Oh man @5:30 I'm screaming at the screen "Right behind that big boulder on the left side pool!!!" Good fishy looking water and the landscape is beautiful. Pretty little trout.
Yes, you're right! Unfortunately, the Japanese tend to take everything they catch to eat, so there aren't many big fish in most places in Japan. Hokkaido is the only place I went to where I saw some fish big enough for a main course.
Thanks for your comment. I have some more fishing videos coming soon! Terima kasih atas komentar Anda. Saya memiliki beberapa video memancing lainnya segera hadir!
Hi, thanks for watching. When I was learning to fly fish, growing up in England, using an indicator didn't seem to be a thing. Also, no tradition of using a dry-dropper rig, so I generally don't use that either. If I'm fishing upstream I just watch the line, preferably the leader where it disappears below the surface but if I can't see that, I watch the end of the fly line. The takes usually have a quite distinctive jerk on the line. Downstream I usually keep the line tight and let it swing round in the current, then you can feel the takes easily.
Oh man @5:30 I'm screaming at the screen "Right behind that big boulder on the left side pool!!!" Good fishy looking water and the landscape is beautiful. Pretty little trout.
Yes, good spot. I got there eventually!
congratulations ! beautiful native japanese salmon ! greetiings from Switzerland
In New Zealand, we call those fish you caught, Hors d'Ouvres.
Yes, you're right!
Unfortunately, the Japanese tend to take everything they catch to eat, so there aren't many big fish in most places in Japan. Hokkaido is the only place I went to where I saw some fish big enough for a main course.
teknik memancing dengan fly fishing di sungai tomoe..... mantap banget .salm mancing dari Indonesia 🤝👌👍🎣🇮🇩
Thanks for your comment. I have some more fishing videos coming soon!
Terima kasih atas komentar Anda. Saya memiliki beberapa video memancing lainnya segera hadir!
How are you detecting strikes on those nymphs without an indicator?
Hi, thanks for watching.
When I was learning to fly fish, growing up in England, using an indicator didn't seem to be a thing. Also, no tradition of using a dry-dropper rig, so I generally don't use that either.
If I'm fishing upstream I just watch the line, preferably the leader where it disappears below the surface but if I can't see that, I watch the end of the fly line. The takes usually have a quite distinctive jerk on the line. Downstream I usually keep the line tight and let it swing round in the current, then you can feel the takes easily.
work on your delicate casting presentation and you will hook more fish in that skinny water.