mono leader as shock leader and always keep 18-24 inchs of line loose ready to pay out when I get hit.
Thanks for the tip. I'm using a 6/7 switch right nowWill said:Last fall I had a few good takes in a smaller trib on black woolly buggers (size 6 if I remember correctly).
But like IR4J said - be ready with some slack and don't underestimate the power of those fish even when they're getting pretty dark. I had a 9'-6" 7-wt with a 14 lb leader (great setup for throwing decently large flies) but realized I was way undergunned on my first fish. Any little obstruction in the river and you're done. I'd recommend an 8-wt at the very least.
That's awesome! Sounds like pretty low/clear water then?fenwickfisher said:Havent landed any yet this year but have had several takes on blue and black intruders....yesterday morning i tried swinging with no luck but hooked a monster on a pheasant tail nymph....watched it swim from 10ft away to smash my fly
depends on how savvy you are with your fly and reel, I'm using 8wt 9'6" rod and still struggle on the initial run...beaded woolies are the only fly i use for salmon. black or olive. so far I've caught 7 this week only, non landed....include burnt finger just because i'm too stubborn to even wear gloves...JCRG said:Thanks for the tip. I'm using a 6/7 switch right now