{{+1}}River set up for short & long leader nymphing – competitions{{-1}}
{{start}}
Please read this article in conjunction with the companion article:
At the 2012 World Fly Fishing Championships which I participated in as part of the Australian team leader lengths were limited to twice the length of the fly rod. Whilst at the "Worlds" that limitation was a rule variation I know that FIPS Mouche is currently considering incorporating that limitation in leader length into competition fishing rules.
Over the last few years myself and most other competition fly fishers have to differing degrees come to grips with the French leader style of fly fishing. That technique for me had evolved into fishing a 9 meter Hends Camou leader. It was a good set up but for me but it had severe limitations on anything but a windless day or a day with slight winds at your back. If the wind was in your face or if a little stronger even at your back I had real problems managing what in those conditions was an alarmingly light and increasingly inaccurate set up.
As an alternative I have come up with a "longer leader" set up which is a combination of a thin fly line running line and a 4.3 section of Hends Camou leader and as I will explain below I think is a better set up overall that a French leader.
Leading up to the "Worlds" I was a man on a mission and experimented with quite a few different fly line options including silk lines. The line I settled on as I moved through that experimentation process is a 1# weight Orvis Hydro Superfine forward taper fly line. I chose this line, firstly because it’s dull olive in colour, which is prerequisite for a nymph line for me, and because the running line is finished the same as the forward taper and floats very well and most importantly is only 0.6 of a mm thick and 58 feet long. I have that line loaded on my reel back to front so that I fish the running line and the forward taper is connected to my backing. Off that thin end of the line I have connected with a nail knot a 4.3 meters leader taken from the middle of a 9 meter Camou leader. I initially take a 4.5 meter section from directly above where the Camou leader is 0.3 mm thick and cut the butt off about 4.5 meters (the extra 0.2 meter is taken up in the nail knot to the fly line and the leader half of double uni knot I use at the business end) above that. At the thin end I add two colours (that’s around 60 cm) of Cortland bi colour indicator line. I then have 50 cm of 0.2 mm Grand Max followed by up to 1.8 meters of .12 mm Grand Max tippet. the 50 cm of Grand Max is important as I find that the step down in thickness allows a stronger tippet connection than if I tie my fine tippet directly to the 0.3 mm indicator. This is a great set up and with 3 or 4 meters of the Orvis fly line outside the rod tip it’s as close as I could find to fishing a 9 meter Camou leader.
In fact in some respects for me this is a better set up than 9 meter Camou leader because the fly line is about 10% thicker than the butt of a 9 meter Camou leader and consequently my Orvis running line set up is easier to cast over longer distances particularly in windier conditions. Sure the 0.6 mm running lime is slightly heavier than the first 3 or 4 meters of the Camou leader that I used to use, but I must say that it’s still light enough for it to be held off the water with an 11 foot rod. In faster water particularly there is very little tendency of the hang of that heavier butt section pulling your fly or flies toward you particularly if your using reasonably heavy flies.
The process of preparing and fishing in the Worlds has led me to a better understanding of my fly selection for river fishing. I am now a firm believer that in shallower more sensitive water it's best to fish just one fly over a given section of water and then if that is not successful fish a different fly over the same water. This is actually a page out of the rule book for successful French leader fishing where it's called the induced take and if you can fish multiple flies to a fish with natural drifts without spooking the fish then it definitely does work. With one fly also it is much easier to stay in contact and that of course means feeling more takes and hopefully if your reflexes are quick enough more fish.
If your fishing in a competition and you only have a limited amount of prime water I certainly opt for fishing just one fly at a time and if that fly or subsequent flies are not inducing takes then working though a number of different fly options. Nearly always the choice of fly should be a tungsten bead head fly and the choice of bead should be a weight that in combination with the dressing of the fly is going to get it down close to the bottom. If you not touching the bottom occasionally then your probably not beep enough. The flies you work through in those bits of prime water should be selected for a reason and generally I fish 2 or 3 "bait" flies over a section of water then a "shock" fly. Each fly is quite different to the other and if you have fished with stealth and cunning, and with natural drifts and consequently have not spooked the fish then you will be surprised to see that when fish get used to the first fly you offer or just don't want it how readily they will still take one of the subsequent offerings if its to their liking.
These are some of the teams of flies I have worked through using this process.
Kokra River Slovenia: