Inyo Register

Nymphing continues to be the most productive

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(Sierra Bright Dot fly fishing report for Dec. 15.)

The mountains are in need of snow. There may be a storm on the horizon. Time will tell. In the meantime access to waters in Long Valley that were snowed in last year are vehicle accessible this year. Catching trout on dry flies in December is a treat. Mayflies and midges are offering dry fly opportunit­ies. Nymphing continues to be the most productive method of catching trout in Eastern Sierra waters. Persistenc­e is the key to success for winter fly fishing. Just keep putting the fly in the water and eventually the trout will take it.

Lower Owens River Wild Trout Section Flows continue to be too high to safely wade the river. If the mountains continue to be dry there is a good chance the flows will drop below 300 CFS first of the year. Looking forward to fly fishing the lower Owens River this winter.

Hot Creek Interpreti­ve Site

Easy access to the creek makes this the choice of a lot of fly fishers. Nymphing with 18 bead head flash back pheasant tail nymphs, hot spot pheasant tail nymphs, Frenchie’s and olive quilldigon­s are the imitations to use for imitating the mayfly nymphs in the creek. Size 18 or 20 tiger midges, zebra midges and brassies are good midge nymph imitations. This is a water that pays off for fly fishers who are persistent with their casts. The more casts you put in the water the more trout you will hook up.

Hot Creek Canyon Section With the steeper gradient the trout feed more reactionar­y than selective. This makes the canyon a slightly easier to fish water than the interpreti­ve site. Nymphing requires fly fishers to cover the water thoroughly with lots of casts to guarantee their flies float in front of the trout. More casts produce more trout. Midge nymphs like tiger midges, zebra midges and brassies in size 18 or 20 are productive patterns. Mayfly nymphs like bead head flash back pheasant tail nymphs, hot spot pheasant tail nymphs, Frenchie’s and olive quilldigon­s are the productive mayfly imitations. Other flies worth fishing are scuds, egg patterns and worms.

Upper Owens River Above Benton Crossing

Bridge

Vehicle access is wide open right now with no snow on the ground. Trophy trout are in the water, but not in any quantity. Working the outside bends of deep holes with gold ribbed hare’s ears, stoner nymphs, green/gold Prince nymphs, egg patterns and squirmy wormies with lots of casts working the flies on the substrate is what is going to produce trophy trout for the persistent fly fisher. With the trout spread throughout the river fly fishers need to cover lots of deep pools, deep runs and cut banks to find trophy trout willing to take their fly patterns. A mid-day hatch has trout up to 12 inches coming to the surface to feed.

Bishop Creek Canal, behind the Old Ford

Dealer

A mid-day hatch of blue wing olive mayflies has a few trout coming to the surface to feed on the emerging mayflies. Blue wing olive parachutes, Adams parachutes and olive sparkle duns in size 20 and 22 are fooling the surface feeding trout. Nymphing continues to be the most productive method of fooling the wild brown trout. Use size 20 and 22 bead head flash back pheasant tail nymphs, olive quilldigon­s, hot spot pheasant tail nymphs, Frenchie’s tiger midges and zebra midges. Best fishing has been between 10:00 A.M. and 2:00 P.M.

(Fred Rowe owns Sierra Bright Dot Fly Fishing Specialty. He teaches fly fishing and fly tying, is one of the original fly fishing guides in the Eastern Sierra. When he’s not out fishing the waters of the Eastern Sierra from Bishop to Bridgeport, he is an avid hunter who loves to hunt birds, especially waterfowl. Fred can be reached at (760) 920-8325 or at roweboat5@verizon.net. His webpage is at sierrabrig­htdot.com)

 ?? ?? Working nymphs on the outside bends of deep holes is how you get hooked up with trophy trout on the upper Owens River.
Working nymphs on the outside bends of deep holes is how you get hooked up with trophy trout on the upper Owens River.
 ?? Photos by Fred Rowe ?? Landing brown trout on Griffith’s gnats dry flies on a Tenkara Tanuki rod in December on Pine Creek is a real treat.
Photos by Fred Rowe Landing brown trout on Griffith’s gnats dry flies on a Tenkara Tanuki rod in December on Pine Creek is a real treat.

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