That article has some great info. I have always had my doubts about fish seeing colors, but the article says that they see colors in the yellow to green range better. That makes more sense. I know there are several blue flies on the market and I know I have never seen blue bugs or eggs. One thing I would have to disagree with is that when a fish slams a fly it does not think it is food. Caddis patterns and other emergers are slammed on a regular basis. Caddis emerge quickly and the fish slam them. Well, off to the creek to terrorize some of those smart fish.
that is one of the better articles that i have read about trout, some stuff i knew some stuff i didnt, really good article. thanks for sharing it with us.
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Fishing isnt about catching fish, its not about who caught the most, or who caught the biggest, its about the experience that you have on the water, and the life long bonds you make with others on the journey to becoming a better person inside.
Some generalizations in the article may relate more to lakes than Putah, but anyone wearing white hats/shirts or using a yellow flyline and standing within 20 feet of a trout waving a long stick or moving around in the water grinding stones together while casting may be putting themselves at a disadvantage (unless, of course, you are sneaking up behind them from downstream in fast water).
Another note on color. I read awhile back blue is the only color that doesn't bleed into brownish the further down in the water column it gets. In other words the deeper you fish the more important silouette and size become. I have been working blue into many of my midge patterns and have had great success at Putah with them. You tiers should check it out. I know a guy who uses yellow line and he has no problems whacking the pigs.