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Building a quick change leader "system" for on stream efficiency

  • February 08, 2021 8:37 AM
    Message # 10069598
    Rob Farris (Administrator)

    This is a re-print from TroutBitten, and Dominick Swentosky.  An excellent article on how to build a leader system to fish different styles, and to change quickly between styles as needed on the stream.  Many links are available on TroutBitten if you wish to dive into depth on some of the nuances and specifics for various leader constructions.

    TACTICS

    Efficiency: Part 2 – Leader/Tippet Changes

    by Domenick Swentosky | Jul 28, 2015 | 11 comments

    My best days on the water are usually full of changes.

    The morning fog burns off, and I switch from streamers to nymphs; a half hour later, a swirling back eddy looks like the home of the next nameable brown trout (two footer), and I go back to streamers, trying to nudge Mr. Nameless from his rest; then maybe it’s back to nymphs for the pocket water; and after working to the top of the run, I see just enough trout snouts poking through the surface of the tailout to interest me in fishing dries ….. and so I change.

    I’ve shared the stream with a lot of fishermen, and the most deadly anglers are those who adapt.

    You can try to fish everything with one rig, using the same leader and tippet for streamers, nymphs, wets, and dries, but the compromises that you have to make by tying a three inch streamer to the long, thin tippet that you were just using for an X-Caddis on the surface are just not worth it, and you’ll have far better opportunities for good fishing by using the right tool for the job.

    In Part 1 of the this series on efficiency, I tried to stress that you will be best served with a group of simple knots which you can tie quickly. You can’t be afraid to change, and if you don’t have your rig alterations down to seconds instead of minutes, then you’ll be afraid of wasting time and missing fish, and you won’t make the changes that you should.

    I constantly search for solutions and try to develop a system that suits my own intentions for a day of fishing. It’s a system that is constantly in flux and often changes with my goals on the water, but in the last few years I’ve found some things that have helped refine these rig changes to something very, very efficient.

    Tippet Rings

    In my early years of fishing, I occasionally used tiny barrel swivels as a location for swapping out leader pieces, but I gave it up, because they weren’t tiny enough. Tippet rings are perfect. I tie my own leaders, and every one of them has a tippet ring in it somewhere.

    In fact, I use a tippet ring for full leader changes. Permanently attached to my fly line with a needle knot is a six inch piece of Maxima Chameleon and then a clinch knot to a tippet ring.

    I swap out my leaders at that tippet ring, and I store the leaders on old Maxima spools. It’s much easier than hand-wrapping and storing them in a leader wallet; the leader quickly comes off the spool, ready to use, with no tangles.

    These days I only use two leaders: one for dries and then one for nymphs and streamers,  I make the nymph leader work for streamers by using another means of line storage …..

    Rigging Foam

    Loon Rigging Foam is the solution to a storage problem that I have struggled with for over a decade. Previously, I used half of an old foam fly box to store pre-rigged flies, and there are other manufactured solutions to this, but nothing that I tried was quite right until these simple foam discs came out.

    When switching from two nymphs to two streamers, I want to use the same leader butt section but have a different tippet section; I clip the leader at the sighter (at another tippet ring), roll the sighter and tippet onto the foam spool, and then jam both hooks into the foam to keep the line tight. The whole process is accomplished in less than a minute and no tippet material is wasted. I just slide these in a pocket, awaiting the next change.

    Another way I used to accomplish the same thing is with foam glued  into the back cavities of a Maxima spool. This is good, but the Loon Rigging Foam is better.

    Whatever method you choose, the bottom line is that being able to quickly swap rigs gives you a chance to meet the fish on their own terms by swiftly adapting to whatever situation you encounter. Changing efficiently will get you into more fish.

    I hope this gives you ideas for your own system.

    Enjoy the day.
    Domenick Swentosky
    T R O U T B I T T E N
    domenick@troutbitten.com


    Last modified: February 08, 2021 8:38 AM | Rob Farris (Administrator)
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