Topwater Bream Flies
Posted: Thu Mar 26, 2020 1:37 pm
As a club, we've been doing a lot of work on top water black bream in the last few years. Paul Vogel was one of the guys that kicked this off with the disco shrimp. We've done a lot of work since then, and there have been subtle improvements to what we are fishing now. Conditions need to be right to fish surface flies for bream. Different estuary systems also fish very differently to each other. There are however enough common ideas here and myself or someone else will start a thread on this.
Success with the Disco Shrimp got me thinking if this fly works, what other surface flies would work? Mid 2018, I had a trip to Mongolia. Some of the flies that I tied up for that were some hopper flies, large caddis, as well as cicadas. They all worked on the lenok and grayling that we encountered over there. As I had some left over flies, I decided to try them out on the bream. Another resource is the latest copy of Western Angler. Scott has an article in there regarding catching bream when there's an ant hatch.
It's still early days, and very much in experiment stages. So far, I've had quite a few hits, but haven't been able to convert those to hookup. It will happen, just need time on the water. The disco shrimp is still a more effective fly. We are generally fishing 2 up per boat, and the disco shrimp is still getting more attention. Out of the three patterns, the hopper has had the most attention. I've tweaked this pattern a little. Using Gamakatsu B10S #4 as the hook, as it's a little more saltwater resistant. I've also added an underbelly of UV Ice dub, as UV seems to play a large part of success in disco shrimp flies. Below is a video of the hopper pattern that I used.
https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=mo ... M%3DHDRSC3
With all three patterns, I'm just waking the fly. ie subtle movement to suggest an insect trying to get away.
Hopper. For the foam, I've glued 3 x 2mm foam together to make a 6mm thick foam. Floats nice and high. It's a reasonably straight forward tie. You just need to make up the legs and glue foam sheets before hand. Quite a quick tie when you have all the bits and pieces together.
Success with the Disco Shrimp got me thinking if this fly works, what other surface flies would work? Mid 2018, I had a trip to Mongolia. Some of the flies that I tied up for that were some hopper flies, large caddis, as well as cicadas. They all worked on the lenok and grayling that we encountered over there. As I had some left over flies, I decided to try them out on the bream. Another resource is the latest copy of Western Angler. Scott has an article in there regarding catching bream when there's an ant hatch.
It's still early days, and very much in experiment stages. So far, I've had quite a few hits, but haven't been able to convert those to hookup. It will happen, just need time on the water. The disco shrimp is still a more effective fly. We are generally fishing 2 up per boat, and the disco shrimp is still getting more attention. Out of the three patterns, the hopper has had the most attention. I've tweaked this pattern a little. Using Gamakatsu B10S #4 as the hook, as it's a little more saltwater resistant. I've also added an underbelly of UV Ice dub, as UV seems to play a large part of success in disco shrimp flies. Below is a video of the hopper pattern that I used.
https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=mo ... M%3DHDRSC3
With all three patterns, I'm just waking the fly. ie subtle movement to suggest an insect trying to get away.
Hopper. For the foam, I've glued 3 x 2mm foam together to make a 6mm thick foam. Floats nice and high. It's a reasonably straight forward tie. You just need to make up the legs and glue foam sheets before hand. Quite a quick tie when you have all the bits and pieces together.