Guess I'll just have to chew on that awhile....
Rain dance worked .....
Now we just need enough to fill the reservoirs

Thanks Ron.
hank
Moderators: William Anderson, letumgo
Then I found a book that Donald scanned; "THE GRAYLING Salmo Thymallus"To fly fish for grayling, use a floating fly line and position yourself a few yards upstream from where you judge the fish to be. Cast square across, and a yard or two beyond the line of the current that leads to the fish; then, directly the line is on the water, bend it into an upstream curve which will pull the fly back into the correct line of current. The fly will now sink and continue to do so until the current changes the upstream curve which will pull the fly towards the surface again. This is when the grayling will take, and you will know that it has happened when you see the end of the line stop. All you need do then is to tighten the line, and the grayling will be hooked.
http://angling-guru.info/fishing-for-grayling"
Grayling rise from the bottom to surface insects and return to the bottom. They don't hoover sub-surface like trout can do. Their window thus is much larger than the trout's."Another point that to my mind is is most important: do not fish up stream for grayling, as you would for trout. Always present your fly down or across and down to rising grayling. You will catch a lot more fish. For one thing, you will, by drifting the fly down to the rising fish, present the fly without showing the cast, and to so keen sighted fish as the grayling this makes a difference. Their manner of rising, too, not going forward to meet the fly, but a kind of a leaning backwards to get it, and particularly the formation of their mouth, a very much overhung top lip, to my mind makes a drifting fly more sure of being taken than one that is cast up stream to them."
He goes on about the importance of fancy flies (for grayling) and tells the reader that he always starts the days fishing with two fancy flies, fished wet, invariably the Grayling Witch and Grayling Steel Blue. By so doing he is catching grayling whilst observing the prevailing conditions."A reasonable imitation of a nymph can hardly be taken for anything but a nymph, but what about the winged and hackled flies that we use. What are they taken for? Some of them like nothing in the air, on the earth, or in the water. A damaged or dead natural fly in rough water is not like the neat fly that we use for wet fly fishing. Its wings and legs are limp and tossed about by the stream and has very little resemblance to the neat and trim dun or spinner that we see floating down the stream so beautifully and jauntily. The very lightly dressed soft hackled flies that are used on northern streams may very well represent a drowned, bedraggeled fly, and be taken for such, but none but the grayling knows what our flies are taken for. The only inference we can draw from their acceptance of them is that they seem to be something eatable, and they are sampled in the hope that they may be a dainty addition to their dietary. All the evidence we have points to Nymphs being the chief item of the underwater food of the grayling, so we cannot go far wrong in putting on our cast a seasonable imitation of a nymph. So take in your fly box imitations of the Olive, Pale Watery and B.W.O. Nymphs, and use them as circumstances dictate. Also carry a selection of lightly dressed hackled flies, tied for movement, that may be taken for the drowned and damaged flies, such as Waterhen Bloa, Greenwell spider, Dark Watchet, Brown Owl, Olive Bloa Dark Needle, Poult Bloa, Blue Hawk. These may be tied with either a soift, mobile feather or a lighter stiffer hackle; but whichever is preferred, it must be lightly dressed, so that the stream works on the fibres and gives the fly the appearance of life."
Kelly L. wrote:I have heard people talking about swinging, and the Leisenring lift. I had no idea what that was. I mostly fish lakes, so there is usually no current, unless I fish at the dam. The dam is good, if the water is flowing. But our water has been low, and they have little current most of the time. This was a good topic. I usually don't come here, because of time constraints, to this particular forum. I do good to keep up with the Cabin, Tying Wingless Wets, and Fly Dressings. Today I saw a couple of videos that explained those terms. I have no idea what the best videos are, that are free. So this is a good topic, and I hope to learn more. It has been raining, so I have been in the house more than usual.