Salmon and trout possess highly specialized vision, finely tuned to detect a range of colours…
Salmon hitting dry fly
The Take:
To the dry fly angler the core of dry fly fishing lies in the take. The enthralling and hypnotic experience of seeing a fish coming to the surface to hit the fly can`t be matched by much.
The salmon dry fly take
Some salmon will take the fly savagely wild and furiously fast; others will take their time, rise slowly, and finally suck the fly from the surface – Bigger salmon in the 10 – 15 kilo range will normally be slow starters. They will need a well-presented fly to allow them to work their way up to the surface. Working out the right tactic to use is very much a matter of experience, and the angler will need to consider river depth and river flow when presenting the fly. The eyesight of salmon is built to look for insects in a cone-shaped 96-degree window upwards – If it finds interest in your drifting fly, it will start its rise with precision so it cuts right into the path of the fly when it is above it lies…. These things aren’t always certain terms, and salmon will sometimes act in unpredictable ways – Some may follow the fly closely for many meters downstream before grabbing it – Some fish will jump high out of the water and then grab the fly from above.
See our small film on a salmon missing the dry fly by millimetres – or maybe just pushing it away ?
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