Thread: Mr. Cahill and the Sulphurs
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06-04-2014 #1
Mr. Cahill and the Sulphurs
There are some great little streams near the McD's I work at......... The light if the drive thru window draws in the hatches.......
Here is this evenings sample
Mostly sulphursbut a guest appearance from Mr. Midge..look at the two dropped egg sacks..
This is a sulphur in the wrong place...she needs to get back to the crick and lay them eggs
and here is, who I believe is Mr. Light Cahill Spinner....but I may be wrong.......do tell if I am
Similar Threads:- "I'm not out on the river to win." -Kieth Rutherford
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Barleywine (06-06-2014), golden beetle (06-05-2014)
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06-05-2014 #2
Re: Mr. Cahill and the Sulphurs
That bottom picture is awesome..
I experienced a decent small and large golden stonefly hatch on a small wts after work...I thought it was too late for them?? I assumed the small ones were Sulphurs at first until I caught one.
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06-05-2014 #3
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06-05-2014 #4
Re: Mr. Cahill and the Sulphurs
Forget these entomology pictures
The coloration on the breast of these rainbows is crazy. I'm not sure you could call this a double bow
I had to throw a couple more ugly rainbows in this post
Landed this on 6x...from an unstocked trib to the Delaware. No idea where it came from, but had beautifully-spotted fins and fought like hell.
This fish was re-visited. It kicked my ass by taking me out to my backing during higher flows in our first encounter. I swore it was over 20".
Holdover rainbow, NJ.
Just located some huge spawning smallmouth. Hooked one on a sucker spawn that I had in my box but it thrashed my 6x ( I didn't think too far ahead ). This smallie was bigger than any bass I have ever seen. Hopefully I can post a picture of some soon.
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06-05-2014 #5
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09-17-2014 #6
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Re: Mr. Cahill and the Sulphurs
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09-17-2014 #9
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Re: Mr. Cahill and the Sulphurs
I believe that is a little yellow quill (Leucrocuta hebe)
Where did you take that Pic FF?
"Hatchery fish have the same colors, but they always seem muted like bad reproductions of great art." Bill Barich
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09-17-2014 #10
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Re: Mr. Cahill and the Sulphurs
Well if we like a test !!! which I do !!! lets do it.
Based on what I can make out from this one photo there several potentials. It appears to be a male imago of the genus Maccaffertium or Stenonema. Stenonema femoratum has the dark infused stigmatic stain that we see in the upper area of the forewing it does suggest Stenonema femoratum. However I don't know where the sample was taken from, what the size is, or the time of session that you collected it. So because Maccaffertium pudicum can also look like this it makes knowing for sure very tough without dissection.
However I believe I have seen this photo before on Trout nut with a Stenacron carolina that I diagnosed ??? If so I now believe that Kurt cleared this one up as M pudicum.
It is the same photo I just checked, Ha "JohnNY"
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09-17-2014 #11
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Re: Mr. Cahill and the Sulphurs
"Hatchery fish have the same colors, but they always seem muted like bad reproductions of great art." Bill Barich
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09-17-2014 #12
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Re: Mr. Cahill and the Sulphurs
Notice the body posture is incorrect. It is a Maccaffertium pudicum. Leucorcuta are more closely related to Stenacron. Kurt, Taxon, and myself agreed that this one is pudicum on Trout nut.
http://www.troutnut.com/topic/8055/March-BrownQuill-Gordon
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