Nicely done! I find myself doing something similar over here in Western Montana (hit me up if you end up this way, would love to join you on a fishing adventure!). I haven't used that bubble float bobber, but I have used the weighted bright colored bobbers that has a spring loaded hook at each end. They do work pretty well overall, but I find that their bright colors seem to attract more fish than the flies at times, LOL. I also see where you mention that near the end of your video... I've had A LOT of hits on my bobber in rivers, lakes and ponds when fishing flies this way. I find myself using the Trout Magnet floats more though since I have a bunch of them, adding a couple of tiny weights if I need more casting distance, keeping them close to the float to prevent the fly from sinking. I do find a struggle with smaller flies where you really benefit from a fly setup, which has made me dig mine out of storage (I'd committed to going spinner cast only for a couple of years). Gink is the way to go to keep dry flies floating too! Glad to see you using it as well. Thanks for the quick video. Hope you enjoyed your time up this way.
Gotta have the gink. I'll have to look into some other float options. I thought it was pretty funny that they were hitting the bubble. I love it up your way man, great scenery and few people. Hard to beat that!
Thanks. As a spinner reel fisherman trying to learn fly techniques, I have been out there with all my gear only to be stumped by trout surfacing on naturals all around me wanting nothing to do with worms, spinners, or stickbaits
I kinda glossed through this the other day and Havnt been out in about 13 years but this morning I made some good 18-20 ft casts on my 6’8” spinning setup with a tiny tiny dry fly ! Lol I still got it!!! Got half a dozen nice little brook trout and a chub or two lol
I hate you for that. I go out at least once a week and I can't tell you how many countless videos and lectures I've watched and listened to and how many hundreds of dollars I've spent on lures and bait alone.. Yet I have yet to catch a single freaking fish. I have gone to every area I have learned to look for fish and I try every technique and lure I can and try to match the fry as well and still nothing. I'm seriously so discouraged now. I've had better luck with turtles if anything and I obviously let them go.
@@92GreyBlue just keep going to new areas and keep an open mind and really try to get out of your comfort zone and experiment . Really it’s whatever works for you. I can double haul like 80 foot now but I don’t always catch fish when I go out with my fly rod
Gonna try this to catch saltwater speckled trout! My usual pier has been slow recently but I’ve been seeing big trout come up for little white moths! And that bobber is so easy looking , can’t wait to try it 👍
Thank you for your video. As a boy scout we fished the Beartooth lakes with bobbers and flies. It was a great technique, loads of fun, and kept us in fish for meals the whole while. I always knew it would work on streams too. Thanks for sharing this. I had already bought my tackle to try it. Time to get out onto Rock creek just down from Red Lodge Mt. and go to work.
Cool !!! People don't know that!!! 😊 I love Idaho I've cought thousands of trout there on the fly!!! Used to go out evary year fishing the west from Mass. 22 times! Been flyfishing and tying 56 years now!!! ✌️ Teach a purson !!! TU.
I use a sealed torpedo bobber with eyes on each end. That way you can add a swivel so the line doesn't twist. And a net so you don't touch the fish with your dry hands. 55 years ago.
My father taught me this trick when I was very young. It’s part of the reason I never took up fly fishing. What is the stuff you are putting on the flies?
Grew up in the 70s over there. My Grandparents lived in Missoula and then moved to couerdlane. We used a clear bobber similar to that with a split ring and then a lead line for the fly. the clear bobber was filled with water and the line went through the slide tube similar to yours. I taught my children to fish this way even though we live in Iowa now. two days ago me and my daughter (23) were fishing our local lake ( pond really) and were killing it. think i caught over 10 fish, mostly pan fish but one walleye, in less than an hour. my first cast caught a fish. other people on the shore were like, what????
Beautiful location! I haven't bubble-fished flies (successfully, for trout) since I was a boy. I need to try again this season, on both the Ogden and Weber rivers.
Exactly the video I was looking for. As soon as we come off the lockdown I’ll be in the eastern Sierras with my spinning rig using lures, and now I’ll be putting flies on the same rig. Carrying two rigs when backpacking isn’t convenient. . Thanks.
What kind of line do you have on this? I'm in Ohio, and was fishing a small trib creek which is like less then half the width of what you were fishing and is really really shallow. I was float fishing and trying to use spinners in the only deep spots... the fish weren't interested in my jigs or spinners/spoons at all but the fly fisherman were SLAYING! I need to try this!
