Fishing with Rod Discussion Forum

Fishing in British Columbia => Fly Fishing Cafe => Topic started by: koifish on August 12, 2014, 01:46:17 PM

Title: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: koifish on August 12, 2014, 01:46:17 PM
So my buddy went to pegleg and caught his sockeye and Im going tmr

Is it possible to fly fish pegleg and catch anything? 
Or am I crazy?
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: Humpy on August 12, 2014, 01:50:11 PM
Now, the answer would be no,
wait until the upper area is accessible then it is great fly fishing territory, have caught many pinks up there.
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: koifish on August 12, 2014, 01:53:55 PM
Thanks humpy

But would I have a chance? Or no?  Ill keep it in the truck just in case haha
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: Humpy on August 12, 2014, 01:55:31 PM
Not a chance, pegleg is crowded because only one area of the whole bar is accessible by foot, so there would be no room.
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: Rachid on August 12, 2014, 08:51:10 PM
Never leave your fishing gears in the car or any valuable items , there is a chance someone will break into the car.
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: SkagitDreamer on August 12, 2014, 09:19:29 PM
I had a set of fly gear stolen from my vehicle on the chilliwack before... Bad idea leaving anything behind.
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: bunnta on August 13, 2014, 12:19:37 PM
Peg leg? Probably not, I managed to hook one while fishing for pinks last year and no it couldn't be flossed if the hook was near the nose of the fish Also had a small coho smash my fly as well so I must have been doing something right. Still going to try and hook one this year on the fly to see if the area I am fishing will make them bite.
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: Chehalis_Steel on August 13, 2014, 04:06:55 PM
Yea its possible, but the reality is that you will be flossing some of your fish. Pinks are a lot better if you want to fly fish the Fraser. That's the only thing I really do there anymore...rather be trout fishing other rivers when there aren't pinks.
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: koifish on August 13, 2014, 04:23:00 PM
Went out today got some sockeye and lost a spring
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: Knnn on August 25, 2014, 11:00:15 AM
On the fly and at Pegleg?

Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: featherchucker on August 30, 2014, 12:18:24 AM
I have caught many salmon on the fly in the fraser.I wouldn't fly fish peg during sock season though. If you want socks then look for bars that are too snaggy for the bottom bouncers.If you use the propper tip then your line should slide over the boulders that would otherwise snag the bouncers. Try a very large muddler or if there is good vis then a pink prawn pattern. I have also hooked socks on the thompson indicator fishing.Once the coho show up and the bouncers are gone then there is much better fly fishing.
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: HOOK on August 30, 2014, 11:44:03 PM
I have been successful for socks on the fly many times. The water to look for is where its too slow for proper bouncing and is slow(ish) out 50-100' from shore. Sockeye amongst other salmon will run this soft shoulder and often come in even as close as where your standing. I have hooked many while stripping my line in past buddies down stream to re-cast. I normally use chartreuse flies of various patterns/sizes only because the bright green shows up well in the murky water.

I may be out there Monday in one area I'm pretty positive will be producing now  :D
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: bigsnag on August 31, 2014, 03:46:02 PM
With the water temperature hovering around 19 - 20C. I hope everyone will just take their 2 sox and go home. Sometimes just because it is legal does not make it right to hook and release  40-50 fish.  This goes a lot deeper than the method of how one fishes,  it's about a persons character and integrity.
 
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: clarkii on August 31, 2014, 11:59:45 PM
^ that is true.

Also do not forget about the water discharge rates.
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: Knnn on September 02, 2014, 05:03:36 PM
I'll second the Squamish poacher in pink or orange.  Recently had success with a small imitation (ok bastardization) of an orange general practitioner.

featherchucker, what do you mean by proper tippet?  I have been using a medium - heavy sink tip with 3 foot of 15 lbs mono

(PS to the mass unwashed horde, no; the fish were not flossed with the fly, this was in clear water, all hooked in the snout or inside the lip and when the bite turned off no fish were caught on any type or colour of fly)
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: HOOK on September 03, 2014, 05:13:39 PM
I'll second the Squamish poacher in pink or orange.  Recently had success with a small imitation (ok bastardization) of an orange general practitioner.

featherchucker, what do you mean by proper tippet?  I have been using a medium - heavy sink tip with 3 foot of 15 lbs mono

(PS to the mass unwashed horde, no; the fish were not flossed with the fly, this was in clear water, all hooked in the snout or inside the lip and when the bite turned off no fish were caught on any type or colour of fly)

Where the he** are you finding clear water in the Fraser ?? everywhere seems to be way more muddy and next to no visibility then years past, unless your fishing the Harrison. In that case, carry on  :D
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: Knnn on September 03, 2014, 06:52:26 PM
oh at little confluence someone showed me.  Caught a good sized chum on the fly as well, Tuesday last week.  The pic is up on the other {cough .....reports} site.
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: ajransom on September 04, 2014, 11:32:05 AM
With the water temperature hovering around 19 - 20C. I hope everyone will just take their 2 sox and go home. Sometimes just because it is legal does not make it right to hook and release  40-50 fish.  This goes a lot deeper than the method of how one fishes,  it's about a persons character and integrity.
 

Yep, I agree.
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: ajransom on September 04, 2014, 11:34:44 AM
Chum? Already?
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: HOOK on September 04, 2014, 04:31:54 PM
Chum? Already?


yup, someone had kept one at Bowmans at some point before last Saturday but when they realized what it was left it behind. I know this because it was dead on shore with the gills cut to bleed it and the seagulls had plucked the eyes out already. There was hardly any of the bars showing and the ones you could make out were so faint my dad asked me more than once if I was sure it was a chum LoL
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: Knnn on September 05, 2014, 06:44:17 PM
That makes me sad, such beautiful fish.  A sockeye fly fishing hole I have recently frequented appeared to dry up because a couple of chum started to chase everything out.

Can't weight to target these beauties on the fly.
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: Magz on September 05, 2014, 06:47:09 PM
I saw on the albion test fishery a chum was netted a couple days ago also.
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: RalphH on September 06, 2014, 07:58:49 AM
the Rivers and creeks around Hope have a run of chum late start moving into the Fraser in August. By early October they will be spawning. Very nice fish and very edible so it is stupid to toss them as well as illegal
Title: Re: Fly fishing the Frasier
Post by: Knnn on September 06, 2014, 08:43:23 PM
Very nice fish and very edible so it is stupid to toss them as well as illegal

?  There's 2/day retention, no?  So either keep of carefully C/R, why would anyone toss them?  Sorry if I miss-understand.