I like this video. It was short and to the point and you made some very valid observations that I think will benefit people quite a bit. Your delivery and annunciation, etc. was well done and you’re easy to listen to. I am an old timer and fish the San Juan river below Navajo Dam in Northwest New Mexico and I certainly agree with presentation as being the key. I become very stubborn swapping flies because I know they will eat things that come right down into their face, but I also feel that that is a negative and that I should probably switch bugs more often when slow. this was good Food for thought that I can respect. I have a major float trip tomorrow with a group of buddies and I will implement some of what you said for sure because lately the fish have been super picky as to what they eat. Anyway, just wanted to say good job and, I look forward to watching another one of your videos. Take care, Scott.
Dude you are awesome!! I have been fly fishing for 50 years plus!! and you couldn't have explained it better new folks and anyone!!!!!! also I subscribed and thumbs up'ed you!!
Great overview of the midge life cycle. And you are right on when you say that presentation is most important above fly selection, especially on THAT river. Tight lines!
Nice explanation of the midges life cycle . Fished the San Juan for over 30 years haven’t fished it in probably 10 years , how is is fishing now ? Thanks for sharing
Thanks Mike! The San Juan is still in awesome shape. Plenty of fish. We’re due for a spring flush with high flows soon, should offer some even better fishing this year👍🏼
Not like it was 30 years ago that's for damn sure. Too many guides and too many frigging boats. Looks like a fkn Merry-Go-Round at the Texas hole. Frig that place.
@@dragally1 was like that ten years ago that’s one reason I haven’t been back . Apt description of the boats on Texas hole . And around and around we go :-)
Hey Jack! Thanks. I'll be on the Juan this week and really appreciate this info. Looking forward to giving it a try. Stay safe and I'll look for ya on the water.
Thank you so much for the videos, love the channel. I pretty much only fish the San Juan and could really use some advice on understanding how to rig up for different depths of water. Keep up the good content man!
Thanks for watching! The larva/pupa rig is a great rig to fish because you can cover both hatches (larval and pupal stage). Try it an hour or so after you start to see some bugs flying around or hanging out on the surface. That’s when the fish will come off of the bottom and hangout a little higher in the water column looking for larva/pupa. 👍🏼
Nice video - can you do a follow up on size of fly and colors? Maybe talk a little about how/why hot spots are being used today. I feel like i get the most fish on black zebra variations but that's my confident place. I add in some crystal flash shuck. When would I try orange or red hotspots - very confusing - thanks!
Hi Fishing Jack. New subscriber - great info!! Super clear and precise. I'm in the west; Northern California. I imagine this info applies out here as well? Thanks!!
Hi Pat! Thank you for watching. Yes, the same principles apply. Matching the hatch is critical not only for the time of year, but also the time of day (as they change form). But putting those flies directly in front of them is the most crucial key on any tailwater. 👍🏼
I fish a tail water that gets very high fishing pressure and I think sometimes they will only take tiny size 24-26 dry flies. This area also sees a lot of catch and release. Do you have any thoughts or tips on this??
Our fishery at the San Juan can be similar. A solid piece of advice I can give you is to try fishing bugs they are not often exposed to. Use a stomach pump to see which bugs they are eating most often, then think outside of the box and use something of similar profile, but maybe a different color. With picky fish, not only are you trying to match the hatch, but you’re also competing against thousands of other bugs that look exactly the same. Swap between sizes and colors one at a time. It’s a tedious process of elimination, but you’ll have knowledge about your river that many people never will.
Should start getting warm real soon, great time to get out there! I wear the Costa Reefton 580g. You might be able to see my tan line, they work well 😂
very good presentation. You may want to get familiar with Black flys. Some friends and I wrote a book (but cost to much to publish) on the entomology of the San Juan River and found a huge amount of Black Fly Larva, Simulidae. They are not in the Chironomoidea, midge, family. The Larva is commonly misidentified as midges. Great video, had fun watching.