Nice, I wondered about that. Once in a great while would like to fly fish but not enough to invest in the tackle and learn the technique. Not to mention where i live there is not a lot of trout streams.
Great video Chris - I know you have told me about this before but I finally got around to watching the video :D Seriously though, that area is freaking gorgeous. Reminds me of when I went to the Missoula, MT last March. I love the west man - I need to get back.
Excellent information!! I've tried it a few times but I was using a stopper knot instead of the adjustabubble. I gotta try it like that! Nice fish. Sub from me!
Oh yeah man, I can see this setup working great on those situations. And being able to fill the bubble up with water for a longer cast is nice in that situation as well.
All I use for 30+ years, but with the smallest clear, sliding bubble available with a Carolina Keeper 3 ft from fly. One knot and 4lb or less test. In lakes, they'll hit the bubble immediately after casts often returning to grab the fly.
Killed it on streams with this method but the deeper swifter parts of the Snake River I have struggled. I think they like to see the fly bouncing up and down on the water for my deep pocket spots I usually bottom fish from. I don't own a fly rod and am not trained in it. Wish I was. Sometimes they are only feeding from the top, and I want to get those suckers.
I tried dry flies on the spinning rod and i ended up catching ten times the trout i used to manage on spinners. I use a cylindrical wooden plug with tapered edges with punctures on both ends as a weight to cast my flies. However, the thin mono leader ends up getting entangled with the main line almost every time i cast. Is there a way to get rid of this issue ? Any suggestions would be really helpful. Thanks for the lovely video. Cheers !
I was watching this video and I thought the only thing that could make this better was to apply it on a Baitrunner. I have a Daiwa Emcast with 6lb mono ima try this with , let my bobber go with the Baitrunner feature … and as soon as I see a strike start reeling and hook it, instead of having to close the bail and potentially lose a fish
Hey there fellow spinning fly fisherman! All kidding aside, great video! I'm a 61 year old disabled man in a wheelchair. I just started tying flies a year ago, but due to the facts that 1) I can't get into the water to fish 2) I cannot manage all that fly line that you have to strip with a typical fly rod as it would just get all tangled with my wheelchair and 3)I have rotator cuff shoulder injuies in both shoulders from pushing a wheelchair for the last 40 years or so that prevents me from being able to load the rod by whipping the line back and forth over my head several times just to cast my flies 4)cost is the most difficult barrier to using traditional fly fishing gear. Ok i see how you can use a clear bobber and a slider type set up to fish with flies in fresh water, but I also love to fish salt water. How would I do that off of a peir? A boat?Would I use the same sliding clear bobber set up? How would I fish salt water situations since more weight is often required due to the waves of the ocean? Would i simply use a sliding clear bobber and a stopper to fish deeper when using wet flies? How about dry flies and getting them out away from the peir? Thank you in advance for your feedback! Tight lines!
I have one of those bobber, but I had no idea you could twist the end, in order to lock it in the line. Las time I used mine, I used a swivel and a bead as a stop for the bobber.
I like the video to give me an idea. Curious, what weight line do you suggest and what was the set up? Light weight rod, light action rod, curious, and thanks again
Do regular floats work? I've also seen a video somewhere where a person used a floated minnow type bait, like a Rapala, and took the hooks off to do basically the same thing by tying a leader to the rear hook eye.
This was amazing! Growing up in southwest Michigan my dad taught me this technique and it’s now a “staple” technique I use now residing in NC fishing bluegills here...I love your scenery! Beautiful! Beautiful catches! Awesome technique tutorial! I am also new to your channel! BABAAM!!
Do you usually use a hair jig under the float? That's how I've always heard it fished. I've never fished a floatn fly for bass but I've read about it a bit. Hope you are feeling better brother!
