Rainbow of Fish
Posted: Thu Apr 30, 2009 10:25 am
Ken, and his cousin Anita, and I fished for about 2 hours late Wed. afternoon.
We took our fly rods and targeted the red devils. Casting was a little tough with all the wind, but the fish didn't seem to mind. If you could land the fly near the fish, they took it. The water level is the lowest I've seen it in a long time.
Light conditions and low water visibility made spotting the fish a challenge. However, a big orange fish shows up pretty good even when the water is a little cloudy.
I was again surprised at the rainbow of colors of all the red devils Ken caught. I've been told they are different fish, but all in the same general red devil family.
This big bluegill put up a great fight.... I wonder if it wouldn't have topped the current state record?
Any sinking trout fly will catch red devils. A bead head nymph is great.
(One of my most successful flys is just some gold Flash-a-bou tied to a size 10, AH hook..... with bead chain eyes to give it some weight. Just try to bop the fish on the head. Let the fly sink down and slowly twitch it.)
If your not into fly fishing, a light spinning rod and a can of earth worms works really well. We've also caught red devils on small, slow moving, lures. Recently I've used a 1/32 oz. jig with a plastic twister tail in a green crawfish color. Just slowly hop it along the bottom near the fish.
I enjoy spotting the red devil, casting my lure or fly near it, and watching it swim over and pick up my offering.... landing a 3/4 to 1 pound scrappy little fish on ultra-light tackle is a real kick too.
We took our fly rods and targeted the red devils. Casting was a little tough with all the wind, but the fish didn't seem to mind. If you could land the fly near the fish, they took it. The water level is the lowest I've seen it in a long time.
Light conditions and low water visibility made spotting the fish a challenge. However, a big orange fish shows up pretty good even when the water is a little cloudy.
I was again surprised at the rainbow of colors of all the red devils Ken caught. I've been told they are different fish, but all in the same general red devil family.
This big bluegill put up a great fight.... I wonder if it wouldn't have topped the current state record?
Any sinking trout fly will catch red devils. A bead head nymph is great.
(One of my most successful flys is just some gold Flash-a-bou tied to a size 10, AH hook..... with bead chain eyes to give it some weight. Just try to bop the fish on the head. Let the fly sink down and slowly twitch it.)
If your not into fly fishing, a light spinning rod and a can of earth worms works really well. We've also caught red devils on small, slow moving, lures. Recently I've used a 1/32 oz. jig with a plastic twister tail in a green crawfish color. Just slowly hop it along the bottom near the fish.
I enjoy spotting the red devil, casting my lure or fly near it, and watching it swim over and pick up my offering.... landing a 3/4 to 1 pound scrappy little fish on ultra-light tackle is a real kick too.