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Editor's Note: Jason
Borger's lithographs offer something special here.
Strike indicators have received a great
deal of attention in the past few years because they transform
dead-drift nymph fishing into a relatively easily accomplished
tactic. However, these tiny floats are not of modern-day
conception. In her book, "A Treatise on Fishing with an
Angle," Dame Juliana Berners instructed the anglers of the
15th century: "For the trout take a piece of cork no bigger
than a garden pea and burn it through with a hot iron, and that
shall be your float." Five hundred years have passed since
the publication of the Dame's book, but the advice is still as
sound today as when it was first set upon the page.

"From Russia with Love" The
best Atlantic salmon fishing in the world is in Russia, and this
litho was created to honor this fishery.
Lithograph by Gary Borger
Strike indicators are not bobbers. A bobber
is a float, to be sure, but it is large enough to suspend the
bait and any attached weight at a desired depth. Strike
indicators do only what the name implies: indicate the fish's
take. They are so small that they usually cannot suspend the
bait, lure, or fly. They are so small that they create no
resistance to the fish when it takes the angler's offering. They
are small, but boy! are they effective.
A number of years ago I held a class in
spring creek tactics for fly fishers. Although the instructional
level was advertised as intermediate to advanced, one of the
students had never used a fly rod before. The challenge was how
to get the raw recruit into fish as soon as possible so that he
didn't become discouraged. After he'd had a bit of casting
practice, I rigged his rod with a small, weighted pheasant tail
nymph and slipped an indicator up on the leader. "Just cast
out into that riffly water and watch the indicator," I
instructed, "and when it stops or jerks under, set the
hook." He took fish consistently all day and was a confirmed
addict by the time the evening sun slipped behind the mountains
in the west.

"Danica: The Original"
The Mayfly (Ephemera danica) from which the order derives its
common name. Very large insects, they hatch is midday and provide
very exciting angling. Jason photographed specimens when fishing
in England.
Lithograph by Jason Borger
Indicators can be made from a variety of
materials: cork, hard or soft foam plastics, yarn, fly line
coating, even a dry fly. I carry three types and use each in
different situations. The first indicators I used (25 years ago)
were modeled after those of Dame Juliana. They were tiny popper
corks, 1/4 inch on a side. I burned a hole through them
length-wise with a hot needle and painted them various
fluorescent colors. Today, in place of the cork, I use 1/4- to
3/8-inch diameter, styrene plastic balls manufactured
specifically as strike indicators. These are slipped up on the
leader and the end of a toothpick forced into the opening to hold
the indicator in place. Because they are large (and hence easily
seen), I prefer this style of indicator when fishing large,
heavily weighted nymphs in rough water.
When fishing more delicately, I switch to a
smaller diameter indicator made of fluorescent, fly line coating.
Again this is specially made as strike indicator material; the
coating of a normal fly line is chemically bound to the core and
cannot be removed. This material is about 1/8 inch in diameter
and can be cut to any length (normally 1/4 to 3/4 inch). It's
jammed over a knot on the leader or held in place with the tip of
a toothpick.

"The Better to Hear You, My
Dear" Guaranteed to bring out a little smile even on the
most dour of personalities.
Lithograph by Jason Borger
When fishing very tiny flies, dry flies, or
casting over spooky fish, I normally use a yarn indicator. The
best material is Bug-Yarn, Lefty Kreh's indicator yarn, or other
fine denier yarns. Treated with fly flotant, they ride high and
are easily seen, yet are as light in weight as the most
delicately dressed fly. I use white yarn for spooky fish (the
white indicator looks like a blob of foam on the surface),
otherwise I prefer fluorescent colors. Form a single overhand
knot in the leader, insert a short chunk of yarn and pull the
knot tight. The yarn can then be trimmed to make an indicator of
any desired size. The knot won't weaken the leader because the
yarn prevents the knot from pulling completely tight against
itself.
Another great trick is to use two colors of
yarn, black and any light color you like. When the indicator is
on dark water, the light color shows. When the indicator is on
light water, the black shows.
In riffly water, position the indicator at
a distance from the fly equal to twice the depth of the water.
When fishing with a tiny, impossible-to-see dry fly, secure an
indicator two or three feet from the tip of the leader; it will
mark the relative position of the fly on the water. When fishing
deep, fast currents, use several indicators spaced over the
length of the leader to better see the take.
Watch the speed of the indicator relative
to the current. If the indicator slows, stops, or darts upstream,
set the hook. The indicator may sink or be washed under by a
wave. Often it's visible even when submerged; if not, lift the
rod tip to pull the indicator back to the surface.
The indicator not only helps see the take,
but because the fly is so small, can also act as a bobber to hold
the fly at the correct depth.
Indicators can make the difficult easy and
the impossible at least probable. For the angler who fishes
dead-drift, they are a must.

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