I'm curious what flies people use the most and why.
I'm fishing mostly medium and small rivers and streams in the Northern Front Range in CO.
Dries:
Parachute Adams - Rides low, but is fairly buoyant and easy to see. Can pass as a spinner. Catches picky fish but is more user friendly than, say, a Comparadun.
PMX - It's a caddis and hopper wearing a big white top hat. Good combo of natural fibers and jiggly rubber. My go to search pattern for summer/ early fall.
Chubby Chernobyl - Floats like a boat. Great for heavy droppers in rough water. Ugly and wind resistant though. Prefer the PMX if it isn't getting dragged under, but the chubby beats using a bobber.
Griffith's gnat - Less annoying to use than other midge patterns and I see lots of midges. Don't use it a ton, but when I need it I need it.
Emergers:
Mole fly - Catches fish that would otherwise ignore me. No replacement for this one. When I'm stumped I turn to the mole.
Film critic - Has a mohawk like Glenn Plake. Not sure it's any better than, say, an RS2, but it looks awesomel.
Nymphs:
Frenchie or similar - In general I seem to do better with simple, buggy nymphs with a hot spot. I prefer them over more the more muted/realistic patterns or the bright shiny ones. Unless they aren't working. I could switch this out for any number of similar patterns.
Blowtorch - Same as above but with a slower sink rate and added texture.
Zebra Midge - The fish I catch eat lots of midges. Boring but extremely effective.
Juju Baetis - Seems to out-catch other tiny mayfly patterns. Little bit of shine, some buggy texture, and sinks faster than a pheasant tail.
Streamers:
Sculpzilla - significantly more "alive" than a bugger when dead drifted.
Meyers Leech - jig jig jig bam.
Out of all of these I'd say the Parachute Adams, Mole Fly, and maybe Juju Baetis are the ones I'm most attached to. I think those three actually help me catch more fish. The others I could replace with something fairly different without much change in success. I think. Maybe. Or not.
What about you?
I'm fishing mostly medium and small rivers and streams in the Northern Front Range in CO.
Dries:
Parachute Adams - Rides low, but is fairly buoyant and easy to see. Can pass as a spinner. Catches picky fish but is more user friendly than, say, a Comparadun.
PMX - It's a caddis and hopper wearing a big white top hat. Good combo of natural fibers and jiggly rubber. My go to search pattern for summer/ early fall.
Chubby Chernobyl - Floats like a boat. Great for heavy droppers in rough water. Ugly and wind resistant though. Prefer the PMX if it isn't getting dragged under, but the chubby beats using a bobber.
Griffith's gnat - Less annoying to use than other midge patterns and I see lots of midges. Don't use it a ton, but when I need it I need it.
Emergers:
Mole fly - Catches fish that would otherwise ignore me. No replacement for this one. When I'm stumped I turn to the mole.
Film critic - Has a mohawk like Glenn Plake. Not sure it's any better than, say, an RS2, but it looks awesomel.
Nymphs:
Frenchie or similar - In general I seem to do better with simple, buggy nymphs with a hot spot. I prefer them over more the more muted/realistic patterns or the bright shiny ones. Unless they aren't working. I could switch this out for any number of similar patterns.
Blowtorch - Same as above but with a slower sink rate and added texture.
Zebra Midge - The fish I catch eat lots of midges. Boring but extremely effective.
Juju Baetis - Seems to out-catch other tiny mayfly patterns. Little bit of shine, some buggy texture, and sinks faster than a pheasant tail.
Streamers:
Sculpzilla - significantly more "alive" than a bugger when dead drifted.
Meyers Leech - jig jig jig bam.
Out of all of these I'd say the Parachute Adams, Mole Fly, and maybe Juju Baetis are the ones I'm most attached to. I think those three actually help me catch more fish. The others I could replace with something fairly different without much change in success. I think. Maybe. Or not.
What about you?
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