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Flies for Utah Lake
#1
[cool][#0000ff]There is a small but growing group of fly flingers that wanna play with feathers on Utah Lake. I have been doing it for a whole lotta years. I'll try to give a BRIEF rundown of my findings.

First, think about 5 basic colors: white, black, purple, chartreuse and hot pink. Use them in solids or combinations. All white is good when the temps are up and the water has some clarity. Black is good almost anytime. It is especially good when the baby mudcats are swimming around during the summer. Purple is good by itself, or in combination with white, black or chartruese. Chartreuse is the color for cold and/or murky water. However, it will work almost any month of the year during low light conditions. Hot pink is a "go-to" color late in the year, in the final weeks before ice-up. I don't know why, but there are days when you get nonstop action on hot pink and can't buy a bite on anything else.

As suggested, plain old wooly buggers are all you need for basic patterns. Again, all one color, or the body one color and the tail and/or hackles another. Good combos are black or purple body with white or chartreuse tails. Another combo, especially good for whites and walleyes in the spring, is a purple or claret red body with black tail and hackle. Oh yeah, don't be afraid to add some red or blue krystal flash in some of the patterns.

When you tie your whites and chartreuse patterns, it can be more effective to finish them off with a hot red thread head. A dark red head is good for purples and blacks.

After the carp finish spawning, in June of most years, you will sometimes do well with yellow patterns...with some gold tinsel and/or flashabou added.

The lake is shallow, so you do not need heavy sinking lines. However, a good sink tip will help you get the flies down near the bottom, where most of the action will take place for most species. You can fish them with the standard cast, sink, strip method, or you can do a slow troll from a tube or toon. Sometimes it is good to rig a two fly tandem rig, with different sizes and colors. Oh yeah, don't be surprised if you pick up a few mud cats and channels on those flies.

I am attaching pics of some of the patterns I have used successfully over the years. There are others I do not have pictured. Notably, I have done well with a streamer using a chartreuse body, red tag tail and grey squirrel tail wing. I think it is a "contrast" pattern. Whatever...it works.

I am also including some pics of my "over and under" flies. I do a simple body of one color and then a "shell back" of a contrasting or more visible color...like red, blue, black or hot red. I then do an underbelly of silver, gold or other color. The lines seem to help trigger a reaction bite when solid colors do not work as well. These over and unders are especially effective when casted and retrieved on "drop shot" rigs with spinning tackle.

I am also attaching a pic of the deadly "Pistol Pete" fly, tied with a small propeller spinner on the front. Some purists consider these to be more "lures" than flies. But, as long as the fish vote for them, who cares? There are times when that extra bit of flash and vibration can trigger a strike when stripped quickly after settling to the bottom.

Hope this helps. I know that Emuscud has been working on some good patterns for Utah Lake too. Maybe he can post a pic or two.
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#2
I wish I knew of some other "good" patterns. I've been skunked every time I've used the fairy wand at the lake itself.

The only time I've landed a Utah lake fish on the fly was during the white bass run this spring. They took an all white "marabou miss." It is on the second row, second from the top. I was using a full sink line at the time.

One of these days . . .
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#3
I have a float tube but i dont have my waders yet and i dont have my life vest yet and ill probably be alone so that rules out the possibility of me using there do you think ill be able to get anything from the shore without wading i hear theres alot of debris in the lake so i dont really wont to wade out there.
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#4
[cool][#0000ff]There are a lot of places you can wade without fear of "debris". The area around the north jetty at Utah Lake State Park can be good. So is the Lindon harbor area.

The only area you need to be careful around Lincoln Beach is right around the springs. The bottom is eneven and you can step off a dropoff or into a hole. But, if you can find a spot not overrun with wild-eyed spin fishermen, you can wave your rod okay.

If you get some waders, or want to wade wet (cold), you can drive up a ways to the west of the springs. There is a lot of area there where you will not have as much company but there are still some fish to be caught.

If you are worried about snagging your flies, tie them with a monofilament weed guard. Keeps them out of the rocks but still allows you to set the hook on a strike.
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#5
does anyone think terrestrials will work come to think about ive never heard or seen a fish jump there and ive never seen any rise either
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#6
[cool][#0000ff]That's not too farfetched. In the "olden days", when there was water in Utah Lake, and the "Mud Lake" area near the airport was fully flooded, there would sometimes be big hatches of bugs out of the mud in the evening. Walleyes and white bass would feed on them after dark.

Also, used to catch lots of channel cats in the spring, about May, when the stone fly nymphs washed down the Provo river. There were several holes below riffles that a stone fly nymph imitation would get a cat on every cast. Again, that was when there used to be water in the river.

In late summer, in calm areas, you should be able to at least pick up some bluegills on hoppers or poppers. And, largemouths will smack topwater, including hair bugs and poppers. Fish near structure.
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