Willow slurpers

Posted By on July 4, 2009

I fished with Darren McDonald last Wednesday and we had another interesting day on the flats. The Hex hatch was beginning to wind down but a few adults were clinging to willows around the edge of the lake. Bass were still up shallow but moving around with much more urgency than before – as if they knew the easy food was thinning out and they wanted to make as much of the remaining calories as possible.

Darren was treated to another day of glaring sun (at the beginning) and wind that made spotting and casting conditions rough. As the wind finally let up after noon, the atmosphere “popped” and storms bubbled up from the broth of heat and humidity. You can see the storms percolating in the background of the photo. The one big storm in the area sat right on top of us as we left and pounded the area with rain and wind.

Interesting side note . . . the willow trees have “seeded” and the carp were up sipping the fluffy seeds. They look much like Cottonwood seeds and form floating masses of fluff in back eddies and coves. At one point we could hear a large carp slurping the seeds off the surface; it sounded like someone dropping pebbles in a fountain. We looked around and saw a huge pair of orange lips working on a “seedline”. Darren did his best Blue Heron impersonation and after an agonizing several minutes (the carp kept moving every 5-10 seconds), put the fly right in the fish’s mouth. After a good fight, the carp pictured above was brought to hand.

(BTW – notice the Hex adult on Darren’s elbow!)

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One Response to “Willow slurpers”

  1. Jonathan says:

    Good talking to you on the phoen yesturday. I hope I can go out to the flats soon! HEre is that book on rough fish I mentioned: http://www.amazon.com/Fishing-Buffalo-Pursuit-Cuisine-Suckers/dp/081666532X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1246899208&sr=8-1

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North Texas Fly Fishing Adventures with Joel Hays

Imagine wading through ten inches of clear water,trying to be as quiet as possible. Fifty feet ahead is a pod of large fish "tailing" on the flat. You strip out fly line, make the cast, and pull your fly in front of the lead fish. After agonizing seconds the fish spots the fly, rushes forward for a quick grab, and feels the hook. The silence is broken as the fish accelerates across the flat, quickly exposing backing on your screaming reel. Sounds like a great day on the coast, or even an exotic bonefish flat, right? Actually it's a great description of the usual day my clients have fishing for Carp on the flats of Lake Ray Roberts where many clients are blown away by the water clarity and the actual ability to sight cast along miles of flats. Big spooky fish in shallow water. They fight and tail like Redfish and can sometimes rival Bonefish in nervousness. This is an EXCELLENT WAY to hone your flats fishing skills and test your "eyes" where it's more about stalking the fish than simply stumbling upon them. You will be a better flats angler!