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Nice flies Hans, I too have gone away from the detached body styled daddies to a tied in body as after a few fish, I need to tie on a new fly! And boy these norwegian fish go mad for daddies.......so that alot of tying to do......

Hi, nice flies and they should work well for Norwegian SWFF. But to be honest, I've found white and charteuse flies, wolly buggers, various shrimp flies and a few black muddlers will cover pretty much all of your needs.

The white and charteuse covers the herring/sardines
Wolly Buggers cover lug and ragworms
Shrimps obviously shrimps
and black muddlers can't be beaten at night worked on a floating line.

I use a floater at night and intermediate and lead sinker during the day. This will cover all of your SWFF needs in Norway :P

Submitted by fontinalis fan on

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What a great fly! I guide at a brook trout lake in Labrador. It has monster pike along with huge brookies. Been tying deer hair poppers all along. Very time consuming. Definitely going to give some of these a plop or two this coming season. (The brookies will likely hit them more than the pike! )

Thanks, Martin. The other files were too big to post. DOH!!!

The Carp was my first one on a new rod I had picked up a few days before. It was a 7 foot 8 inch Sage four weight. I was just trying it out on the big Shellcrackers in the Shennandoah River and I saw the Carp lolling under a huge log. I had the nymph on and threw it above the fish a few times until if got right under it's nose. It glided over sucked it up. The fish fought for one hour and fifteen minutes. A man and his son watched the whole thing. They thought that I was fighting a huge Brown Trout. The man offered to take my picture. When I went in to revive the fish he exploded from my hands and swam out to a school of tailing Carp and commenced feeding like nothing had happened. There were twenty pound Carp in the school but I had to meet my wife about thirty minutes before so I left. Since then I have returned to the same spot with similar luck.

Speaking of luck, I am off to the National Park to try my new Ross on some Brook Trout. I'll let you know how it goes.

Hello Dada, I`m from Turkey and living in Norway now. :)
There is a lot of beautiful places in Turkey for FlyFishing. An example Blacksea Coasts (Karadeniz) you can catch Seatrouts. In West Turkey Aegean Sea; between Bodrum and Selcuk there is big rivers for trouts.
My Favorit place is the "Abant Lake" between Bolu and Düzce called 7 Rivers-Trouts-Paradise !
Here, I found a page for you, A to Z Fish types of saltwater and freshwater in Turkey.

http://www.oltaciatlas.com

Submitted by Tom Murphy on

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If I might be so bold as to correct you on your knots. Your first leader to fly-line knot is in fact a needle knot. So called because a needle is used to first penetrate the end of the flyline. Your second knot is in fact a nail knot as a nail is used to take the wraps of nylon. The nail is then gently removed, the tag end is pushed through and the knot tightened. The nail can be used for both knots.

I had a lot of tough times trying to figure Carp out. The best success that I have had is like this. I tie a ratty looking reddish, brownish, orangeish nymph and I weight it well. I use a long hook. Maybe 3X or longer in a size #10. I wrap .035 lead free round wire from just over the point of the hook to about an eigth of an inch from the eye to leave space for a head. I wrap over a thin layer of super glue to hold the wire from spinning. Tie on a few fibers of anything for a tail and dub something really fuzzy and light brown or orange for a body. Finish the head with some kind of light softish hen hackle of varying lengths and give it a try. There are so many things that Carp eat that live on the bottom that getting anal about tying immitations is a waste of time for me. Cast well upstream of the fish and let the fly float down and under them. Twitch it along like a big nymph struggling along in life and if they see it they will suck it up. Look at how excited I was in this picture. I peed my pants. I caught this 28 inch, fourteen pound Carp on a messy little barbless fly like the one I described.

thanks for the insight. the river i fish is about 40ft across at most and is usually slow flowing and relativey clear, the carp can be extremely spooky and the other day i had to drift a run full of large fish for over an hour before oi got one two pounder. it was a test of endurance and patience that no other kind of fish has been able to give me. im beggining to think that the really big ones only bitea fly under almost perfect conditions with a perfect drift.

There are so many variables to your question that it is hard to answer. There are a lot more specifics to Carp fishing than I thought when I first took it up. When the mulberrys are ripe in the DC area you can find Carp waiting under the trees and a black deer hair ball about the size of a......well, mulberry, works great. I have had zero luck casting to moving fish. That is traveling fish rather than milling or tailing fish. Are the small rivers that you are talking about fast and clear or slow and muddy. Or maybe somewhere in between. Stalking them is fun but you really can spook them if you are not careful. And the jump not only at the sight of you but at the sight of line hitting the water. When they are mudding they are better targets. They are face down and concentrating on the bottom. A brownish or reddish nymph thrown into the area where they are feeding can get them. The book Carp On The Fly by Renolds, Befus and Berryman is a pretty good read. It covers a huge area of fly fishing for the Golden Bones. You can get it brand new on Amazon for as little as ten bucks. Have fun and check your backing.

Submitted by Randon B. Jolph on

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As it is I think this photo is way overrated. I'd say about 2, but try cutting off the right area with the pine trees so the angler appears in the golden spot. Then we'd be talking!

Submitted by Randon B. Jolph on

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Another way overrated pic. Only after a hard fight can you get a fish to "pose" so steady. 5 for the picture and 0 for the imagination. You get 2-3, let's say 2.

Submitted by Randon B. Jolph on

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Honestly, this photo is way overrated. You get 1 since I hate seeing trout get squized.

Submitted by Randon B. Jolph on

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Very good though not very original. No more no less, you get 4 dude.

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