Red’s Tired of Tangling Your Nymph Rig?

Are spending more than 10% of your time dealing with snags, tangles, and other pesky interruptions?

At Red’s we use this rig in many of our University of Fly Fishing clinics and see great success.  Anglers experience efficiency and suffer less negative distraction. Your setup should be a joy to fish and cast, this rig in the diagram below does just that.  In order for you to get good at drifting and presenting a fly you need REPS.  Many reps.  Lots of casts, thousands of drifts.  An angler must have a smooth and efficient tempo, presenting their fly over and over again and in this process they become skilled. You’ll become a Ninja in no time if you can just stay untangled!

Many anglers spend half of their time retying and untangling some complicated rig they learned on YouTube. Probably from Red’s haha and that’s a shame.  Simple is awesome.  Follow this recipe, get back to the basics and go have a great time moving fluidly throughout your fishery.

While there are anglers that can and should utilize more complex rigs, if you are looking to improve your fishing abilities; the “Keep it Simple Stupid” approach is best.  If some things on the list below annoy you while fishing, try the setup diagramed here and free yourself of distraction. You’ll be faster to rig up, and now able to focus on all the other skills like mending, stalking trout, and reading water because you won’t be picking apart a birds nest every 5-10 minutes at 15 minutes a pop.

Threats to a Nymph Angler’s Tempo and Efficiency:

  1. Tangling your fly/indicator/tippet
  2. Snagging Bottom (most of the time your nymph really just needs to be in the bottom HALF of the water column)
  3. Snagging Behind You
  4. Standing on Your Line (or snagging your handling line in the grass/shrubs)
  5. Trying to cast too far
  6. Trying to feed too much slack line downstream
  7. Changing flies too much
  8. Setups that take too long setup (2 fly rigs)
  9. Not Having a Well Developed Casting Strategy (consistent use of roll, overhead, or water based casts) for every drift. Simple rigs will help you develop this.
  10. Nymph setups that are too heavy (see #1 and #2)
Nymph Setup Diagram

The Pro’s Notes:

  • Indicator MUST be position and the point on the leader where the taper is most extreme.  This leaves exclusively fine tippet below the indicator allowing the nymph to sink fast and suspend directly below the indicator.
  • 7.5′ 4X Leaders are perfect for this. 9′ leaders can be more challenging to cast. You can repair your leader with Fluorocarbon tippet, but don’t overthink this. Start with a leader right out of the package.  No tippet material required.
  • Yarn as an indictor material is essential. To fish a nymph suspended it must float slower than the surface currents. The weight of a Tungsten nymph will actually slow the yarn down.  Other “bobbers” won’t do this.
  • Tungsten Jig Nymphs are a huge advantage. Don’t try and fake it. Get a good nymph

Video Tip of Simple Nymph Rig

Video Tip of Nymph Setup

Guadalupe Valley Lakes

GV Lakes

Please exercise caution when enjoying the Guadalupe Valley Lakes this summer – adhere to all posted guidelines, safety measures and beware of prohibited and restricted zones in your area. GIS Map

CONSTRUCTION UNDERWAY ON LAKE DUNLAP DAM

LAKE DUNLAP

Construction to restore Lake Dunlap is underway, with the Texas Water Development Board (TWDB) providing Guadalupe-Blanco River Authority (GBRA) with authorization to issue the formal notice to proceed on Friday, May 14. The estimate timeline for completion of the project is 24 months, pending unforeseen weather delays.

LAKE MCQUEENEY

Currently in design phase with final design anticipated to be completed in November 2021

The Texas Water Development Board approved GBRA’s application for $40 million from the Clean Water State Revolving Fund Program on February 10, 2021

The Lake McQueeney Water Control and Improvement District was approved by voters on November 3, 2020

LAKE PLACID

Currently in design phase with final design anticipated to be completed in November 2021

The Texas Water Development Board approved GBRA’s application for $40 million from the Clean Water State Revolving Fund Program on February 10, 2021

The Lake Placid Water Control and Improvement District was approved by voters on November 3, 2020

Stay up to date with this link

NBFF May Meeting – May 26th, 7:00 pm

Once again, Darryl Yarbrough has reserved the Summit’s pavilion for meeting on May 26th at 7:00 pm. The Summit is located at 13105 River Road and the pavilion is behind the clubhouse/pool area.

