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Artic Grayling
Posted: Sat Oct 24, 2009 9:30 am
by katch moore
Hey guys!!
I recently moved to Alberta, and there's some great Artic Grayling in the streams 5 mintues from my house, can anybody give me a tip on how and what kind of fly should use to hook onto one of those cool looking fish??
well i'm off to scout some new water/ice!!
thanks for the input.
Matt
Posted: Sat Oct 24, 2009 7:49 pm
by Salar
I caught a quite a few of them when I was travelling in Alaska and the Yukon. Anything that's black will work. Try swinging a #10 black Woolly Bugger or #10 black Doc Spratley. For surface action try a #12 black Humpy or #12 black Elk Hair Caddis.
Posted: Sat Oct 24, 2009 9:37 pm
by beeman
They seem to bite almost anything !
Red Tags work well and are an easy tie.
Posted: Sat Oct 24, 2009 11:00 pm
by Prairieboy
Only did it once but we caught a few on small black and black/yellow mepps spinners.
Posted: Sun Oct 25, 2009 11:49 am
by plncrzy
Prairieboy has it right... I have caught MANY in Northern Sask and all were caught on the smallest Mepps black spinner.
Keep in mind that these fish spook easy... IMHO they make brown trout seem like vacuum cleaner salesman.
As for Hard water fishing... There are a couple reservoirs up there, otherwise your stuck going into the foothill lakes for trout... These lakes can often freeze over HARD in October ... (Chinooks skip over the foothills.)
Posted: Sun Oct 25, 2009 3:54 pm
by Fishboy
KM: Check the regs carefully before you wet a line. On some creeks and rivers you might only be allowed a single, barbless hooks - no trebles.
Good luck with life out in Alberta!
Posted: Sun Oct 25, 2009 8:59 pm
by katch moore
thanks all for the tips,
I've checked the regs over and over. yeah the season closes at the end of the month. And yes Alberta is barbless.
Since my last outing with GettingJiggywithIt, i've been hooked big time on fly fishing. that's all i think about, and with the creeks i have with in a 30 minute drive is great.
well i finaly settled into the home. soon enough the waters going to be hard enough to punch a couple holes.
thanks all.
Posted: Mon Oct 26, 2009 7:18 am
by Prairieboy
Once the freeze happens you'll have no shortage of great wallleye, perch and pike action up in those area lakes.
Walleye stage in the west end of Slave Lake. That area is walleye heaven from first ice until June. The lake closes for the spawn but other than that it is great fishing.
Posted: Mon Oct 26, 2009 8:16 am
by getnjiggywithit
There is nothing like hooking into a big old mud shark on a fly rod!! A friend of mine went up north to fish, and he used small jigs and twister tales for the graylings! and did really well!!!