Bass on a fly
The usual reasons for not flyfishing for bass
usually go like this: I don't know how. I don't have the gear. The gear is too
specialized. Bass is that other species you read about in flyfishing magazines;
people don't actually fly fish for them. I don't have a big boat with a motor
the size of a dishwasher, and tons of sponsors to support me. I feel
comfortable tying nymphs, dries and chironomids, and don't really want to tie
flies the size of a small bird. I don't want to risk a rotator cuff injury
casting something the size of my uncle's hair piece.

I started chasing bass with a fly rod after many years of trout fishing.
Early on, fly fishing for bass was some mysterious unknown, never a part of
Saturday morning as Bob or Bill or Jim weighed his sack of fish during yet
another Bass Masters tournament on a southern lake with a funny name.
I
remember the fish as always being monstrous, chainsaws with spiny rays, and the
gear used, unimaginably complex and varied with lures diving down and up and
sideways, hither and yon, flashing and sometimes squeaking, with
fisherman poised
seemingly right on top of the fish, yanking them from pond water infested with
branches and roots and weeds and slime foul enough to gag an alligator.
I also remember pictures in magazines, fantastic photos of largemouth bass
pirouetting in the air with an almost
equally fantastic man-made device dangling from its jaw. The impression was that
these fish would fight on for a long time. A very long time indeed. Man against
beast. Yet somehow these masters of the fish would yank them out of the
water in just a few moments, raising them triumphantly by the lower jaw.
Amazing.
I was intimated by it all. But I learned too that, like lots of things, the
myth is larger than the fish.
Soon I began to devour books on bass, most of which placed bass fly fishing
in a more realistic context with my other fishing. They invited me to the sport,
reminding me of the all the nonsense mega sports can become. I don't have lots
of strategies to download on you. There are too many books that can give you
that. Read every book you can, especially those on the natural history of
bass. There is a lot to learn, and it is fun learning, but it is not that
difficult to catch bass. You might find yourself being more particular about the
water you fish and more observant than when fishing for other species of fish,
something more akin to a hunting frame of reference.
Bass are the future of flyfishing. Well, maybe. Flyfishers are just beginning
to see the tremendous advantages of fishing for bass. Let’s look at this more
closely.
Why bass?
Bass are a modern fish, genetically speaking. They are a very survivable
species capable of living in the warmest and filthiest of pond water. In a
sense, then, they are more advanced than trout, though maybe this is
subjective biology. Certainly they are better than trout at doing a few things,
like stalking and ambushing their prey, which consists of everything from
trout-like fare such as chironomids and mayflies (yes, they'll eat tiny stuff)
to large frogs, popcorn and baby ducks. A baby duck would probably frighten a
large trout to death.
Pound for pound they fight harder and longer than any trout shy of steelhead
size. Their somewhat flattened body makes them that much harder to fight with a
fly rod, like trying to fight a frying pan through the water. And who can
complain about a bass exploding onto a surface fly like a triton missile?
Flyfishing tactics for bass
If you are going to catch a bass, act like a bass. This doesn't mean you have
to eat frogs and harass cute little baby ducks. But you need to think like a
bass. When I talk to bass fishers, I often get a similar reaction. Fishing for
bass inclines you to stalk them like they stalk their prey. Trout are more
refined, gentle fish. Trout in a lake, you wait for. You can troll, but
basically most trout fishing involves keying into the basic fact that
trout in a lake are on the move, cruising. They do some stalking, but they don't
have the explosive body/muscle type that makes a bass attack like a linebacker
through the weeds and into their prey.
Fishing for bass reminds me of fishing for trout in rivers. I enjoy
anticipating where a trout lies, and then stalking them. Fishing for bass forces
me to have a similar degree of awareness, observation and anticipation. To stalk
them. To be careful and quiet and patient. To use all my senses just a little
bit more than I would for trout.
I try to anticipate any potential ambush point. A small rock pile. A pile of
brush half submerged in water. Logs diving into the water. And my favorite--
yard-wide floating islands of tules and bulrushes. These little moving forests
may not be the ideal bass location, but they fascinate me. Try picking one up
out of the water, and you'll see what a perfectly messy little, moving shield
they offer for a bass. I usually fish the shady side of these little islands.
But, to be honest, visit your local library. Fly fishing, more so than any other
sport, is a sport of active participation mingled with active reading.
My point is that the behavior of bass to lie in wait for their prey causes me
to do the same. This way, I'm always anticipating something big about to happen
on the water. I also don't get as bored as I often do with trout fishing,
trolling around hoping to intercept something.
Bass fishing has everything trout fishing has, only scaled up: lots of
impressive top water action; strong long fights; big, very big fish; fishing and
hunting challenges. The reason more trout fishers don't consider bass is
probably a matter of perception, and down right lack of respect for the fish.
And maybe some uneasiness with fishing near others who are looking at you
quizzically slinging a line when you should be slinging powerbait trailing
behind the latest techno-plug. But we're flyfishers. We don't fish with other
people. So find an isolated piece of water to practice your new sport. And when
others see you haul in a 4-pounder on a fly, they might be back with a fly rod.
Or they'll throw beer cans at you.
