The images on this post show the selection of flies and lures I have used in the Arabian Gulf.
They have each performed with varying degrees of success, though by far the most successful in terms of numbers of fish, are the orange trout poppers followed by the white floating fry (of which I have none of the originals left). The white fry shown tried to combine the qualities of the red and white poppers and fry and worked well until the flying treble was lost along with most of the tail to a toothy critter. In the pictures, the more successful a fly has been, the less legs it has remaining attached. The attachment of a flying treble also seems to improve the rate of hook-ups and this I attribute to the hardness of many of the fish species' mouth areas.
I have used bit detectors to construct my own popper variants as often it is difficult to get the appropriate materials in UAE, Qatar or Kuwait. Fore example, I was unable to get olive wool for the Arno's Milky Dream fly so used some chartreuse material and white marabou and, at the time, had no internet access, so had to go off a verbal description of the fly scribbled on a piece of hotel note paper.
Some trout poppers ended up being so chewed up they disintegrated. The one mentioned in the picture is the last of the three originally purchased.
Some of the flies are sea trout trebles and salmon doubles which are too heavy to cast from the shore or while wading with my 9' rod with 8 wt line, and so are used trailing from a boat, or flicked into deep water from a pier and allowed to sink and drift before being retrieved.
They have each performed with varying degrees of success, though by far the most successful in terms of numbers of fish, are the orange trout poppers followed by the white floating fry (of which I have none of the originals left). The white fry shown tried to combine the qualities of the red and white poppers and fry and worked well until the flying treble was lost along with most of the tail to a toothy critter. In the pictures, the more successful a fly has been, the less legs it has remaining attached. The attachment of a flying treble also seems to improve the rate of hook-ups and this I attribute to the hardness of many of the fish species' mouth areas.
I have used bit detectors to construct my own popper variants as often it is difficult to get the appropriate materials in UAE, Qatar or Kuwait. Fore example, I was unable to get olive wool for the Arno's Milky Dream fly so used some chartreuse material and white marabou and, at the time, had no internet access, so had to go off a verbal description of the fly scribbled on a piece of hotel note paper.
Some trout poppers ended up being so chewed up they disintegrated. The one mentioned in the picture is the last of the three originally purchased.
Some of the flies are sea trout trebles and salmon doubles which are too heavy to cast from the shore or while wading with my 9' rod with 8 wt line, and so are used trailing from a boat, or flicked into deep water from a pier and allowed to sink and drift before being retrieved.
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