Trout love to see the fly above the water. Adult females lay their eggs on the water's surface, and trout watch, as they approach. If you learn to fly cast a dry fly with just monofilament, it will allow you to give some action to the fly. You only get about 15' max casting distance, but, you'll do well at the 8' to 12'-range. Let gravity and the breeze carry the dry fly, then make the fly have the smallest movements on the water surface. I've had fish bite a fly several inches above the water, it is quite exciting. My first experience catching trout was a 5.5' spin-set-up, dry fly, probably 8lb monofilament. It gives you tons of control to, roll-cast (spey-ish,) and it is very nice for a bow-cast (short rod). If you use a tippet, you will have more ability to turn-over your loop. All the technical trout fly fishing can be done up close, some of it can be done at a distance. The pocket-water gives the angler some cover from the fish. Getting around using fly line isn't that much of an issue, when you are basically casting about 3' of it and a long leader. Stick to flies that have a tuft of calf-hair for a wing. The calf-hair is very easy for the angler to see, and they float fine in choppy water. Anything with lots of wrapped hackle is a favorite for free-stone streams where flies tend to sink.
do you think a medium spinning rod (shakespeare beta 20-80g) would be good for brown trout? i would fish a small mepps behind a bubble float with a long 5lb leader
I noticed you are using braid. Is you trace fluorocarbon? If not, it seems like at least on a sunny day that would be much more effective in such clear water.
Love watching an outdoorsman "catch and release, even if dropped from 6 ft. and bounced off boulders, not to mention unclear "directions" or names for product 😂 great content...
A good technique. My youngest son has done well like this. You put the bobber on upside down and put just a dab of that Gink on your fingers,then the fly. It will float better that way. Peace
Great info. I'm struggling with casting far on Joe's flies...can you share what your test line was and rod length? I'm using a medium 6'6 with I 🤔 6 or 8lb test
put a bobber on it either what he has in the video or those small trout magnet bobbers, if I'm fishing un weighted flies then ill usually put a small splitshot not to far from the fly itself and that helps with casting and getting the fly down quicker
What are you putting on the fly. I have spent so much $$ on lures, flies, bubbles, bait. I've fished at night, in the day, when it's hot when it's cold I just can't fish. :(
Just a personal preference, I just slip the hook with long nost pliers, rather than handle them. It is much easier on the fish, especially when you drop em on the rocks.
So i guess for fly fishing you do need a good view on your hook and the fishes. I can go fishing for 3 hours on a lake with not the clearest water... if i use a blopper or swimmer the fishing line sinks and drags the fly too close to the blopper. So i moved it a little closer occasionally. But overall, after going like 10 times fishing (yes i am new to it), i only caught a very little one -.- also i noticed my fishing line makes curls and those even attract some fish but not the fly? 🤣🤦🏻♂️🤷🏻♂️ if i had more money i could get more proper stuffs. I think my setup is just not made for it or i do sth totally wrong.
Take that rig and hook a fat summer hopper with that fly. Hook him through the back gently through the exoskeleton where it meets the lower part of the hopper and he should float and kick around for 5+ minutes. Big trout can't resist.
Ha I noticed that too I’d imagine it doesn’t really affect much if any the way it works being completely empty if you fill it half of more with water they’re designed to be fat side up so the wider part is out of the water and easier to see
you dont need to use that fly floating crap on your fly, just squeeze the watr out of the fly and blow on it. been fishing this way for 30 years in southern oregon, works great
Nicely done! I find myself doing something similar over here in Western Montana (hit me up if you end up this way, would love to join you on a fishing adventure!). I haven't used that bubble float bobber, but I have used the weighted bright colored bobbers that has a spring loaded hook at each end. They do work pretty well overall, but I find that their bright colors seem to attract more fish than the flies at times, LOL. I also see where you mention that near the end of your video... I've had A LOT of hits on my bobber in rivers, lakes and ponds when fishing flies this way.
I find myself using the Trout Magnet floats more though since I have a bunch of them, adding a couple of tiny weights if I need more casting distance, keeping them close to the float to prevent the fly from sinking. I do find a struggle with smaller flies where you really benefit from a fly setup, which has made me dig mine out of storage (I'd committed to going spinner cast only for a couple of years). Gink is the way to go to keep dry flies floating too! Glad to see you using it as well.
Thanks for the quick video. Hope you enjoyed your time up this way.
Gotta have the gink. I'll have to look into some other float options. I thought it was pretty funny that they were hitting the bubble.
I love it up your way man, great scenery and few people. Hard to beat that!
@@Outwestwithchris1 Awesome man..what kind of scent are you using at 3:20?
