
Fly fishing with a leech pattern is a very effective method to catch trout all year long. The next possibility is a very slow strip along the bottom of a lake, river, or pond, near aquatic vegetation. Leeches are very abundant in nearly all freshwater environments and a large meal for trout, so when presented with the opportunity, trout love this easy meal.
The full medical leech is wriggling at the bottom of a plastic glass. Royalty-Free Stock Footage. Close up.

Liverani added, "When I was in the shower, he would come right out as far as my bottom lip and I could see him sticking out the bottom of my nose. So when that happened, I jumped out of the shower to look really closely in the mirror and I saw ridges on him. That's when I realized he was an animal.
You'd probably look like this too if you lived exclusively in the freezing groundwater and darkness of one of the deepest caves in the world. Over the next decade, researchers from the Croatian University Mountaineering Association would descend into the winding, dipping cave systems that stretch several kilometres inside Velebit to discover a series of chambers, pits and channels, ice-cold pools and streams, and a m free-fall vertical drop - the world's deepest hole. It's like discovering the properties of some other planet, something completely different and unexpected," says one of the team, Dalibor Paar, who descended m down the hole to catch a glimpse of the bottom, dangling on a rope to take measurements of his surroundings.


I still remember that day on Plateau Lake, located northeast of Merritt, almost 25 years ago when my fly fishing partner and I learned a lot about leeches. It was early June and we had been having fairly good success that morning on chironomid pupal patterns fished on long leaders and floating fly lines. By noon the chironomids quit emerging in the shallow water so we moved out into deeper water in the hopes of finding an afternoon hatch.
An animal with a name enough to make most peoples skin crawl, and one that can quickly become a concern in garden ponds — the leech! Although unpleasant for humans, most leeches are actually harmless to ponds so long as their populations are controlled. Only a few species actually suck blood, and most fish, especially koi, love to eat them as a snack!
Most species of leeches found in ponds feed on the sludge at the bottom of your pond and are not blood-sucking parasites. Leeches get into your pond from a number of sources, but they usually come from the introduction of new plants, fish or rocks. Parasitic leeches can be harmful to your fish causing anemia and can spread protozoal blood parasites between fish.
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