Flies To Fish to Catch Trout In October - Black Cormorant https://ift.tt/0NEDjKm

 



 Black Cormorant: Why is it our Fly of the Month for October?



The Black Cormorant's strength is its clever simplicity. By October, the water is colder and the season has changed. Trout, especially in stillwaters, are in a hunting mood, stocking up for the winter. There aren't many specific insect hatches left. The Cormorant works because its simple design can look like many different things to a trout, suggesting food and movement when there's not much else about.

  • A Small Fish Imitation: Autumn is the perfect time for trout that eat other fish to chase shoals of this year's small fry. The Cormorant's thin black shape and lively marabou tail are a great imitation of these little fish. Fished on a sinking line with a quick, jerky retrieve, it looks just like a panicked or hurt minnow. This can get you some aggressive bites on big waters like Loch Leven or the Lake of Menteith, where trout are often hunting in packs.

  • A Leech or Large Insect: As the underwater weeds die back, other food becomes more important. The wriggling action of a Cormorant pulled slowly along the bottom is an imitation of a leech that trout can't resist. Fished with a steady figure-of-eight retrieve near the bottom, the marabou tail breathes and tempts fish that are eating larger, slow-moving insects. Its dark shape is also easy for fish to see when they are looking up from the depths.

In October's tougher conditions, you need a fly that makes a trout want to attack, rather than one that copies a specific insect. The Black Cormorant's simple, dark shape and a tail that never stops moving looks like an easy meal to a trout, making it a deadly and simple fly to end the season on a high.

You can view our range of Cormorant Patterns here or tie one yourself with the materials below.

Basic Black Cormorant Recipe 




Wings: Marabou: Black

Need all these materials? View all of the mentioned materials here!

Want to learn how to tie the Black Cormorant? Check out the video below where Davie McPhail shows us how.



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