@@Outwestwithchris1 dude just put a bb slipshot and a fly i catch trout all day like that
Simple and effective. Beautiful river ❤
Thanks. As a spinner reel fisherman trying to learn fly techniques, I have been out there with all my gear only to be stumped by trout surfacing on naturals all around me wanting nothing to do with worms, spinners, or stickbaits
I broke my fishing quantity record today using this exact setup. I had a blast.
This is how my dad taught me to fish for rainbow trout in the early 90s.
I never see anyone doing it anymore
Still works pretty good!
I kinda glossed through this the other day and Havnt been out in about 13 years but this morning I made some good 18-20 ft casts on my 6’8” spinning setup with a tiny tiny dry fly ! Lol I still got it!!! Got half a dozen nice little brook trout and a chub or two lol
that's awesome man!
I hate you for that. I go out at least once a week and I can't tell you how many countless videos and lectures I've watched and listened to and how many hundreds of dollars I've spent on lures and bait alone.. Yet I have yet to catch a single freaking fish. I have gone to every area I have learned to look for fish and I try every technique and lure I can and try to match the fry as well and still nothing. I'm seriously so discouraged now. I've had better luck with turtles if anything and I obviously let them go.
I was jk about hating you btw!
@@92GreyBlue just keep going to new areas and keep an open mind and really try to get out of your comfort zone and experiment . Really it’s whatever works for you. I can double haul like 80 foot now but I don’t always catch fish when I go out with my fly rod
Yep. Love and have fished the Joe many times. Nice instructional. Underrated river.
Yeah man, I love that river! Thanks for watching!
Gonna try this to catch saltwater speckled trout! My usual pier has been slow recently but I’ve been seeing big trout come up for little white moths! And that bobber is so easy looking , can’t wait to try it 👍
Thank you for your video. As a boy scout we fished the Beartooth lakes with bobbers and flies. It was a great technique, loads of fun, and kept us in fish for meals the whole while. I always knew it would work on streams too. Thanks for sharing this. I had already bought my tackle to try it. Time to get out onto Rock creek just down from Red Lodge Mt. and go to work.
Yeah it's an old school method, can be very effective. Have fun!
Grew up on that river, miss it greatly
Cool !!!
People don't know that!!! 😊
I love Idaho I've cought thousands of trout there on the fly!!!
Used to go out evary year fishing the west from Mass. 22 times!
Been flyfishing and tying 56 years now!!! ✌️
Teach a purson !!!
TU.
Very informative... This is going to give me something to do while my buddies chase elk in southwestern Colorado. Thanks
What a beautiful location, I would love to fly fish this River 🎣🏴
I use a sealed torpedo bobber with eyes on each end. That way you can add a swivel so the line doesn't twist. And a net so you don't touch the fish with your dry hands. 55 years ago.
We have a huge trout fishery in Columbia SC. I'm gonna give this a try. Thanks!
Been doing the same since I was a kid here in Nevada. Great video.
Clear bobber wooly worm mid water
Boy, is that river clear! Beautiful place to fish.
Thanks for the tip. Enjoyed it. :)
It's one of my favorite places in the world. Been going there since I was about 12 years old
My father taught me this trick when I was very young. It’s part of the reason I never took up fly fishing. What is the stuff you are putting on the flies?
Hey Shawn, that's floatant. It helps the fly float after getting water logged or going through riffles.
Gink
Grew up in the 70s over there. My Grandparents lived in Missoula and then moved to couerdlane. We used a clear bobber similar to that with a split ring and then a lead line for the fly. the clear bobber was filled with water and the line went through the slide tube similar to yours. I taught my children to fish this way even though we live in Iowa now. two days ago me and my daughter (23) were fishing our local lake ( pond really) and were killing it. think i caught over 10 fish, mostly pan fish but one walleye, in less than an hour. my first cast caught a fish. other people on the shore were like, what????
Beautiful location! I haven't bubble-fished flies (successfully, for trout) since I was a boy. I need to try again this season, on both the Ogden and Weber rivers.
Exactly the video I was looking for. As soon as we come off the lockdown I’ll be in the eastern Sierras with my spinning rig using lures, and now I’ll be putting flies on the same rig. Carrying two rigs when backpacking isn’t convenient. . Thanks.
Glad it was helpful and hopefully you can get out there sooner rather than later. Tight lines!
