Posted on July 17 2022
I'm sure you've all heard (or been) the angler with a fish on his line who hollered downstream to his buddy "He took a size 18 olive cripple". And, almost everyone within hearing distance begins looking through their fly boxes for an olive cripple of the same size.
Come on, what did the trout really take? He took a fly in his feeding lane that looked good and wasn't dragging. Back in the day when everyone kept their ten fish a day, I cleaned many a trout and I looked to see what they were eating. There ate every kind of mayfly that was hatching, their respective nymphs, a half digested black nosed dace, a flower blossom, a small strike indicator, a Japanese beetle and even a filter from a cigarette (more people smoked then). Fish don't live in a supermarket, they eat what is available. However, in todays catch and release fishing they have learned to be very, very careful about what they eat, that said, they almost never refuse a properly prepared and presented meal.
So what about the olive cripple. It was simply a well presented meal. Will today's catch and release fish eat anything that is well presented? Absolutely not. Believe it or not I'm on the river so much that I actually find time to experiment. For fish in a heavily fished river system to eat your fly, it not only has to be floated drag free down the fish's feeding lane, IT HAS TO LOOK LIKE THE REAL THING.
Two years ago during a very good evening sulfur hatch I was literally getting a refusal on almost every cast. They were coming up to my fly time and time again only to turn away at the last second without eating it. So I began to experiment by changing flies. Started with one I had recently picked up at the Troutfitter. Why? Because it looked good to me. Did it look good to the trout? Apparently not because not one fish even gave it a sniff. Went through my sulfur box, tried comparaduns, split wings, and in line wings, hackles, no hackles, emergers with trailing shucks, encased nymphs with a yellow thorax, spinners with spent wings, broken wings and one wing, yellow bodies, orange bodies, small, medium and large flies, in short everything that was in the box. What did I learn? Which flies to throw away and which flies to keep in my box. Also learned that I needed to keep working on small subtle changes in hopes of finding flies that fish will take more readily.
Assuming you are working on your casting and are making good casts at least part of the time and you are still not getting refusals or takes, change flies, often. Sort out the ones fish eat or at least refuse and leave home the ones they ignore. Finding the "right fly" with which to catch heavily fished Delaware River trout during the sulfur hatch is a challenge that will endlessly test the creative ability of you and every other Delaware River angler.
Note to Keith - As a tone deaf word smith wanna be, I was a long time Chapin fan, and have been known to slip in many a reference to Harry over the years (for sure several since you joined our ranks). With due respect to all the other sharp eyes who have ferreted out other musical references your "Do what you do", back in May was my first hookup on Chapin lyrics. Sad to think so few of his fans are left, he truly could paint a picture with words.
Yes,that is a musical reference.
Come on Dave…give us break!
This is such a great blog that I enjoy immensely especially when there is a new post!
Having returned from a week on the famed Henry’s Fork I can say unequivocally that the upper WB fish in the summer are the most selective you will find.
Along with all the great insight already provided let me add a few tricks:
-add more tippet
-go to lighter tippet and make sure it is long or it will break (3 feet minimum)
-most of the fish are taking a ton of nymphs along with the duns, nymphing during a hatch can be deadly
-something different like an ant or beetle
-I find the flies they are taking are often smaller than you think
Thanks for your latest blogs. The information you generously share helps make us all better fisherman . Don’t know is yesterday’s storms were strong enough to dirty up the water( some places in NJ had 5 inches of rain),but I’ll give it another try tomorrow.Thanks again
Another great article. It’s time for another book. Tips on fishing the Deleware.
I feel a little better after reading the blog. The last two nights I have had a bunch of refusals and caught some fish but it was like you said 1hr per fish caught. I will heed your advice and switch flies more often.
Thanks for the great advice!!!!!!!!
P.s. cats in the cradle is my all time favorite
Spent an evening hatch in the sulfur zone early last week and then Friday afternoon in the same spot for the afternoon hatch. In the evening targeted a nice fish that almost looked like a tailing red. So….. put on an emerger and got a take and a hook set and had him on for a few seconds before he got off. Three days later in the same spot in the afternoon the same fish was sipping sulfur duns very leisurely so put on a Troutfitter size 20 and third cast – boom – a 19 inch brown was fish of the afternoon. Do you find that is typical? Do fish key in on different stages of the mayfly life cycle at different times of day or even at different times of the hatch (before it gets going emergers and then a switch to duns)? It also seems that different fish in a pool will be keying in on different bug stages at the same time even if they are rising ten or twenty feet apart. Do you find this as well?
So you say IT HAS TO LOOK LIKE THE REAL THING.
In your years of tying and fishing are there any pattern types that consistently produce for you, especially during tiny Sulphur season? What tying materials produce the best results for you?
Yes, I’m the guy in the river listening for the person yelling “He took a size 18 olive cripple”…..then tying on yet another Sulphur variety.
Thanks as always!!!
We are having a little difficulty with the blog and double posting. As I was trying to sort the issue out I accidentally deleted a comment that was made. I apologize.