Yes, yes, I know pink flies work for anadromous species and have used them frequently for salmon, steelhead and especially SRC. However, I've watched a few flyfishing programs where anglers were using pink patterns in dry and subsurface form for rainbow, cutts and browns.... and they worked.
Okay, I've never tried using a pink fly for anything other than sea-going fish so I'm curious as to if any of you have experience with using pink patterns for inland species. And if so, and they work, do you have any idea why a landlocked trout would be drawn to hit a color not normally seen a thousand miles from the salt. A dry fly tied with a pink body and a nymph tied with a pink thorax has me scratching my head.
Okay, I've never tried using a pink fly for anything other than sea-going fish so I'm curious as to if any of you have experience with using pink patterns for inland species. And if so, and they work, do you have any idea why a landlocked trout would be drawn to hit a color not normally seen a thousand miles from the salt. A dry fly tied with a pink body and a nymph tied with a pink thorax has me scratching my head.