What kind of line do you have on this? I'm in Ohio, and was fishing a small trib creek which is like less then half the width of what you were fishing and is really really shallow. I was float fishing and trying to use spinners in the only deep spots... the fish weren't interested in my jigs or spinners/spoons at all but the fly fisherman were SLAYING! I need to try this!
Iv always wondered how yo fish a fly on a spinning rod.. Definitely going to try this trick out soon on my next fishing trip thanks
Glad it helped! It's a good option to have.
Same. Last time I went trout fishing, I was doing pretty good with a spinner, but they were rising everywhere! This vid was very helpful!
@@05c4r6 glad it helped!
Nice, I wondered about that. Once in a great while would like to fly fish but not enough to invest in the tackle and learn the technique. Not to mention where i live there is not a lot of trout streams.
Great video Chris - I know you have told me about this before but I finally got around to watching the video :D
Seriously though, that area is freaking gorgeous. Reminds me of when I went to the Missoula, MT last March. I love the west man - I need to get back.
Yeah man, such a gorgeous area! Let me know if you try this out! Cheers!
Excellent information!! I've tried it a few times but I was using a stopper knot instead of the adjustabubble. I gotta try it like that! Nice fish. Sub from me!
The intro is flipping sick.
Thanks brother!
Works great on high sierra mountains lakes when the tress and brush are thick and you can not back cast.
Oh yeah man, I can see this setup working great on those situations. And being able to fill the bubble up with water for a longer cast is nice in that situation as well.
All I use for 30+ years, but with the smallest clear, sliding bubble available with a Carolina Keeper 3 ft from fly. One knot and 4lb or less test. In lakes, they'll hit the bubble immediately after casts often returning to grab the fly.
What a beautiful spot. Thanks for this
Thank you so much. such a great help for new fisher like me.
im from northern ireland, we use a "bombarda" float for sea-trout (sea-run browns) its similar kinda set up with the fly or small micro lures
Hey Chris really enjoy your hunting and fishing videos thanks
Thanks for watching them Carin, and for the feedback!
Killed it on streams with this method but the deeper swifter parts of the Snake River I have struggled. I think they like to see the fly bouncing up and down on the water for my deep pocket spots I usually bottom fish from. I don't own a fly rod and am not trained in it. Wish I was. Sometimes they are only feeding from the top, and I want to get those suckers.
I fish for salmon in BC like this . Works a charm. Add split shots if you want depth
Awesome!! I've always wanted to try this. Is your leader mono or fluoro? Thank you!
Shout out from Coeur d'Alene! Love fishing the St. Joe. Thanks for the tips man! Got yourself a new subscriber!
Awesome, thanks for watching!
Thank you. I have never used a fly rod. So I needed some tips for fly set up. This helped
Glad it helped!
I tried dry flies on the spinning rod and i ended up catching ten times the trout i used to manage on spinners.
I use a cylindrical wooden plug with tapered edges with punctures on both ends as a weight to cast my flies. However, the thin mono leader ends up getting entangled with the main line almost every time i cast. Is there a way to get rid of this issue ?
Any suggestions would be really helpful.
Thanks for the lovely video.
Cheers !
I have been in the same boat thanks for this video!!!!
Put an indicator on b4 bobber...also works well with crappie jigs spinners etc.
Great video! Just had a question, what are good ways to jig or work the fly?
I was watching this video and I thought the only thing that could make this better was to apply it on a Baitrunner.
I have a Daiwa Emcast with 6lb mono ima try this with , let my bobber go with the Baitrunner feature … and as soon as I see a strike start reeling and hook it, instead of having to close the bail and potentially lose a fish
Great video! Just ordered two of them. Worth a try!
Hey there fellow spinning fly fisherman! All kidding aside, great video! I'm a 61 year old disabled man in a wheelchair. I just started tying flies a year ago, but due to the facts that 1) I can't get into the water to fish 2) I cannot manage all that fly line that you have to strip with a typical fly rod as it would just get all tangled with my wheelchair and 3)I have rotator cuff shoulder injuies in both shoulders from pushing a wheelchair for the last 40 years or so that prevents me from being able to load the rod by whipping the line back and forth over my head several times just to cast my flies 4)cost is the most difficult barrier to using traditional fly fishing gear. Ok i see how you can use a clear bobber and a slider type set up to fish with flies in fresh water, but I also love to fish salt water. How would I do that off of a peir? A boat?Would I use the same sliding clear bobber set up? How would I fish salt water situations since more weight is often required due to the waves of the ocean? Would i simply use a sliding clear bobber and a stopper to fish deeper when using wet flies? How about dry flies and getting them out away from the peir? Thank you in advance for your feedback! Tight lines!
