If you've flyfished much you've seen this. One guy is just hammering
trout one after another while his buddy 50' away using the same gear
and fly is getting few or none. The catcher is on a "chironomid tube."
When the fertile female midge returns one calm afternoon to lay eggs,
she flys within a tight 2-4' circle dipping to the water and depositing from
500 to over 1000 microscopic eggs depending on species. These eggs slowly
sink to the bottom muck within the same 2-5' circle. The eggs develope into larva (bloodworms)
and the larva eventually develope into pupa, also all within this 5' circle.
The thing to keep in mind is this happens to this batch of eggs in SYNC.
The Pupa, lacking mobility, hang in the bottom 2' of water gaining carbonation
and creating the bottom of the "Chironomid Tube". They ALL gain enuff carbonation
at relatively the same time and begin migrating to the surface within this same
5-6' tube of water creating the "hatch" all hatching within a 2-4 hr. time period.
The trout are much more aware of these "tubes" than the fishermen. They gather
around by the dozens, like a bunch of starving hogs around the slop bucket.
Find a chironomid tube and you will be in flyfishing heaven catching up to 20+
trout one after another all within the same 10' circle.
_________________________
If you can't go fishing today,
At least talk fishing!