More than enough information for getting a couple of new visitors on Chew going in Early April. Tight lines all and thank you very much for a brilliant video for hints and tips.
Brilliant video really good to see plentycof action and took in alot of tips for me to try . Thought Tony presented the whole video very profesionally and very informative well done Tony. I will share this video with all of my fishing friends 👍
Any tips for the small water angler where you are only allowed one buzzer? The only way I can seem to get consistency is using an indicator as this keeps the buzzer at the correct depth. With one buzzer it tends to drop through the feeding zone and be below where the fish are feeding which is no good in the summer when all the activity is in the first couple of feet. I do see some people figure of eight retrieving but surely that’s not natural buzzer movement?.. I saw one elderly gentleman fishing fluorocarbon attached to mono but I’m not sure I like the idea of knots if you hook into a monster......any tips greatly appreciated as I want to ditch the indicator and fish properly ....cheers ears
A very slow figure of 8 retrieve is a natural movement of a buzzer. A lot of stillwaters in Canada only allow 1 fly. Those guys use a lot of buzzers with beads. I am not a huge proponent of that as a single buzzer fished on a straight line of single diameter florocarbon will sink the leader. You can use slip indicators to adjust your depth or you can use a single piece of 3-5x floro straight to your fly line, as seen here in this video.... you can adjust the length of that tippet to achieve the desired depth
One of the best videos I have watched,plenty of top information and top presentation
More than enough information for getting a couple of new visitors on Chew going in Early April. Tight lines all and thank you very much for a brilliant video for hints and tips.
Brilliant video really good to see plentycof action and took in alot of tips for me to try .
Thought Tony presented the whole video very profesionally and very informative well done Tony.
I will share this video with all of my fishing friends 👍
Glad you enjoyed it. Hope you have subscribed to our channel. Tight Lines
Brilliant video this, and great camera angle for casting
Boy, those Chew trout can fight..!
Good informative video there's so much crap out there but this is bang on.
I use ECHO rods myself, ECHO 3 is a nice setup
best one I have seen for a long time. Nice one Tony. BUT where was Marley
Excellent video looked like Alaska there were that many flies in the morning, were you on a floating line for the Nymph deeper down as well? Thanks
Any tips for the small water angler where you are only allowed one buzzer? The only way I can seem to get consistency is using an indicator as this keeps the buzzer at the correct depth. With one buzzer it tends to drop through the feeding zone and be below where the fish are feeding which is no good in the summer when all the activity is in the first couple of feet. I do see some people figure of eight retrieving but surely that’s not natural buzzer movement?.. I saw one elderly gentleman fishing fluorocarbon attached to mono but I’m not sure I like the idea of knots if you hook into a monster......any tips greatly appreciated as I want to ditch the indicator and fish properly ....cheers ears
A very slow figure of 8 retrieve is a natural movement of a buzzer. A lot of stillwaters in Canada only allow 1 fly. Those guys use a lot of buzzers with beads. I am not a huge proponent of that as a single buzzer fished on a straight line of single diameter florocarbon will sink the leader. You can use slip indicators to adjust your depth or you can use a single piece of 3-5x floro straight to your fly line, as seen here in this video.... you can adjust the length of that tippet to achieve the desired depth
RIP Tony.
Really? I remember he got properly shafted by Bristol Water and I thought he moved back home. What happened to him?
@@edhubble I think he died from cancer don't know what happened with Bristol water but they paid tribute to him.
hi which fly is the point fly and which is the top dropper thanks
The point fly is the fly at the very end. The dropper's are between the point fly and the fly line. Tight Lines.
techsecmedia thanks a lot
Show us the fish Tony!
You are using Fast Sinking Line..
fuuuu
So much political correctness about handling the fish and then you start handling them