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it. I may have some interest in your book. Do you have copies available? Would love to hear some of your findings! Always looking to learn more about this river
@@fishingjack BTW, do you use any lead shot? it looks like you let the flies drop naturally. I will be fishing in the San Juan next week, we may want to meet at Texas Hole Parking lot
@@davidbaker4838 Hey David, yes I do guide on the San Juan. I often just use a tippet ring to get my flies down to depth in the slow water. Otherwise I do use split shot. My website and phone number are in the description
This is by far the best commentary on midge fishing -- thank you for sharing.
Appreciate that!
I like this video. It was short and to the point and you made some very valid observations that I think will benefit people quite a bit. Your delivery and annunciation, etc. was well done and you’re easy to listen to. I am an old timer and fish the San Juan river below Navajo Dam in Northwest New Mexico and I certainly agree with presentation as being the key. I become very stubborn swapping flies because I know they will eat things that come right down into their face, but I also feel that that is a negative and that I should probably switch bugs more often when slow. this was good Food for thought that I can respect. I have a major float trip tomorrow with a group of buddies and I will implement some of what you said for sure because lately the fish have been super picky as to what they eat. Anyway, just wanted to say good job and, I look forward to watching another one of your videos. Take care, Scott.
been fishing for a long time, fly fishing for only a few years and always just kinda messed around and found out if it worked lol great video.
Great scientific facts and explanation. Learned/Retained more in short video than reading books!
Glad this helped, thanks for watching!
Dude you are awesome!! I have been fly fishing for 50 years plus!! and you couldn't have explained it better new folks and anyone!!!!!! also I subscribed and thumbs up'ed you!!
Glad this helped! Thanks for subbing. More to come 👍🏼
Great overview of the midge life cycle. And you are right on when you say that presentation is most important above fly selection, especially on THAT river. Tight lines!
Absolutely! Thanks for checking it out!
Finally a good video on this topic. Thanks you.
Fantastic straight to the point. Very educational. I bet seeing all those nymphs and wader flies all the time helps you to become a better tier.
Glad you liked it, and yes it sure does! My photo gallery is filled with pictures of them.
Good stuff, brother!
Great video. Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
Glad it was helpful!
Fishing jack never misses 🎯
Thanks Jordan!
Nice explanation of the midges life cycle . Fished the San Juan for over 30 years haven’t fished it in probably 10 years , how is is fishing now ? Thanks for sharing
Thanks Mike! The San Juan is still in awesome shape. Plenty of fish. We’re due for a spring flush with high flows soon, should offer some even better fishing this year👍🏼
@@fishingjack good to hear . Watch out for Andy Kim he will yell at you “ you to slow “ :-)
Not like it was 30 years ago that's for damn sure. Too many guides and too many frigging boats. Looks like a fkn Merry-Go-Round at the Texas hole. Frig that place.
@@dragally1 was like that ten years ago that’s one reason I haven’t been back . Apt description of the boats on Texas hole . And around and around we go :-)
Great cycle explanation. Thank you.
Hey Jack! Thanks. I'll be on the Juan this week and really appreciate this info. Looking forward to giving it a try. Stay safe and I'll look for ya on the water.
Thank you so much for the videos, love the channel. I pretty much only fish the San Juan and could really use some advice on understanding how to rig up for different depths of water. Keep up the good content man!
Great educational video. Now I better understand the life cycle of the midge. Thanks!
1
Thanks, Shane! Glad it helped
You did a great job in this video.
Excellent presentation and explanations.
Thank you! Hope this helps
Great video!
This was informative and excellent
Thank you, Tom!
Very good informative video. Thank you!
Thanks for watching, Kevin!
Great information!
Very detailed explanation, thank you! 👍🏾
Thanks Jurgen!
Great video!
Question:
I was given a pre-rigged midge larva and pupa in tandem to try. I’m fairly new to ff. When would this setup be used?
Thanks for watching! The larva/pupa rig is a great rig to fish because you can cover both hatches (larval and pupal stage). Try it an hour or so after you start to see some bugs flying around or hanging out on the surface. That’s when the fish will come off of the bottom and hangout a little higher in the water column looking for larva/pupa. 👍🏼
Great info, well done!
Thank you, Daryl!
Great tutorial
Thank you!
Great content, thank you!
