Author Topic: Carp Flies?  (Read 1599 times)

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Offline wsu44

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Carp Flies?
« on: November 19, 2003, 05:02:00 PM »
I ma taking a fly fishing class at WSU and I was wondering has anyone ever tried to go after carp?  I have found a few places on the internet but I was wondering if there is any particular fly that has been tried and proven that is good for carp?  Thanks for the advice.

Offline gino

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Carp Flies?
« Reply #1 on: November 20, 2003, 04:22:57 AM »
Years ago I saw some carp feeding on mulberries that were falling from a mulberry tree overhanging the lake. So.... I went home & wrapped a little lead wire on a hook, tied green floss on it with a little bit sticking out past the bend of the hook, spun purple deer hair on and trimmed it to a mulberry shape. The next time I went fishing I positioned my canoe about 40' from the mulberry tree, dipped my "mulberry fly" in plastic worm oil and cast it under the tree. Actually caught some carp! Only used the fly that one time, proved it could be done. The plastic worm oil was probably the effective ingredient.
gino :grin:

Offline eroyd

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Carp Flies?
« Reply #2 on: November 20, 2003, 10:46:39 AM »
I use to fish for carp when I was a kid. I suspect any fly that can represent a ball of cheese or a chunk of weiner on a dead drift would work. :wink:

Offline willis5

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Carp Flies?
« Reply #3 on: December 15, 2003, 06:55:55 AM »
caught them on dry dog food this summer!  :-D
Cheers,
Willis5

Offline missed_shot

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Carp Flies?
« Reply #4 on: March 23, 2004, 02:29:58 AM »
There is a book with the title - CARP ON A FLY- It has all kinds of good stuff. My favorite flies are mulberry imitations, and crayfish imitations.
DONUTS - IS THERE ANYTHING THEY CAN'T DO ??- HOMER SIMPSON

Offline Brett

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Carp Flies?
« Reply #5 on: April 26, 2004, 02:43:19 PM »
Ol' Rubber Lips pulls like a freight train!!!   They can be as wary as trout. I try to "match the hatch".  that is figure out what it is that they are feeding on then try to tie something that resembles it.  It could be mulberries, dogwood blossoms, ants you name it.  

Brett
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Offline hillbill

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carp
« Reply #6 on: May 07, 2004, 09:08:07 PM »
largest carp i ever seen caught was caught on a french fry. took almost an hour to land on 10lb tes spinnin rig. hate to think how long it wuld of took with fly rig. hey what the hell yu do with 30 lb carp anyway?

Offline Bugflipper

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Carp Flies?
« Reply #7 on: May 15, 2004, 10:05:51 AM »
I just use little black pieces of yarn wrapped in a spherical shape. I have caught them on terestrials and knats.
Molon labe

Offline Questor

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Carp Flies?
« Reply #8 on: March 01, 2005, 11:01:17 AM »
WSU:

It really depends on where and when you're fishing for them. The critters are so ubiquitous and versatile that you really need to regard them as different depending on waters you find them in. For example, I know one spot that is a blue ribbon trout stream, and there will be carp staging in the same water from which I catch brown and rainbow trout. Hard to believe, but true.  Other waters are practically opaque and if they're not taking from the surface, you're mostly wasting your time with a fly rod. They are opportunistic feeders, so they may be fixated on a "hatch" of cottonwood seeds, berries, or bugs at the surface.

The book Carp on a Fly is a good read, but is mostly concerned with catching them on clear flats in the great lakes.

A mulberry fly can be made by tying a ball of appropriately colored deer hair. A corn fly can be tied similarly. The difference is that you want a corn fly to be tied of more compacted deer hair.  A cottonwood fly is basically a bodyless hackle fly of white or light gray hackle.

It also helps to have a spinning rod and some night crawlers handy because there are days when you simply can't catch them on a fly, even though they're breaking all around.  They're the most frustrating fish I fish for.

Carp are underrated as a game fish. I've seen how quickly they can destroy a lake, so I don't like them to be introduced to new waters. After they're there, however, we may as well get used to the idea that they're not going away. Fishing for them is fine sport.
Safety first

Offline Woodbutcher

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Carp on a fly
« Reply #9 on: March 01, 2005, 01:55:58 PM »
Missed shot said it first, Carp on a Fly. Good book! (Inter-library loan is great! ) Mulberry flies in there also.
 Been there when a carp is caught on a fly, hard on the fingers holdin the line! Doesn't have to be big either, 12 to 14 inches is surprisingly strong!
 The go where they want when they want to. Midday with the sun bright overhead, and everything else down deep, they're in the shallows, carrying on.                                                                 Woodbutcher

Offline Thebear_78

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Carp Flies?
« Reply #10 on: March 01, 2005, 02:01:39 PM »
I have had good luck when using large nymph patterns when they are tailing, but the best fly for carp fishing is the corn fly.  Take a small wedge shape of yellow closed cell foam and wrap it on with white thread to create the yellow white effect of an actually corn cernal, make it slighly oversized and keep several of them in a baby food jar full of canned corn juice.  Yellow chinelle will work too, just make a small ball of it with a white head.  Throw out a few handfuls of corn and then cast into the chum pattern, dead drift.