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Winter Fishing

It was March 2, 2019. The plan was to meet at Wilson’s creek in Mortimer NC, to pre-fish for the upcoming Wilsons Creek Clean-Up tournament in two weeks on March 23rd. Evidently, the North Carolina game and fish commission decided to wait until March 4th to stock rather than their original plan of March 1st, so we simply decided to try another venue. I actually prefer fishing for wild trout or holdovers over stocked fish, as it makes things much more challenging, but I wanted to fish the creek as it would exist come tournament time. I have learned that pre-fishing a venue before it is stocked, is completely night and day different than when it comes tournament time and it is full of stocked fish. We did have a tournament coming up on the Watauga River in Boone, NC on March 9th, and

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Fly Principles

I can’t remember a time that I wasn’t chasing fish with a fly rod and posing in front of a camera with my most recent catch. (Insert kid photos with fish) Well, I take that back. There was a short time……during my college years, that I devoted most of my time to chasing something else and only part of the time fishing, but shortly after graduation, I landed a keeper (pardon the pun), and went right back to chasing fish.
What an amazing experience I have had over the years learning to fly fish. Although I have fly fished since a small child, and guided out west during the college years, I can remember vividly when I first decided to get serious about fly angling. I have always loved a challenge, and when I wasn’t good at something, I would work and work at it until I became good at it. It wasn’t until my wife and I decided to relocate our family and ended up landing between two of the greatest tail waters in the United States that I realized that I was not a good fly angler. It was here that I received my first real lessons in humility when it came to fly angling! I would go to

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Mason Sims Notes

Initial conversation was about leader/tippet set up.
We want a leader that turns over a single nymph and a single dry very well. We want our tippet to be about the depth of the water for quick detection. If your tippet is too long it will take the bite much longer to be detected as it has more slack. Mason also does not like to use tippet rings as he says it gives a hinge point or a sag point in his leader. He ties his sighter

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George Daniel Notes

**** BIG EMPHASIS ON CASTING***** Euronymphing with Distance Tuck Cast Follow with Arms and Hands DON’T DROP SHOULDERS!!!!! Keep hands in front of you Strong Back Cast Move Hands towards target, then down to water Really hinge and cock wrist back Square Shoulders to target Longer pause on backcast (line has little weight so you…...

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