Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Neuse River wade

Fished with my son Luke again today. We tried a stretch of river that we had not fished before.  As always it produced great.  The Neuse river in Raleigh is a prolific fishery a true hidden gem when it comes to flyfishing and light tackle fishing.  Some caddis flies are around and I fished Elk Hair Caddis in size 16 that produced well getting consistent bluegill and redbreast bites.  The best fish of the day were a small largemouth on the EHC fly and my first Redear Sunfish also known as a shellcracker.  In a slower stretch of river I made a 60 ft cast deep in a logjam and got the fish to hit on a size 14 flashback prince nymph.  They are impressive fish strong and neat to look at. You can never really fish too small here but too large will cost you bites and hook ups.  Longer casts will help too with the more weary fish.  Tandem rigs like a hopper and a dropper or a streamer and a nymph or wet fly give the fish options and you will get better size fish.  I generally walk the middle of the river and fish the shaded areas under trees and by logs in the river. Working upstream helps to add a more stealthy approach when the river is low.  You know when you deliver a great cast in a likely spot it will surely produce. Get out and fish it's primetime!

Fly Tackle: 3 or 4 weight fly rods, 9 ft tapered leader to 5x tippet

Dry flies: Elk Hair Caddis, Humpies 14- 16, 
Terrestrials: Hoppers, Ants, Beetles, Crickets 8- 14
Nymphs: Beadhead caddis, Prince, Zug Bug, Estaz Stone flies 12- 16
Streamers: Muddler Minnow, Wooly Bugger in black, peacock or white Size 6- 12

Spin Tackle: Ultralight rod and reel rigged with 4 to 6 lb test line.
Berkly Power Bait Pre Rigged Atomic Tubes in white, green and pearl.
Gulp Cricket
Johnson Beetle Spin
Roadrunners

Fish Species(I have caught): redbreast sunfish, bluegill, green sunfish, largemouth bass, white bass, white perch, crappie, yellow perch, chub, catfish, Redear Sunfish.

Conditions: USGS Water data says the Neuse was flowing 116 cfs today at the spillway in Wakefield. It was a sunny, warm day and 80 degrees.  The water is low and ideal for wet wading.  Sunscreen and or sun protective clothing was necessary such as UPF clothing and a UV Buff. 

Wildlife: Great Blue Heron, Red Shouldered Hawk, heard a Great Horned Owl hooting loud close by but didn't see him, Ticks(ugh), River Cooter turtle, lots of Dragon Flies and Damsel Flies by the river. 







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