Thursday, October 22, 2015

Caddis and PMD Nymphs on the Weber River


Nick and I were able to fish a different section of the Weber River every morning and afternoon during my daughter’s visit.  Each stretch produced well and kept us anticipating what would be around the next bend.  

This is the perfect trout river for fly fishing; plenty of pools, runs and riffles along with winding turns and structure.  

There are even stretches that have a rusted out car or two and old mink cages thrown in to add variety.
Wildlife is plentiful as well as domesticated animals, including llamas. This week we saw a family of sand hill cranes.

The typical setup Nick and I used was a 9 foot, 4 or 5 weight rod with a 9 foot tapered leader.  We used the new Air-Lock strike indicators.  We used fluorocarbon tippets at 4X or 5X depending on the size of fly.  

Mostly we used size 18 or 20 PMD nymphs or size 16 green caddis imitations, usually with a bead head. 

I like the black, tungsten beads.  One or two BB size split shot were needed to keep the flies near the bottom.  

Nick used the typical setup of split shot, fly, leader tied to bend of hook and then a second fly at the end.  I used the downrigger method with a split shot at the end with two droppers up the leader from that.  

Strike indicators were set at 1.5 to 2 times the depth of the water which ended up being about 5 or 6 feet.  The trout seemed to like the riffles that were near deeper water.  

They also seemed eager to eat whether it was morning or afternoon.  On some rivers the fishing slows down in the afternoon during the summer.  The Weber browns were just as active mid-day.  We caught mostly 13 to 18 inch brown trout all week long with maybe one or two rainbows and a white fish.  Once in a while we would see fish rising, but mostly not.


2 comments:

  1. What beautiful pics! I guess you forgot to bring some home to eat; but they were too pretty to keep.

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  2. The Weber was great. Those Browns were fun in that current.

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