Shark Flies

Blog Forums Fly Tying Shark Flies

Viewing 11 posts - 1 through 11 (of 11 total)
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  • #6690

    My new obsession is shark fishing with flies.

    #58420

    Neal

    Then can you get on a plane in July or August and use them with me???
    Brett

    #58421
    Neal Osborn
    Member

    You really are serious about shark fishing aren’t you?

    I already gave up the Tarpon trip . . . and that is a guaranteed melee.

    #58422
    keith b
    Member

    Try looking at war path flies. I am sure he has something. Saw the creator of war path flies on wild on the fly the other day. This guy has some serious flies, especially for taimen! He brings articulated flies up several levels from what most of us would imagine.
    There is also a guy put of wrightsville north Carolina that uses flies for sharks. Capt. Matt Wirt, check out his stuff at reel-adventure.com.

    #58423
    Aaron Brown
    Member

    Have you seen this for motivation?
    http://www.drakemag.com/2010-films/462-mako.html

    #58424
    Avatar photoTim Angeli
    Member

    This Is Fly has an article by Bowman too.  That dude seems to have the Mako on the fly thing dialed in.  There are shots of his flies in there too.  That’s where I’d start.
    http://www.thisisfly.com/

    Tim

    #58425
    Chris Beech
    Member

    I’ve had some success on orange flies tied to represent squid.

    Best Regards,

    Beechy

    #58426
    Zach Matthews
    The Itinerant Angler

    That is a cool squid fly, Chris.

    Zach

    #58427
    Avatar photoBob Riggins
    Member

    I posted a little about flies on your other thread on TFO.  As I indicated, I use tube flies for shark with the predominant color being red and/or orange.  I also like a little black in them with a lot of flash.  Depending on the size of the shark, the flies could be 4″ to 8″ long.  I like to use synthetic materials for durability.  I don’t think specific patterns matter that much.  Just tie a bulky fly generally in the shape of a fish.

    Remember, a shark is going to take a fly in a quick reaction to sight, so you have to use something that will excite them.  Once they get a good look and sniff at a fly, they will never take it.

    For the hook setup, I use braided steel bite tippets snelled to a circle hook.  Snelling the hook keeps it from flopping around inside the fly.  Since the tippet is threaded through the tube in the fly, hook action is not relevant.  I also do not use multi hook flies like shown in one of the pictures.  If you get hooked when landing the fish, you are connected to the shark.  Not a good thing. 😮

    I have attached a sample tube fly and a snelled hook as an example.

    #58428

    Bob
    I found some Berkley Gulp pink strips that I thought might help with the scent issue.

    #58429
    Chris Beech
    Member

    Actually that mako in the shot above took the fly with all the delicacy of a trout taking a nymph. The fly was fed down the side of a berley trail and I was catching a lot of squid on it. The squid ‘take’ was like a gentle pull on the line. I thought I had another squid take and yanked back pretty hard on this occasion (sick of catching squid…), then the line took off at some speed and we got treated to a mako missile show! The little fella was hanging back just out of sight picking off the squid that were attracted to the trail.

    Best Regards,

    Beechy

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