Yellow perch are popular with a lot of folks, including myself, primarily because they’re outstanding table fare. Let’s face it, you won’t hear many stories about their fight or huge size (a 12 inch fish is a Master Angler), but when it comes to eating few fish rival these tasty morsels.
Further, when the conversation turns to fishing for perch, bait fishing with worms has to be one of the top methods, closely followed by small jigs tipped with a worm. Fly fishing, well not so much. But there are times when it should be consider as it can be an extremely productive method of catching yellow perch. Sunday is case in point.
Cody and I decided to fish Boyd from kayaks and we were on the water shortly after sunrise. We paddled to the south end to work the weed edges. Primarily looking for black and white bass, of which we had little success. After a couple hours we decided to head north. As is my habit I drag flies behind me as I move from one location to another. Once we got into deeper water, 13-15 feet I got a strike and landed a brace of 8-10 inch perch.
Now what was really interesting was the two fish came in with a whole school of perch, fifty or so fish. Needless to say, we parked and proceeded to catch triple after triple, with an occasional double. Simply, once our gang of flies encountered a school of perch (running from 50-100 fish each), they ganged up on the flies until all hooks were loaded and then they kept at it, trying to take the flies from the hooked fish.
Simply, right now at Boyd, I presume other perch waters, large schools of perch are aggressively chasing bait and a gang of flies (2 or 3), in our case 1.5 to 2 inch clousers worked on a sinking line is producing some great action.
If you like perch and fast action, give fly fishing a try. I think you’ll find it to be an extremely effective and fun way to catch your dinner.
To say fly fishing is a passion for Dave is an understatement, he lives by the adage, �fly fishing isn�t a matter of life or death, it�s much more important than that.� Simply, if it�s a fish, then Dave�s willing to chase it on a fly. This includes making two or three trips a year out of state to places like Alaska, Canada, East and West Coasts to fly fish for salmon, northern pike and salt water species, such as redfish. The rest of the time Dave spends his time plying Colorado waters with a fly rod for everything the state has to offer such as bass, perch, crappie, bluegill, walleye, catfish, pike and yes even trout with a fly.