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by Bill Bryden
on 8/5/2009
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We're impressed (and that ain't easy to do!)
Here is a photo of a 40 inch by 21 inch Atlantic salmon we landed on one of your monster caddis tube flies last week. You can see the fly hanging from the fish's mouth (barely). I've hunted large salmon for 20 years throughout Newfoundland and Labrador and that fly moves them unlike any other. We've had many large fish come to that fly in the last week when other flies just would not move them. I rose 5 different big fish yesterday on one of those flies and two of them ate it despite a cold east wind! Once a fish is hooked, the tube fly slides free of the single barbless hook during the fight and significantly reduced the chances of the hook shaking free due to the drag induced on the hook by conventional non-tube dry flies. We are using them with a #2, standard shank length, sproat bend single barbless hook, with round down turned eyes (the old mustad 3999), and thus the full hook hangs down from the tube on a 45 degree angle with just the eye in the tube....as a result every fish has been hooked solidly with the gap of the hook around the bottom of the lower jaw or very deeply in the scissors. By the way, one has taken 6 fish so far and it only has a bent whisker to show for wear.
However, I'll be needing more of those flies as the guides and guests alike are hording them. I will be placing an order for next year!
Cheers;
Bill Bryden
Eureka Outdoors Inc.
Newfoundland and Labrador Outfitter |