| Dun Hatches
on the Goulburn 
The observations
noted here have been drawn from the cumulative experiences
of the three guides at Goulburn Valley Fly Fishing Centre.
We fish/guide on this river every day of the season
and there is always some new piece of the puzzle being
uncovered. We hope that this short introduction to our
dun hatches helps you to achieve better results when
visiting the Goulburn and helps you to unravel a little
bit more of the puzzle.
Introduction
Most
hatches of mayfly on Australian rivers are not well
documented. This is not due to any real anomaly in regards
to our trout rivers but rather the fact that we do not
have many people who actually fish full time on their
local waters. While we hear of huge emergences on waters
such as the Madison in Montana and on many of the British
Chalk streams relatively little is written about local
hatches. While our hatches are not generally speaking
as intense as some of those that occur in these more
famous locales (their seasons are shorter and more intense)
there is some fantastic fishing available on the Goulburn
River for those targeting the emerging Mayfly.
When?
Goulburn
River hatches of Mayfly can occur at anytime of the
year. Unlike many other trout fishing destinations,
a relatively mild climate means that it's never too
cold for Mayfly to appear. We often have Mayfly on both
the first and last days of the season in September and
June and on most days in between. Even in July last
year while filming spawning fish we encountered good
hatches and rising fish.
Blue Winged Olives
These
tiny duns are associated the world over with cold weather
and the seasons end. On the Goulburn we get weak hatches
of them in spring and they are usually the first of
the Mayfly family to appear. However it is the low water
conditions in autumn that most of us look forward to
when thinking about BWO's. Their arrival is usually
heralded by the first real frosts after the river has
dropped. Cold, clear and low flows are required for
the best hatches and the best month would have to be
May. Characterised by flows of 130 Megalitres per day
due to the cessation of irrigation demand this last
month of fishing before the season closes is pure magic.
More
often than not May consists of windless days and heavy
fogs that don't lift until lunch time. The first of
the duns appear about 10 am and it is possible to find
fish already dining on them however catching them is
not easy with every movement being silhouetted by the
thick fog. Not long after 11 am more duns appear and
the fish all seem to have taken up residence in the
slow flowing bubble lines for an easy feed. At times
there appears to be hundreds of fish rising with heads
breaking the surface as far as the eye can see to take
advantage of the feast.
Presentation
is of the essence. A four weight is considered overkill
with most settling on 2-3 weights in the still conditions.
Leaders average about 12 feet in length with at least
3 feet of two pound tippet. The fly is all-important.
You will remember back in summer when a beetle was a
beetle was a beetle. Well things have changed and you
better get organised if you are to share in the spoils.
Small to tiny flies are needed. Starting at #16 for
the faster water down to 18-22 for most of those found
in the bubble lines. Parachutes, No Hackles and Comparaduns
are used with as close to the exact shade of olive for
the body and slate grey for the wing as possible. Ignore
this advice at your peril.
This
fishing stretches most years until seasons end depending
on when the real rains come which are usually in the
first three weeks in June. Fish supposedly with their
minds on spawning will rise quietly all day. The best
fish I have seen taken on a Blue Winged Olive pattern
went close to five pound and the biggest bag days went
well over 50. I would quote the actual number but I
have been accused once this season of exaggerating so
will leave it at that. In recent seasons the olive hatches
have not been as good as in previous years and this
can be directly attributed to a low lake level. This
year we have a fair amount of water left in the lake
and if it stays this clear and cold for the rest of
the season we should see some fine fishing for the month
of May.
For
another account of Olive Time on the Goulburn Click
Here!
Kosciusko Dun
Colloquially
named the Kossie Dun takes its name from Australia's
tallest mountain. Quite fitting it being one of our
biggest duns. Kossie Duns are found along the Great
Divide in South East Australia and every year they are
documented in systems they were previously not identified
in. From up in the Snowy Mountain's Geehi to the Goulburn
River at our back door, the phrase the Kossies are on
conjures up vivid images in the minds of all flyfishers
who have crossed paths with these outsized ephemerids.
Kossie
Duns can hatch in large numbers anytime from late October
until April although November and March seem to be peak
times. They inhabit the fastest stretches of a river
and therefore fishers favour much of the Breakaway and
the area downstream of Gilmore's Bridge. These are fast
stretches of water with gravel bottoms, and therefore
are supremely suitable for kossies.
Summertime
emergences often occur in that last light so favoured
by flyfishers. Hatches are often huge in volume of insects
and last only 10-20 minutes sometimes extending well
into darkness. Autumn and spring can be somewhat different
with ideal temperatures triggering hatches in the afternoons
and this can lead to some of the best fishing of the
season. Large fish are often drawn to the surface to
feed and when this happens in broad daylight there is
not much more you can ask for. Even better is the fact
that imitation is almost restricted to the dun only.
Forget tying emergers in just the right colour. These
mayfly are fast water lovers and are therefore accomplished
swimmers. They leave the stones at the bottom and swim
strongly to the surface where they break through the
meniscus very quickly. This means that the fish don't
have the luxury of targeting a small, helpless insect
trapped below the surface tension and must grab the
nymph on its way up or take the dun in the second or
two it is on the water. This leads to very aggressive
surface feeding and in the low light the fly only need
be suggestive. Daytime emergences are similarly frantic
although we would recommend a parachute or thorax tie
at these times.
Five
weight rods are the norm for fishing this hatch on the
Goulburn and 5-6lb tippet can safely be used to tire
fish quickly and give you a chance for another fish
before it gets dark. Hooks should be barbless as the
flies needed to imitate this insect tend to be large.