Typically, though, I find myself more alone on bass waters than on trout
waters, especially fly-only trout waters. It is a great thing that lakes can
become catch and release (and a shame more bass water doesn't), but once a
lake becomes catch and release, it becomes marked. Which, again, is a good
thing, but then all the flyfishers show up expecting great things. Bass waters
tend to have fewer people, with notable exceptions, such as opening day,
pleasant warm summer weekends, and bass tournaments.
Casting those big flies
I guess no article on bass is complete without some thoughts on bass gear and
casting techniques. Bear in mind, that, like any writer, I can only give my
attitude toward things--and I am no means in the majority about bass, or about
anything else for that matter.
As bass rods go, I go pretty light. I often use the same six weight I use for
trout. To get started in bass fishing, you don't need special gear. You don't really need anything different than your
regular trout gear (except for the flies, maybe). Keep in mind, the limitations,
though, if you choose to go light, namely, you can't cast those way cool
bass bugs the size of robins. Now, I'll fish a nine weight rod (my steelhead
rod) occasionally when I want to launch some bigger contraption I've devised on
the water, but normally I enjoy a lighter rod.
I use a double-tapered line because I don't feel a need to cast long
distances. Keep in mind though that any store clerk, when asked about bass fly
fishing, will inform you that must have a bass tapered line or similar
weight-forward line. It is a personal choice whether you choose to buy them, but
my point is you don't have to have them, especially if your flies are, like
mine, scaled down.
I don't fish with the biggest bass flies. The biggest fly I fish is a small
thin Dahlberg Diver and numerous variations of my own that go by other names but
are essentially Dahlberg Divers.
Some
pop more on the water and dive less, but mainly due to what are
slight tying evolutions that are really just mutations of the Dahlberg Diving
theme.
Deer hair is the an ideal material for bass bugs because of the size of the
bugs you can create, while giving you endless variety of creative ways to trim
the fly to suit your casting and your impression of what the bass wants to kill.
If you try to tie something with dry hackle, you'll end up wasting half a bird
skin before you can get the thing to float well.
Bass will eat small flies as well. I've caught many on size 12 zug bugs. It
is a fun challenge because this kind of fishing tends to be very targeted.
But you don't want to randomly throw around small flies in a searching pattern,
or you'll spend the entire afternoon shaking off bluegills.
The way to figure out how big a fly you can cast with a fairly light line is
to tie a few bass bugs, and take them on the water with a pair of fly tying
scissors. After making a few casts, you'll probably decide the bug is too big.
Start trimming the bug until it begins to cast better for you, making sure to
keep the general dimensions of the original shape. Or, don't keep the general
dimensions. Many a fly pattern was invented by trimming on-site and watching
the new effect on the water, turning the pond into your laboratory. Bass
aren't too particular about a specific type of commotion on top of the water. If
the thing moves, it will come. Some people spin on deer hair and don't
trim it at all, figuring, I imagine, that the messier and chaotic the fly, the
bigger the commotion and the more psychotic they'll make a bass.
Smaller flies can create enough commotion on the water, but of course not as
much as a buzz bait in the hands of caster with a 5:1 retrieve ratio on his
reel. So there is probably no point in yanking the fly through the water until
you feel a muscle strain.
Moving a fly is only one strategy. Even the better tournament bass fishers
have learned the lesson of slowing down the retrieve using plastic worms and
other lures to a creeping rate. This kind of presentation is the stuff
flyfishing is made of. Typically, I don't move a fly at all once it hits the
water. It just sits like something dead or confused until I grow a little
impatient. Then I give it a single twitch. Then maybe another twitch or two.
Then maybe a bigger yank after the opening strategies failed to lure a
fish.
Another strategy that gets me around casting issues is designing
flies that have the appearance of size with very little weight and resistance
through the air. These usually sink very slowly and are made up of a closely
trimmed marabou body with a single two-inch length of hen feather tied on as a
tail. Extremely simple flies, extremely thin and light weight, and very
effective. Wooly buggers are similarly easy to cast, give the impression
of a meat moving through the water, and are very effective against bass, or, as
we all know, against all other species of fish known to swim.

One of the best strategies to improve the casting of larger flies is very
simple: Practice your casting. A better casting stroke will cast a larger
fly. Now you aren't casting little olive duns out there, so don't cast like you
are. To cast a big fly, learn to be patient in your casting stroke. Learn to
wait for the line to completely unravel behind you before launching the
fly. In time, you'll begin to feel the tug (sometimes a yank) of the fly behind
you. The forward cast doesn't need to be shot like a cannon. A lobbing type of
casting can work very well, as long as you aren't trying to casts 80 feet. If
you want to cast a bass bug 80 feet, you have the wrong weight rod (in which
case you should be fishing with your steelhead rod). Most bass, no matter the
size, can be cast to from 20 to 50 feet, as long as you are being very
quiet on the water. Let the bug make all the noise, not you.
So cast away with confidence, which as we all have been told, is 80 percent
of the success of the sport. Bass fly fishing allows you to become very
creative, and to start thinking about fishing in new terms, terms that may help
you whether you fish for bass, trout, pike or anything else that prowls through
the water.
--Toney J. Sisk
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