
On a side note: heres a pic of my Mother Inlaw. Sorry for the Chartreuse String Bikini she's wearing. Even though you cant see it, trust me, its there.


Moderators: William Anderson, letumgo
Wade fished a couple hours, and did ok. Decided to come home due to the wind and chase "bubbles" instead.hankaye wrote:Dubbin, Howdy;
Went a little bit overboard with the velcro dubbin' brush thingy ...???![]()
couldn't resist ...
How'd the fishin trip to the gorge go ???
hank
DUBBN wrote:Wade fished a couple hours, and did ok. Decided to come home due to the wind and chase "bubbles" instead.hankaye wrote:Dubbin, Howdy;
Went a little bit overboard with the velcro dubbin' brush thingy ...???![]()
couldn't resist ...
How'd the fishin trip to the gorge go ???
hank![]()
Yes, bubbles can be the name of a wife, girlfriend, dog, or activity in the bathtub.
Dubbn,DUBBN wrote:Oh, I believe in shiny tinsel. I just want to believe in the bubbles. I have been interested in it since LaFontaine touted the bubble as a trigger, but was not able to produce alot of photographic evidence. He claimed to have spent 100's of hours filming under water, but I guess that stage of the Caddis' life cycle eluded him.
gingerdun wrote:Dubbn,DUBBN wrote:Oh, I believe in shiny tinsel. I just want to believe in the bubbles. I have been interested in it since LaFontaine touted the bubble as a trigger, but was not able to produce alot of photographic evidence. He claimed to have spent 100's of hours filming under water, but I guess that stage of the Caddis' life cycle eluded him.
Some of the Ralph Cutter footage from Bugs of the Underworld is on YouTube, includes photographic evidence of gas bubbles causing the nymph to float to the surface for molting. Here's a link to one passage from the video.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4UjlT7fqJ1s
gingerdun wrote:So much of fly fishing literature is based entirely upon credible eye-witness accounts, the absence of photographic evidence is something that we have gotten used to. We have to trust that these guys are not making the stuff up. To me, the cool thing about this video, that I did not know before, is that some mayfly nymphs inflate themselves with gas to help reach the surface quickly. So a gas bubble is playing a role here. Interesting.