Overlooking Midge Larva?
When it comes to stillwaters, few bugs matter as much in a trout's
diet as the midge. A true staple for trout, the midge will hatch all
year on open water and up north, from ice-out, 'til ice-on on most of
our stillwater fisheries. There are four stages in the midge's life
cycle, these stages include the egg, larva, pupa and adult, with the
last three of these four stages being quite important to trout and to
stillwater fly anglers. The second of these three stages -
the larval stage- frequently gets overlooked.

Midges come in many colors and sizes. The adult midge looks very
similar to a mosquito but lucky for us lacks the mosquito's
proboscis. The most obvious stage of a midge's life cycle -the adult-
can be seen on top of the water both when it sheds its pupa shuck and
again when it returns to lay its eggs. Although trout prefer the larval
and pupa stages of the midge, trout may key in on this stage while the
adult is ridding itself of its extol pupa skeleton, or while it waits
for its wings to dry before flying off. When the adult midge returns to
lay its eggs, the midge will skim across the surface of the water
depositing its eggs leaving a
come eat me wake behind it, which seams to attract trout well enough.

The pupa stage of the midge -the chironomid- receives a lot of
attention from both stillwater fly anglers and the stream guys.
Although the chironomid (from the name chironomidae meaning non-biting
midge) is in actual fact a midge in any stag of it's life cycle, most fly
anglers refer to the chironomid as the pupa stag of the midge. Fly fishermen concentrate more on this stage of the midge
because the chironomid can be found at any depth of a stillwater
fishery as it rises from the lake bottom very slowly until it reaches
the surface where it transforms into the adult. Because of this,
chironomids give trout an easy meal throughout the entire column of
water meaning anglers can fish a pupa pattern at nearly any depth of
the fishery with a good chance at finding trout. It's during the heat
of summer when trout move to deeper, more comfortable water and the
pupa activity slows down or when trout start keying in on active larger
food items that the chironomid may not get the consistent results one
is after.

The larval stage of the midge, known as -the bloodworm- is not a true
worm due to it's exoskeleton and small clawed legs. The chironomid
larva will spend its time living at the bottom of a lake in the mud or
sediment feeding on decaying matter known as detritus. In stillwaters,
you will find midge larva in a few different colors like green and tan but red larva are
typical. The blood of a midge, like humans, is iron based and because
most stillwater bloodworms live in anoxic environments, need a protein
called hemoglobin. This hemoglobin is carried by red blood cells and
stores oxygen which maintain the viability of it's cells keeping it
alive and giving the larva a blood red appearance when little oxygen is
available.
Bloodworms often get overlooked by many anglers but quite the opposite
when it comes to feeding trout. Trout will often key in on the
abundance of larva available and due to its familiarity, will readily
feed upon larva even when other aquatic life is plentiful. Because you
can find Bloodworms on or near the bottom of the lake, anglers will do
well to keep their bloodworm patterns one or two feet off any bottom
structure they may be fishing. The size of fly you choose to represent
a midge larva should be up to three sizes larger then the adult midges
seen hatching on the surface as the midge's body length decrease in
size from larva, to pupa, then to adult.
Fishing The Bloodworm
Fishing a bloodworm is much the same as fishing a chironomid. You'll
need a strike indicator (Quick Release indicators work well), floating
line and a long leader. The length of your leader will depend on the
depth you are fishing but unlike the chironomid, the bloodworm will not
stray far from the bottom so a foot or two off the bottom will be the
required depth.
To find this depth, take a bell weight or hemostats and place it on
your bloodworm pattern. Now lower your fly down until it reaches the
bottom. Using your thumb and index finger, mark the spot where your
leader is even with the surface of the water and secure the strike
indicator one foot below this mark. Now retrieve your fly and remove
the bell weight. Your indicator will now float your fly one foot off
the bottom. In early mornings when the water is at a cooler
temperature, trout will be found closer to the shoreline and fishing
your bloodworm in shallow water should produce fish. In the heat of the
day however, trout may go deeper in search of colder, more comfortable
water. Work your way out to deeper water trying different depths from
12 to 22 feet of water or more but always keeping your fly in that one
to two foot section off the bottom. Your retrieve should imitate the
natural so little to no movement usually produces the best results.
Slow short strips or a slow hand twist with long pauses are usually the
key to success. There are times however that attention may be what's
required to get a hook-up so a couple of quick short strips with long
pauses may produce the results you're looking for. Depths of twenty
feet or more make for a very long leader and if you've ever tried
casting a leader this long, you know it's not the easiest thing in
the world to do. When fishing depths of 20 plus feet, a fast sink line
may be more to your liking.
At these depths, you can fish directly below your boat without fear of
spooking the trout. When fishing with a sinking line, find the depth
you want to fish at using your bell weight. Drop your weighted fly down
to the bottom with your rod tip just an inch off the surface of the
water. When your fly hits the bottom, reel up one foot of line. Now
remove the bell weight and drop your fly back down. Keep the rod tip
one inch from the waters surface and when the tip drops, set the hook.
Great attention must be taken with these methods, as takes can be very
soft. At times, just a slight movement of the strike indicator or the
rod tip is all an angler may see and with such little warning one must
set the hook or possibly lose out on an opportunity.

Bloodworms are a true staple for trout at any time of year even when
the lakes are frozen over. Paying no attention to the bloodworm is like
overlooking scuds, leeches or the favored chironomid pupa itself. On those slow
warm days when nothing seems to be working, toss a midge larva pattern
out into some deep water about a foot of the bottom and find out for
yourself what you've been overlooking. It may just save a fish-less
day.
All photo's coutesy Phil Rowley Copyright ©