Carp are difficult to catch fish on the fly. They are extremely wary and spook easily. However, they are quick to respect in the middle of fly fishing. For fly fishing for carp, you must have patience and the right equipment. Most use a weight rod configuration from June to August with a weight fly line forward. Heavy cloak must be used to land the big fish. 0x-3x is standard issue. Fluoro tippet is a must and will work to your advantage. Fluorine can not easily be seen by the fish and gives you a bit of an edge of the carp.
The presentation is the key. Not land the fly and "splat" surface. This is the case, you will scare the fish. You have to throw the fish in the past and draw the flies that feed the carp. Do not hit on the head or landing in front of them. The South Platte River is a mecca for fly fishing for carp. There is nothing like him a 20-pound carp in moving water. They are also the most educated in the west carp. They were caught in several years and are now carefully fishermen. The board is a great place to improve your skills and practice. If you can catch a carp in the South Platte River, then you can catch a fish anywhere.
Carp feed plate primarily on crustaceans and worms in the South. Well, they will eat almost anything they consider food. Including leeches, insects, seeds, other fish and snails. Carp are opportunistic, but your fly should look exactly like what they eat. Move the flies too fast and the fish will lose interest. Carp tend to be in a deep cave pools and slow runs. This is not always the surfaces on which they feed. Carp love sandy and muddy bottoms where they feed and view the bottom of the can eat. Their mouths are like vacuum cleaners and suck it spit the floor and everything that is not food. If you are in the act of feeding can begin, then your chances increase exponentially. Choosing the right fish is the key, I called fish "happy." Those who go through the day without knowing that you're there. Carp in the South Platte can easily tip the scales over 30 pounds. The further north and east you go, the more fish there are, the more they grow.
The presentation is the key. Not land the fly and "splat" surface. This is the case, you will scare the fish. You have to throw the fish in the past and draw the flies that feed the carp. Do not hit on the head or landing in front of them. The South Platte River is a mecca for fly fishing for carp. There is nothing like him a 20-pound carp in moving water. They are also the most educated in the west carp. They were caught in several years and are now carefully fishermen. The board is a great place to improve your skills and practice. If you can catch a carp in the South Platte River, then you can catch a fish anywhere.
Carp feed plate primarily on crustaceans and worms in the South. Well, they will eat almost anything they consider food. Including leeches, insects, seeds, other fish and snails. Carp are opportunistic, but your fly should look exactly like what they eat. Move the flies too fast and the fish will lose interest. Carp tend to be in a deep cave pools and slow runs. This is not always the surfaces on which they feed. Carp love sandy and muddy bottoms where they feed and view the bottom of the can eat. Their mouths are like vacuum cleaners and suck it spit the floor and everything that is not food. If you are in the act of feeding can begin, then your chances increase exponentially. Choosing the right fish is the key, I called fish "happy." Those who go through the day without knowing that you're there. Carp in the South Platte can easily tip the scales over 30 pounds. The further north and east you go, the more fish there are, the more they grow.