Good stuff. Got yourself another subscriber. Cheers
Great video but I have a question should the bobber be the other way around thick end towards the rod ??
what a beautiful looking river
It's a special place for sure. Thanks for watching!
Great vid, are you using monofilment or flurocarbon leader?
awsome! I was not looking forward to learing with a fully rod lol. great video 👍
Glad it helped!
I have one of those bobber, but I had no idea you could twist the end, in order to lock it in the line. Las time I used mine, I used a swivel and a bead as a stop for the bobber.
Yeah it's pretty slick, no knots and doesn't kink the line either. Thanks for watching!
Thank you for the video. I never tried that but, this summer i will.
Awesome tip. Really good to know
Glad it helped, thanks for watching bro!
Just went got some bobbers an flies. Gonna try it tomorrow great info.
How did it go?
@@Outwestwithchris1 it snowed here 4 days in a row. North East Kingdom vt. No good chance yet, went with crawlers, no luck. Lol
Dang, yeah I've heard it's been a little chilly up there. Hang in there, it will warm up!
I like the video to give me an idea. Curious, what weight line do you suggest and what was the set up? Light weight rod, light action rod, curious, and thanks again
A good idea but it'll be hard to manage drag on your dry. 👍🏻
Shoutout from Boise! Sweet video man.
It's been awhile since I visited Boise but I really like that town, nice river flowing through there too! Cheers.
Do regular floats work? I've also seen a video somewhere where a person used a floated minnow type bait, like a Rapala, and took the hooks off to do basically the same thing by tying a leader to the rear hook eye.
Great video! Thank you brotha. God bless!
I was having issues with line twist with this method so I now put a swivel behind it [like a slip sinker] and I may have solved this issue.
WOW beautiful place!! is that 1 of the main rivers or smaller ones? which 1 is it?
❤wow, easier than using my Fly Rod!
This was amazing! Growing up in southwest Michigan my dad taught me this technique and it’s now a “staple” technique I use now residing in NC fishing bluegills here...I love your scenery! Beautiful! Beautiful catches! Awesome technique tutorial! I am also new to your channel! BABAAM!!
Awesome! Yeah this technique will slay on the panfish. It's such a versatile tool for the tool box. Thanks for watching!
That works for small mouth in the winter we call it the float'n Fly
Do you usually use a hair jig under the float? That's how I've always heard it fished. I've never fished a floatn fly for bass but I've read about it a bit. Hope you are feeling better brother!
Out West with Chris yeah but there are other things you can use to. Small plastics and even gulp minnows.
@@BassGeek I've been thinking about that actually.
Trout love to see the fly above the water. Adult females lay their eggs on the water's surface, and trout watch, as they approach. If you learn to fly cast a dry fly with just monofilament, it will allow you to give some action to the fly. You only get about 15' max casting distance, but, you'll do well at the 8' to 12'-range. Let gravity and the breeze carry the dry fly, then make the fly have the smallest movements on the water surface. I've had fish bite a fly several inches above the water, it is quite exciting.
My first experience catching trout was a 5.5' spin-set-up, dry fly, probably 8lb monofilament. It gives you tons of control to, roll-cast (spey-ish,) and it is very nice for a bow-cast (short rod). If you use a tippet, you will have more ability to turn-over your loop. All the technical trout fly fishing can be done up close, some of it can be done at a distance. The pocket-water gives the angler some cover from the fish. Getting around using fly line isn't that much of an issue, when you are basically casting about 3' of it and a long leader.
Stick to flies that have a tuft of calf-hair for a wing. The calf-hair is very easy for the angler to see, and they float fine in choppy water. Anything with lots of wrapped hackle is a favorite for free-stone streams where flies tend to sink.
do you think a medium spinning rod (shakespeare beta 20-80g) would be good for brown trout? i would fish a small mepps behind a bubble float with a long 5lb leader
I noticed you are using braid. Is you trace fluorocarbon? If not, it seems like at least on a sunny day that would be much more effective in such clear water.
