Go-To high mountain lake dry?
Fishing up on the Grand Mesa yesterday from a float tube and I felt like I was in a pot of boiling water at times. Fish everywhere.
I tried about 20 different dry flies and couldn't figure out exactly what they were hitting. Only action I got all night was a 6" trout :( on a RS2 dropper.
There was a blue winged olive hatch but it didn't seem to be the fly the fish were keyed in on (the hatch would happen and there would be no action in that part of the lake)
I did notice a redish looking fly that would sort of skate on the surface of the water. This might have been the ticket but even then I'm unsure.
So...what should have I thrown?
Flies tried:
Adams (para and non)
Blue winged olive (three variations)
Elk hair caddis
Green drake (long shot I know)
Royal Wulff
Black skeeter imitation thing
What did I forget?
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Go-To high mountain lake dry?
There's some good info in this thread so figured I'd bump this instead of starting a new thread.
Got my ass handed to me on Sunday morning on a large Teton region lake, not an alpine lake. We anchored in a cove that had inflow from a mtn stream and there were fish rising everywhere. Some sips, but a lot were almost full on breaching. Couldn't see anything on the water so tried a small midge first as there were a couple fuzzy butts hovering above the water, no luck. By that point I was convinced they weren't eating anything actually on the surface so switched to a small streamer despite only having a floating line 5wt with me. Obviously that didn't produce either. Just as we were pulling anchor I was able to reach a struggling bug on the surface that turned out to be a Callibaetis dun that had probably just hatched.
If I could go back in time would it have made sense to be throwing a Callibaetis emerger or stripping a nymph? Just had never really experienced fish acting like that in a lake and was definitely out of my element. Some of them were lunkers too...
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