We will have a short business meeting followed by the “Casting Rodeo” once again.  Seems as if all enjoyed last time so we will try it again.  Hopefully, there will be less wind this time (that’s my excuse).  Points awarded for accuracy and distance.  Top 3 will win prizes and a special prize for last place.  So…..bring you favorite rod and let’s have some fun.

Sorry for the short notice but I have been out of town for a few days.

Colorado Parks and Wildlife

Colorado Parks and Wildlife enacts emergency fishing closure on heavily fished portion of Yampa River below Stagecoach Reservoir

OAK CREEK, Colo. – Due to critically low water flow caused by dry conditions and minimal snowpack levels, Colorado Parks and Wildlife (CPW) will implement a mandatory fishing closure on a 0.6-mile stretch of the Yampa River between the dam at Stagecoach State Park downstream to the lowermost park boundary.

The closure begins May 25 and will continue until further notice.

“Should the flow rate increase substantially for a continuous period of time, CPW will re-evaluate the emergency fishing closure,” said CPW Senior Aquatic Biologist Lori Martin. “But because of the current conditions, we need to take this course of action now.”

CPW works closely with the Upper Yampa Water Conservancy District (UYWCD), who owns and operates Stagecoach Reservoir, to stay informed on reservoir releases and monitor drought conditions. UYWCD is finalizing a contract with the Colorado Water Trust for environmental releases later in the year.

“Timing (environmental releases) is critical to the health of the river system,” said UYWCD General Manager Andy Rossi. “We manage the reservoir and collaborate with our partners to ensure that water is available and legal mechanisms are in place to release water when the river needs it most. Unfortunately, flows are already low, but hot and dry summer months are still to come,” said Rossi.

Water releases are currently only at 20% of average, and will be dropping to less than 15% of average for this time period. When water flows are minimal, fish become concentrated in residual pool habitat and become stressed due to increased competition for food resources. The fish become much easier targets for anglers, an added stressor that can result in increased hooking mortality.

“We are trying to be as proactive as possible to protect the outstanding catch-and-release fishery we have downstream of Stagecoach Reservoir,” said CPW Area Aquatic Biologist Bill Atkinson. “This stretch of the river receives a tremendous amount of fishing pressure, especially in the spring when other resources might not be as accessible. This emergency closure is an effort to protect the resource by giving the fish a bit of a reprieve as they can become quite stressed during these extreme low-flow conditions. This spring we have not witnessed a spike in flows, which can offer fish protection and allow them to recoup energy following the spring spawn season.”

CPW advises anglers to find alternative areas to fish until the order is rescinded. Many other local areas will become more fishable soon as runoff tapers down. Several area lakes are also opening and should be fishing well.

CPW asks for cooperation from anglers, who should be aware the mandatory fishing closure will be enforced by law with citations issued for anyone violating the order.

Wildlife officials warn when a fish population is significantly affected by low stream flows or other unfavorable environmental conditions, it could take several years for it to fully recover if not protected. Given the extreme drought conditions we are currently faced with, other stretches of river in this area may be subject to additional closures this season.

Like many rivers and streams in western Colorado, the Yampa River offers world-class fishing and attracts thousands of anglers each year, providing a source of income to local businesses that depend on outdoor recreation.

“We ask for the public’s patience and cooperation,” said Stagecoach State Park Manager Craig Preston. “It is very important that we do what we can to protect this unique fishery, not only for anglers, but for the communities that depend on the tourism these resources support.”

For more information, contact Stagecoach State Park at 970-736-2436, or CPW’s Steamboat Springs office at 970-870-2197.

For more information about fishing in Colorado, including alternative places to fish, visit the CPW website.