My pleasure Aaron and thanks for keeping this ever-obsessed, rigidly serious angler company!
If I had to admit what I feel is my weakest area with stillwater fishing it would be reading them! The larger they are the harder it becomes--especially when they are featureless (no strong points, bays or weed lines). If the fish are showing then I feel pretty confident. But as you recall we hit fish in 130 feet of water, 6 feet of water and various points between. That final flurry in the last 45 minutes though....that was neat. We hit 6 or 7 fish in that span. Was it the wind, the water temperature, the water depth, the fish themselves.....? So many factors. I love this stuff!
...and, I was using Aaron's success as a control as I matched his line and retrieve only adding a top attractor dropper in a Silver Invicta as opposed the the all nymph/buzzer cast he was using. I was hoping it would pull some fish in with the clear water-even if they ended up taking one of the two buzzers under it. But as Aaron had is fourth take in a short span to my one I was thinking maybe the flash was pushing them away. Then I landed a fish and it took the Silver Invicta.
Go figure.
Aaron, I talked with my buddy and he thinks that the steady wind is what turned the fish on. Maybe with the lack of wind for most of the day a far more static, vertical approach would have worked better. But as the wind built and stayed true, the fish got into a more horizontal presentation. He fishes dry/dropper much, much more than I do and he says his success with that seems best with calm conditions (and lots of patience--I need to practice that one).