Patterns should be cream-grey coloured in the body with
a grey wing sufficing. Don't use traditional hackled
flies as these have a tendency to fall over and not
present right. For an example see our Kossie
Dun pattern that is tied by using a normal hackle
that is then clipped underneath before being used.
Rusty Dun
This
is the mainstay of our Mayfly fishing. For many years
now we have been imitating this beautiful little fly
that thankfully the fish appreciate as much as we do.
A dark Rusty Brown colour with a dark wing it appears
anytime from mid-October until May. It is mainly a #16
although occasional specimens may be a size bigger or
smaller. It is a late afternoon and evening emerger
in the warmer months but can appear after midday during
the more mild conditions of autumn and spring.
This
insect can be found in most sections of the Goulburn
upstream of the confluence of the Acheron River. The
larger summer hatches can be directly attributed to
a falling river and often a cold southerly wind, which
often sees massive numbers of this mayfly hatch. Dun
hatches comparable to other parts of the world occur
with up to a 20 duns per square metre of water surface
not being uncommon. These hatches bring the fish to
the top like never before and some outsized fish are
caught this way every year.
As this
insect hatches so regularly throughout the season and
sometimes the day, and because it is rather small (can't
break through the meniscus easily) all stages of the
emergence need to be imitated. Fish on these mayfly
can be very picky and getting the fly and presentation
correct are crucial to success. First off you have to
be confident in picking whether the fish is taking the
adult or the emerger. Many American fly fishing writers
speak of the 'pounds of meat' theory. Basically that
is that fish will feed on whatever stage of whatever
insect is most prolific at that particular moment switching
between them as the hatch changes. Quite often to the
angler, what they think is happening and what actually
is happening are two different things. Often large numbers
of duns on the surface sees us fishing to the wrong
part of the hatch. It is very possible that there are
still more emergers stuck below the film than there
are duns on top of it and the fish will soon tell you
this with persistent refusals. The most basic of pointers
when fishing these hatches is to watch the riseform.
Is the trout actually breaking the surface with his
snout or his back? If a fish wants to take a dun he
must lift his snout out of the water and take it from
the top. This is very easy to spot when you look in
the right place. Often a noise will be omitted and always
a few bubbles will be left as an indication that the
fish is taking from the top. This means he is taking
duns and a parachute tie will suffice. However if the
breaking of the surface is by the trouts back it is
a fair bet that he is on the emergers. Often the surface
will not be broken at all and what we call a 'push rise'
will be the only sign of a fish. This occurs when a
fish takes something just below the surface and it is
noticeable by small waves in the flow that many mistake
for the current. When this occurs you can safely guess
that emergers are being taken and a brown Klinkhammer
or floating nymph will often work.
A method
sometimes favoured by those not confident in picking
the riseform is to fish both the dun and an emerger
a little ways behind it. This can cover both stages
of the hatch and give you an each way bet. The Rusty
Tailrace Dun is far and away the best fly for matching
this particular hatch and has needed little modification
since its original design some seven years ago at time
of writing. Carrying a selection of Pheasant
Tail Nymphs, Brown
Klinkhammer's and Rusty
Tailrace Duns in Sizes 14-18 should see most situations
covered when this insect emerges. No specific tackle
is needed but you must get the fly to drift right over
the fish. Most hatches of this mayfly are quite large
and often the fish will not deviate from the driftline
to intercept the fly and so accuracy is very important.
Four to five pound tippets are considered normal and
the need to go thinner (down to 2lb) may only arise
in the flattest of water.
Patterns
Too many
people fish traditionally hackled flies out of habit
rather than looking deeper. By traditionally hackled
(call it 'old style' ) we mean the hackle wound around
the hook shank so that it sticks out at right angles
from the hook. This is not a good representation of
a mayfly dun. Duns don't sit up high with their body
out of the water. Much of their thorax and abdomen actually
sits in the film and these 'old style' flies do not
accurately represent the natural. A parachute hackled
fly, with the hackle wound horizontally around wing
post is a much better option. Firstly it lands correctly
every time unlike the 'old style' which would be lucky
to sit correctly 50% of the time. Then you have the
profile of a dun, which the parachute tie imitates much
better. Leaving the body low in the film like the natural
and having a clearly defined wing, parachute ties have
revolutionised the matching of this hatch world wide.
Wings should be at least equal in length to the hook
shank as anyone who has viewed a dun from underneath
can verify they are about 75% wing!!
The only
alternatives we see is in the use of Comparaduns, Thorax
Duns and No Hackle Duns. These are all similar to parachute
flies in that they try and give that low riding profile
similar to the parachute dun (or paradun as we like
to call it). Of most interest is the Thorax and No Hackle
Duns. Thorax Duns are tied with an 'old style' hackle
and then trimmed with scissors to sit correctly and
lower to the water. These are especially handy when
tying duns to be fished in faster water where the fish
don't get quite such a good look and where the difficulty
of keeping the fly afloat is great. No Hackle Duns are
ideal for fishing to those fish rising to duns in the
slowest, flattest of water usually associated with spring
and autumn. As such we only use them when fishing to
BWO feeders in May. They are fiddly to tie and not durable
at all and we will therefore fish a parachute tie and
if a particularly fussy fish is encountered we will
then switch to the No Hackle.
Last Word
For too
many years most of us believed we had to go overseas
or at least interstate to encounter good Mayfly hatches.
Many of the countries most published fishing writers
have certainly given this belief credence. However,
the Goulburn River has some of the best Mayfly hatches
to be found in Australia and hopefully armed with a
little bit of knowledge you can share in what up until
now has been the domain of the guides and a few local
anglers.
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