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Creative Dates on a Budget
The Quad News
The situation gets even more complicated for those of us who don't have the kind of cash to blow on a three-course meal and a dozen roses. This year, to avoid all of the money drama, try exploring more budget-friendly date ideas around Hamden and New ...

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Palm Beach Post

Big Cypress swamp tromp
Palm Beach Post
Ranger Melissa Henneman, left, shows a bromeliad growing on a cypress tree to hikers Saturday during one of the free swamp walks offered by Big Cypress National Preserve. The red flower of this cardinal wild pine, a type of bromeliad, was found jutting ...



Telegraph.co.uk

Treasure the complete Australia experience
Telegraph.co.uk
The Northern Territory is six times the size of the United Kingdom, with a population of only 230000; while Victoria, which covers about the same area as the entire British Isles, boasts almost every imaginable type of landscape – from snow-capped ...

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Petside

10 Great First Dates for Dog Owners
Petside
The gent who arranges for this type of date wants to make sure your dogs get along. If you both like to “give back” and want to help dogs in need, spend a Saturday afternoon at a shelter. Call the organization first or review its website for the ...



Cass Bird's Talks 'Rewilding'
Women's Wear Daily
She rolls her eyes at her own eagerness with the iPhone photo gallery, the modern mom's wallet with plastic fold-out photo sleeve. “This is so dumb, so typical dumb-Mom…” Bird groans, “but I'm going to do it anyway.” It doesn't take much time with ...



County to cut down 1000 trees at Mount Madonna County Park
Contra Costa Times
But for the next three months, the park, which straddles the Santa Cruz Mountains between Gilroy and Watsonville, will play host to a new type of visitor: loggers with buzzing chain saws, aluminum helmets and heavy trucks. Concerned by the spread of a ...

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CANOE

'Be prepared' for fun, says Scouts Canada
CANOE
By Charlotte Percival-Gonzalez, Special to QMI AGENCY With her perfect hair and designer wardrobe, Kate Middleton doesn't look the type to roast marshmallows around the campfire. But the glamorous Duchess of Cambridge could soon be doing exactly that, ...

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Clothing Matters: What We Wear to Church
ChristianityToday.com
Picture, for example, a young woman dressed in hiking boots, sweatshirt, and shorts. Around a campfire the message might be, merely, "I'm ready for the trail." Choosing that same outfit for her aunt's funeral would say something rather different.

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Google News

Outdoors Featured Article

Fishing the Dropper Fly

02/06/12

by Cameron Larsen

Over the past decade or so, some fly fishers have hailed the dropper system as the latest and greatest thing to hit fly fishing since the graphite fly rod. The truth is the two fly dropper system has been around since fly fishing began. Like all techniques it has gone in and out of style over the generations. As new technologies are developed, fly fishing trends change, some things are labeled obsolete only to experience a re-birth later on. For whatever reason the dropper fly has experienced just such a re-birth and its uses are becoming more varied as well.

The two fly dropper system is simply a way to fish two flies at one time, actually a fly fisher could fish more than two flies, but for this article we will stick to just two flies. The advantages of fishing two flies can be many. You can more quickly identify the 'hot fly', if fish hit one fly repeatedly you can eliminate the dropper fly. Another advantage is your ability to search through multiple levels in the water column. The theory goes that finding the depth where fish are holding will increase your chances of getting hits. Depending on the food sources immediately available, fish can be holding down at the bottom, or swirling near the surface, a dropper allows you to explore these possibilities.

Dropper Techniques

There are two basic dropper combinations. One is the sinker/sinker combo, and the other is the dry fly/dropper, sometimes called the hopper/dropper as hopper patterns work very well for this. In the sinker/sinker combo, two sub-surface patterns, are used, usually combined with split shot weights.

There are two trains of thought in the sinker/sinker combo. One is you attach the smaller fly first in the sequence and then attach the larger fly, such as a stonefly nymph and attach a split shot in between the flies. The idea here is that the smaller fly, perhaps an emerger pattern, will stay in the upper portion of the water column while the stonefly will sink down, towards the bottom, where the fish is most apt to strike them.

Others (including yours truly) take the opposite approach. Attach the bigger fly first, take that Stonefly nymph for example, put the weight above it, and then attach your emerger pattern. The idea is that the Stonefly nymph will sink to the bottom, and drift in its proper element. And dangling freely behind and above it will be your emerger or whatever smaller nymph you would like. Personally I have had great success with this rigging, although I must say I don't use the previously mentioned one very often.

The hopper/dropper combo, takes the same principles but applies them to a dry fly. Using a larger dry fly with lots of buoyancy, and gooped up with Gink, you then attach the sub-surface dropper pattern that will have you fishing sub-surface as well. If you are using a buoyant enough dry fly, then you may even use a small split shot above your sub-surface pattern, to help it stay down.

Rigging the Dropper

There are fancy ways to attach dropper flies to your tippet, some use the tag ends of the tippet, to attach the dropper fly, others use loops on the tippet itself. But for me there are two very simple ways to rig the dropper. After you have tied on your fly at the end of the tippet, you can easily attach about two feet of tippet through the eye of that fly, and then attach another fly and the other end of this tippet. This method does not work well if you are planning on attaching a split shot above the second fly. The other method involves rigging up normally, and then at the end of the bend of the fly already tied in, tie in a two foot or so section of tippet, and then tie in your fly at the end of this section. The drawback of this method is, it is easier to lose your dropper fly, especially when using barbless hooks.

Cast these riggings with care, as it is easier to tangle your flies. Once tangled it is often easier to cut the rigging off and redo it, rather than try to untangle two flies. Also cast very tightly, as it can become unwieldy with wild casting or under windy conditions. The last warning is in regards to releasing fish, always make sure both hooks are out of harms way, before releasing your fish. It is very easy during the release to snag the fish, your hands or your legs/waders, with the free hook.

Dropper riggings are great for searching for fish, they take a little practice to cast and to tie. But the rewards will quickly outweigh the time invested to learn the proper way to do it.

About the Author

Cameron Larsen is a retired commericial fly tier and fly fishing guide. He now operates The Big Y Fly Company. http://www.bigyflyco.com/flyfishinghome.html He can be reached at info@bigyflyco.com. This article will appear in the Big Y Fly Fishing E-Zine at Http://www.bigyflyco.com/Bigyflyfishingezine.html


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