I use the same bobber they many appacations use them for crappie fishing also !!!!!!
Thank you for posting, can you tell me? If you are in a "fly fishing only" section of water, is the "fly and bubble" legal?
Hey, I’m pretty sure I know that spot. Isn’t that up there by bonners ferry?
Love watching an outdoorsman "catch and release, even if dropped from 6 ft. and bounced off boulders, not to mention unclear "directions" or names for product 😂 great content...
And grabbed it with his dry hand.....!
A good technique. My youngest son has done well like this. You put the bobber on upside down and put just a dab of that Gink on your fingers,then the fly. It will float better that way. Peace
Thanks for watching.
love your vidio was very helpful
Great info. I'm struggling with casting far on Joe's flies...can you share what your test line was and rod length? I'm using a medium 6'6 with I 🤔 6 or 8lb test
put a bobber on it either what he has in the video or those small trout magnet bobbers, if I'm fishing un weighted flies then ill usually put a small splitshot not to far from the fly itself and that helps with casting and getting the fly down quicker
During hatches, are Rooster Tails or similar productive at all?
Bungee Bubbles from Hagen's work well too. Used the mediums on high mountain lakes and the smalls on rivers and streams.
Awesome, I'll take a look!
I have a question, if I use a normal bobber will this still work.
also, hitting the bobber is a common acurence, thats when you put a rappala on your line.
What are you putting on the fly. I have spent so much $$ on lures, flies, bubbles, bait. I've fished at night, in the day, when it's hot when it's cold I just can't fish. :(
Would a neon yellow float work as well? Or does the float need to be clear? I have some nice floaters already but they're bright lol
Great video. Are you using braid, to a leader, to tippett? Or just braid to a leader. Thanks.
Just braid to leader this time out.
great vid. Thanks!
Do you have to use clear water bobbers, or does any streamlined float work?
I'm trying a 3 ft piece of poly chord instead of a bobber. In line fly line
Do you use just regular fish line or do you need something special?
Great info- what pattern works good for you?
What size rod line and reel are you using for that set up
Man I wanted to bass fish during trout season and now it’s bass season and I want to fish for trout but all the trout in my lake died off from heat
WHHHHHHAAAAAT CANT WAIT TO SEE THIS
Let me know what you think after you watch!
@@Outwestwithchris1 mind blowing gonna go get me some of those and some dry flys for when they stockthe pond by me
@@dluffmcgrufflovestostuffmu4606 sweet! Go slay em!
@@Outwestwithchris1 thanks for putting this out there one day I'll get in to fly fishing but for now I'm going to try this lol
@@dluffmcgrufflovestostuffmu4606 it's a good place to start... Save some money and do this. Lol
I'm sure it would also be good for Pike, Bass even Musky
Just a personal preference, I just slip the hook with long nost pliers, rather than handle them. It is much easier on the fish, especially when you drop em on the rocks.
Your pole sounds strained... good vid
So he said sainting about tapered leader is he using fly line leader??
So i guess for fly fishing you do need a good view on your hook and the fishes. I can go fishing for 3 hours on a lake with not the clearest water... if i use a blopper or swimmer the fishing line sinks and drags the fly too close to the blopper. So i moved it a little closer occasionally. But overall, after going like 10 times fishing (yes i am new to it), i only caught a very little one -.- also i noticed my fishing line makes curls and those even attract some fish but not the fly? 🤣🤦🏻♂️🤷🏻♂️ if i had more money i could get more proper stuffs. I think my setup is just not made for it or i do sth totally wrong.
Take that rig and hook a fat summer hopper with that fly. Hook him through the back gently through the exoskeleton where it meets the lower part of the hopper and he should float and kick around for 5+ minutes. Big trout can't resist.
is your bobber upside down? or does it not matter which way?
Ha I noticed that too I’d imagine it doesn’t really affect much if any the way it works being completely empty if you fill it half of more with water they’re designed to be fat side up so the wider part is out of the water and easier to see
what type of line are you using? Mono? What lb test?
you dont need to use that fly floating crap on your fly, just squeeze the watr out of the fly and blow on it. been fishing this way for 30 years in southern oregon, works great
What kind of line are you using and are you using a leader with it ?
Will the fly still float on the surface
Do you have to use it with that exact bobber