rich_ace_G
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 26, 2012
- Messages
- 2,707
The set up. 7.5ft leader. the indicator is in about 3ft . 24" tippet. pegged bead 2 inch above the hook. How is this different from Float fishing with beads?
I get that Nado lol. But the fact that it's more convenient for me to bushwack with a fly gear than a centerpin gear is why I chose too. But someone told me I was lining for fish. This was the first time I did it on the fly and got a steely on the corner of it's lip and the bead slid all the way to my hook. I can't tell what's happening underwater but yeah. I don't really know if the fish was flossed but not my intention...i lost 3 soft hackle flies and ran out of dry flies so I switched to beads.NADO said:Its different because you are doing the exact same thing you would be doing with a float rod but making it unnecessarily harder for yourself lol
What Shmog said, and I find that with a fly setup, there's less weight on the line, so it'll take some more time to reach bottom. Considering switching to a glass beads for fly outfits.Shmogley said:its the same except on a fly rod i dont have to reel in every cast
just a few strips and pitch it upstream.
much less downtime..
dat mending tho
tried glass beads...they are pretty good but I think you will need less split shots or nothing at all. they're quite heavy. but they do work pretty well.flandogg said:I feel a cp vs fly war coming lol.
What Shmog said, and I find that with a fly setup, there's less weight on the line, so it'll take some more time to reach bottom. Considering switching to a glass beads for fly outfits.
I dont know much about float fishing, but this is a great point about indicator fly fishing ... In many nymphing setups, Its exactly like drift fishing/bottom bouncing/bobber doggingtrouttamer said:usually when flyfishing the weight added above bead will tick bottom and the bead will tumble more, when floatfishing the last weight is suspended and the bead will ride just above bottom