New subscriber here. GREAT video for a quick lesson on hatches for us new guys out here trying to get it done. 👏🏼
Thank you, Bj! Plenty more to come very soon, appreciate you checking it out
@@fishingjack Looking forward to it!
Thank you for the great info
Thanks for checking it out!
Super tutorial thanks
Could you do a video on just bugs and the flies to associate them with please ? Possibly months to use them?
Great idea, will add that to my list of upcoming ones 👍🏼
excellent, thank you
Nice video - can you do a follow up on size of fly and colors? Maybe talk a little about how/why hot spots are being used today. I feel like i get the most fish on black zebra variations but that's my confident place. I add in some crystal flash shuck. When would I try orange or red hotspots - very confusing - thanks!
Thank you for the ideas… I will absolutely address these!
Great video.
Thanks for checking it out!
Thank u, that was helpful
Great video
Thanks!
Good piece.
Thank you, Rick!
Where you get that box
It’s the fishpond river mag. Super sturdy!
Hi Fishing Jack. New subscriber - great info!! Super clear and precise.
I'm in the west; Northern California. I imagine this info applies out here as well?
Thanks!!
Hi Pat! Thank you for watching. Yes, the same principles apply. Matching the hatch is critical not only for the time of year, but also the time of day (as they change form). But putting those flies directly in front of them is the most crucial key on any tailwater. 👍🏼
Which Fishpond fly box model is in the thumbnail?
I believe it’s called the Fishpond/ Tacky Rivermag.
@@fishingjack awesome thanks for the fast response.
Good work. Thank you.
Thank you, Clark!
I fish a tail water that gets very high fishing pressure and I think sometimes they will only take tiny size 24-26 dry flies. This area also sees a lot of catch and release.
Do you have any thoughts or tips on this??
Our fishery at the San Juan can be similar. A solid piece of advice I can give you is to try fishing bugs they are not often exposed to. Use a stomach pump to see which bugs they are eating most often, then think outside of the box and use something of similar profile, but maybe a different color. With picky fish, not only are you trying to match the hatch, but you’re also competing against thousands of other bugs that look exactly the same. Swap between sizes and colors one at a time. It’s a tedious process of elimination, but you’ll have knowledge about your river that many people never will.
Excellent ideas.
Amazing channel really easy to follow thanks for sharing big like from me bud tight line's🤝
Nice job
Thank you, Glenn!
Thanks you 👏
👍🏼
Nice video!
Thanks, Jason!
Good stuff bro. I'm slacking! Haven't been up in like two months. Off topic...what kind of sunglasses are those? I need some better goggles!
Should start getting warm real soon, great time to get out there!
I wear the Costa Reefton 580g. You might be able to see my tan line, they work well 😂
I like this
3:28 Looks like you got a free fly out of this guy. I'm sure he appreciated the abstraction.
He sure did! Good catch
Very helpful, thanks. Minor critique, mount the camera to avoid shaking. Otherwise, very good video.
Thanks for watching, glad you liked it. Check my newer videos out. I have since purchased a tripod
Those are 3 different boxes it looks like one big box?
Haha, yes 3 different ones. Fishpond mag box, Lost Creek, and Anglers Accessories
very good presentation. You may want to get familiar with Black flys. Some friends and I wrote a book (but cost to much to publish) on the entomology of the San Juan River and found a huge amount of Black Fly Larva, Simulidae. They are not in the Chironomoidea, midge, family. The Larva is commonly misidentified as midges. Great video, had fun watching.
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it. I may have some interest in your book. Do you have copies available? Would love to hear some of your findings! Always looking to learn more about this river
@@fishingjack Sure, it is only electronic. I am on vacation in Washington State right no and when I get back I get in touch. Are you a guide?
@@fishingjack BTW, do you use any lead shot? it looks like you let the flies drop naturally. I will be fishing in the San Juan next week, we may want to meet at Texas Hole Parking lot
@@davidbaker4838 Hey David, yes I do guide on the San Juan. I often just use a tippet ring to get my flies down to depth in the slow water. Otherwise I do use split shot. My website and phone number are in the description
Anyone see the two orbs ?
First
Second
Thirteenth