Donation

If you enjoy using Minnesota Outdoorsman, Please help me keep it going, Treat me to a Coffee

coffee.png

Recent

 
MINNEAPOLIS WEATHER

Advertise With Us!

ADVERTISING OPPORTUNITIES With over 5,500 subscribers and an average of 18,000 unique visitors per month, www.mnoutdoorsman.com can serve as a productive advertising tool for your business! All banners link automatically to your site. Front Page articles (embedded) $100 per year unlimited articles per year (approval required) Side Bar Banner (175 x 175) $100 year Advertise on the side banner viewable on every page. Board Specific Banner By Topic (250 x 55) $50 year Advertise on forums specific for your product or service. Board Specific Banner By Region (250 x 55) $50 year Advertise on forums specific for your location. The customer is responsible for the banner design. A banner can be designed for a nominal fee. Once payment is received, the banner will go live upon approval. If you would like to place an ad rather than a banner on the Minnesota Outdoorsman site we can also arrange that. Please inquire about that if that is your interest. The ad would go on the front page of the site. NOTE: FREE Advertising is also available for active posters! Interested? Just ask...... Please contact huntermno@yahoo.com for more information!

Check Out Our Forum Tab!

Click On The "Forum" Tab Under The Logo For More Content!
If you are using your phone, click on the menu, then select forum. Make sure you refresh the page!

Memorial Day

The views of the poster, may not be the views of the website of "Minnesota Outdoorsman" therefore we are not liable for what our members post, they are solely responsible for what they post. They agreed to a user agreement when signing up to MNO.

Pages: [1]
On the south end... A great week of fishing with walleyes and saugers caught in good numbers.

The goto presentation, again, was a jig and frozen emerald shiner. Emerald shiners are a staple in LOW and walleyes love them. Other minnows worked also, but emerald shiners are a favorite of anglers for good reason.

The Lighthouse Gap area, Morris Point Gap and just in front of Pine Island held nice fish in 17 - 21' of water. Various schools of walleyes and saugers across the south shore.

A quarter ounce jig in gold, glow white, pink, orange, chartreuse, or a combo of these colors tipped with a minnow worked well again.

Some big pike and jumbo perch being caught by walleye anglers.

On the Rainy River... Some nice walleyes were caught on the river this weekend, although most anglers normally head to the lake. 12 - 15' of water is holding some nice fish.

Sturgeon fishing on the Rainy River is closed until the keep season starts up again July 1st.

Up at the NW Angle... Some nice walleyes being caught along with a mixed bag. 12 - 25 feet of water. Points, neck down areas and bays with warming water were holding good fish this week.

The goto presentation was a jig and minnow as on the south shore. A mixed bag as is common around the Angle.

Lodging, fishing packages, small boat guide trips, charter trips and summer trips are available at www.LakeoftheWoodsMN.com/Lodging.

0 Comments

 

The Cicada Report: How to Tie a Project Cicada

Learn how to tie Curtis Fry's Project Cicada pattern—plus fishing tips from the expert himself

By Ryan Chelius


2063uidProject-cicada-lead.jpg

The highly anticipated Cicada hatch is underway in southern parts of the country, and anglers should start seeing fish of all species come to the surface to feed on these big bugs. In other words, now is a good time to fill your fly boxes with various cicada patterns. One of our favorites—for everything from trout and smallmouth bass to carp and pike—is the project Cicada Cofounder of Fly Fish Food and well-known fly-tier Curtis Fry developed the Project Cicada to improve on his already popular Sickada pattern. The result was a more well-balanced fly that is easier to tie and offers a more realistic presentation in the water. It has become a popular choice among anglers fishing terrestrial bugs all across the country and one you should carry this spring for the co-emergence of Brood XIII and Brood XIX. While you can purchase Project Cicada flies on the Fly Fish Food website, you can also take a stab at tying some yourself.

How do you tie it? Luckily, Fly Fish Food has a step by step YouTube tutorial (see below) to walk you through the process. We also put together the full list of materials that you’ll need for this pattern. If you can tie a bunch of these bugs, you’ll be set for when clouds of cicadas start singing and falling into rivers, lakes, and ponds during the next month. Here’s how to do it.

2063uidproject-cicada-flies-scaled.jpg


Project Cicada Materials

  • Hook: Fulling Mill 36040 Streamer Stripper – 4

  • Thread: Semperfli Classic Waxed Thread – 6/0 – Fl. Orange

  • Body: Fly Tying Foam – 6mm – Black

  • Body (alt): Rainy’s Cross-Link Sheet Foam – 6 mm – Black

  • Wing: Hareline Thin Wing – Light Dun

  • Over-Wing: Para Post Wing Material – Dark Gray

  • Over-Wing: Para Post Wing Material – Fl. Orange

  • Wing Cover: Bug Foam 1MM – Black

  • Wing Cover (alt): Rainy’s Cross-Link Sheet Foam – 1 mm – Black

  • Legs: Speckled Centipede Legs – Medium – Speckled Orange

  • Eyes: Maxima Chameleon Leader Material – 30 lb

How to Tie Project Cicada

 


Tying Tips From the Expert

In the fly tying tutorial Fry walks through each step in detail and offers tips along the way. While everything you need to know to tie this bug is in the video, Fry gave me some additional advice. “The hook is the biggest part of making the fly land correctly—hence the use of the streamer hook,” he said. This allows the bug to land right-side up every time for a better presentation on the water. Fry recommends using a size 4 Fulling Mill 36040 streamer stripper hook.

He also emphasized the color of the fly. Different regions of the country experience different color and shade variations of cicadas. Fry recommends matching the colors of your flies to natural bugs in the area. “Burnt orange rather than a hot orange is my preference most of the time.” If you aren’t sure what the cicadas in your area look like, start with burnt orange and go from there.


2063uidproject-cicada-rainbow.jpg

How to Fish Project Cicada

Fry specifically developed this pattern to better match the silhouette of real cicadas, whose wings often go askew on the water. He also designed it with a bit more heft so that it makes a bigger splat when it lands. He emphasizes the importance of “a good splat” to entice strikes. Other than that, Fry tends to fish it with tip-heavy lines like Scientific Anglers or Rio Grand, so it is easier to turn the fly over while still allowing for it to make a splat on the water. He says that these lines float so well, it is easy to give it a mend mid-drift and continue with a good presentation.

Other than Fry’s Project Cicada-specific tips, the best piece of fishing advice we can give is to find the bugs and spend time on the water. Once the hatch starts in your area, it should last around two weeks. You’ll want to start fishing once the bugs take to the air and start singing. Then, they should start dropping into the water, hopefully creating a feeding frenzy. With any luck, you’ll be standing there, fly rod in hand and with a Project Cicada fly ready to go.



Pages: [1]