General
Info
Fishing
of the nymph and emerger is not particularly
successful in regards to this family
of Mayfly. The nymphs do not often get
washed away from the rocks and are therefore
usually only available to the fish on
their swim to the surface. This does
not take them long as they are a large
and strong Mayfly and reach the surface
in a very short distance unlike other
types that make require several attempts
and rests. Having said this a large
nymph pattern with plenty of inherent
movement will take fish where these
Mayfly are present. Mike Spry had a
particularly good pattern for imitating
the Coloburiscoides and it can be found
in Australia's Best Trout Flies. It
incorporates the right size, shape,
colour and movement. This makes it hard
to beat when fishing rivers like the
Swampy and Mitta Mitta.
Once the
nymph gets to the surface he emerges
very quickly. In fact, so quickly that
fishing a dedicated emerger pattern
is largely a waste of effort. Especially
as the hatch is often right on dark
and changing flies at this time is often
frustrating and especially time consuming.
The dun itself doesn't spend much time
on the water and if there is any sort
of breeze their wings dry almost instantly
sending them fluttering off to the nearest
bit of streamside vegetation. However
for the most part good numbers will
remain on the water and many fish, sometimes
very large specimens will rise with
much vigour. Sometimes hatches will
be just too large and getting a fish
to take yours amongst the naturals is
just about impossible. Either walk downstream
into the pool as recommended by Phillip
Weigall in his article in FlyLife Issue
11. This gives the majority of duns
a chance to fly off leaving a lesser
number on the water but still plenty
to encourage the fish to rise. Sometimes
much better fish too live in this deeper
stretch of river. Or you can put on
a greatly oversized pattern say a number
6-8 and repeatedly cast over working
fish. This hatch is usually short in
duration and extremely heavy in numbers
of insects emerging. What this means
is that often very large fish will move
from their hides to take up the prime
feeding spots at the top of the pools
where they get first choice of the duns.
Patterns should be light coloured underneath
with a very prominent wing. A thorax
tie is best for the fast water and a
paradun for those fishing further back
into the pools.
The Spinner
of the Kossie is impossible to miss.
It comes out on evening especially on
those nights when the wind backs right
off leaving that last hour or two becalmed.
Mating spinners interlock at a point
above the riffles and the females carry
their fertilised eggs forward into the
pool tail out where they deposit them
by dipping their abdomens into the meniscus.
Fish feed voraciously when this occurs
and you will often find numerous smaller
fish slashing them from the top. After
successfully mating or depositing their
eggs they fall to the water spent where
they again provide protein for the fish.
Large concentrations of them can accumulate
in backwaters and the best will often
have a very good fish mopping them up
with very gentle sipping rises. A great
tactic that many fly fishers use is
to a backwater that can be viewed
looking west which gives the angler
a great view utilising the fading light.