Yeah, I mean I think it's been around a little while, I definitely didn't come up with it. Ive seen people do it a few times and was just like you, Wow! That's amazingly simple yet brilliant. So Anyway, I had to show you all. Glad you enjoyed the video.
I’m glad to have been able to bring it by your view. I’ve seen a few people doing this, but surprisingly not many for sure. Let me know how it works for you
Brings to mind the elusive cruisers I used to see in alpine lakes. Pretty sure they were taking midges just under the surface. All I know I was ill equipped that day. I'm usually down in the bottoms!
Yes, It seems like this happens to me a lot also. I have some dry flies, and some wet flies, very rarely do I have flies that will sit just under the surface. Hopefully this pattern solves the issue with you and me.
Thanks! and yes, I would think some false strikes also, However I wouldn't fish it when fish are coming all the way up to the rise, just when I notice many swipes just below the surface where they aren't breaking water. This is perfect for that scenario. But like anything, there will be some random differences in conditions. Ive had many trout strike indicators while nymph fishing, even when I dont see any coming up to the surface prior.
I would need to see how this fly rides when actually tie onto tippet. I’m not sure that it would actually ride any lower. I think the post would just tip to the side.
It's possible, give it a try and let me know how it works for you. Its hard to tell I guess when you tie it onto your line and its casted out far. So if you have a way of checking, maybe casting out near to a friend to check how it rides, then please tell me your findings.
Yes, this technique is awesome. I hope more people incorporate parasol's into their flies so we can get some awesome patterns. Im glad you enjoyed the video, I hope I did the technique justice.
Cool technique. I’m definitely robbing that for my box in various patterns! Folks are gonna like this one. Thanks 🙏🏻
Oh yeah, try it out, let me know how it works for you
@@McFlyAngler There’s a few fish left in the streams, perhaps I can try it out sooner than later. 🪰
Genius. One of those times where you think "how has it taken this long?"
Yeah, I mean I think it's been around a little while, I definitely didn't come up with it. Ive seen people do it a few times and was just like you, Wow! That's amazingly simple yet brilliant. So Anyway, I had to show you all. Glad you enjoyed the video.
Such a cool technique I’ve never seen this before and I’ve watched thousands of videos !
I’m glad to have been able to bring it by your view. I’ve seen a few people doing this, but surprisingly not many for sure. Let me know how it works for you
Absolutely deadly for smutting trout 👌👌👌
Wow sir! Great technique! I'm new so I love your content
Thank you!
Cool concept. Will be trying this.
Let me know how it does for you
Brings to mind the elusive cruisers I used to see in alpine lakes. Pretty sure they were taking midges just under the surface. All I know I was ill equipped that day. I'm usually down in the bottoms!
Yes, It seems like this happens to me a lot also. I have some dry flies, and some wet flies, very rarely do I have flies that will sit just under the surface. Hopefully this pattern solves the issue with you and me.
I'm anxious to try it. Nice video. I would think you'd get some false strikes with fish hitting the part above the fly.
Thanks! and yes, I would think some false strikes also, However I wouldn't fish it when fish are coming all the way up to the rise, just when I notice many swipes just below the surface where they aren't breaking water. This is perfect for that scenario. But like anything, there will be some random differences in conditions. Ive had many trout strike indicators while nymph fishing, even when I dont see any coming up to the surface prior.
I would need to see how this fly rides when actually tie onto tippet. I’m not sure that it would actually ride any lower. I think the post would just tip to the side.
It's possible, give it a try and let me know how it works for you. Its hard to tell I guess when you tie it onto your line and its casted out far. So if you have a way of checking, maybe casting out near to a friend to check how it rides, then please tell me your findings.
Very cool
Yes, this technique is awesome. I hope more people incorporate parasol's into their flies so we can get some awesome patterns. Im glad you enjoyed the video, I hope I did the technique justice.
Very cool
Thanks, I didn't come up with the idea though, but whoever did made something very cool, that's for sure!
@@McFlyAngler you're welcome. Oh i know, yeah they did.