Eating On The Drop — How and Why Trout Eat a Falling Fly

by | Jul 19, 2022 | 14 comments

One of the greatest ongoing mysteries in fly fishing is why trout eat our flies at all. In a resource-rich river, what triggers a trout to choose our fly over the real thing?

Sometimes our presentation of the fly is so dead-on that it is purely convincing. A trout believes it sees another natural, so it eats. Other times, our presentation, or the fly itself, is unusual enough — without being threatening — that a trout is simply curious. It sees our fly as something that might be food, and it can’t resist the instinct to test something out.

So whether they’re convinced or curious, we find trout at the end of our line by fooling them on a fly. And sometimes, it’s that intersection of the two states that elicits the irresistible urge from a fish. Trout eating on the drop is one of those times.

Let’s talk about it . . .

The Drop

Flies falling through the water column — that’s the drop. But like anything else that matters in this game, the nuances are critically important.

How far is the drop?

What’s the speed of the drop?

And is the drop under tension or purely a free fall?

Anglers who are well-versed in various styles of fishing make the best fly fishermen. Experience and understanding of what makes so many fishing methods produce provides the dedicated angler unlimited avenues for creativity. Discovering crossover tactics or combinations of techniques is what keeps the fly fishing game fresh for so many of us.

How the flies, lure or bait drop through the water is talked about across fishing styles. And it pays to consider why and when a trout might eat our fly on the drop.

Still water and river anglers alike see the fish’s tendency to eat  as the offering falls through the water column. When a fish responds, the angler repeats and then refines the presentation until it becomes a repeatable tactic to be called upon from a list of the many proven methods for fooling a fish.

The drop is a deadly look. And in some fashion or another, it has produced in every way I’ve ever fished — from a spinning rod, to a bait caster to a fly rod.

Photo by Josh Darling

Drop Distance

Imagine a nymphing presentation, with the goal to get the fly very near the bottom — in the strike zone. The drop distance, then, is (nearly) the full depth of the column. Is the water three feet deep? Then the drop distance is about three feet.

Now imagine a streamer that has quickly gained the bottom in that same three feet of water. Sure, it dropped those three feet through the column, like the nymph, but nothing ate it. Now let’s jig the streamer up two feet and let it fall. That drop distance is two feet to the bottom. Jig the streamer up a foot next time, and the drop distance is cut in half.

This is the measure of drop distance. And for these examples, let’s stick with nymphs on a tight line and streamers.

After a nymph drops through the column and into the strike zone, we establish a dead drift. Then, maybe halfway through that drift, we lift the nymph six inches. If we relax the tension, we then have six inches of drop available.

A trout may well eat on this short drop, while the same trout may have rejected a longer drop on earlier drifts. These specifics are what make the advanced fly fishing game forever addicting to lifetime anglers.

Drop Speed

Let’s get back to that nymph in three feet of water. Upon entry, we want the nymph near the bottom. But how fast do we want it there?

This is another option for the angler — another decision in our hands that can turn an average day into an amazing one.

Do we want a drop rate of one-inch per second? If so, then we want the fly achieving the bottom on a three count. Or do we want it slower? Perhaps twice as long?

Slower drop rates give a trout longer chances to see the fly above them — more time for making the mistake of eating our fly. Faster drop rates take the fly through the water more quickly — the trout may see it dropping for shorter periods, but they see it drifting in the strike zone for longer intervals. These, again, are the decisions we make.

READ: Troutbitten | Six Ways to Get Your Fly Deeper

Adding more weight is just one way to get the fly deeper. Surely the most obvious, additional weight is a simple way to increase the drop rate. But there are others. Reduce the material resistance of both the fly and the line. Enter that fly and its companion tippet in just one seam to reduce the effects of cross currents. Or provide the fly grace to fall (slack), without tension from the line.

That concept of tension brings us to the last fundamental consideration for the drop . . .

Photo by Josh Darling

Free Fall or Tension Drop?

A fly can drop through the water in one of two ways: It can fall without tension — free fall. Or it can fall under tension.

And while a tension drop has varying degrees that might slow the drop and alter the progress of the fly, the free fall is exactly what it sounds like. It’s a drop where the fly falls, as though unattached to our tippet. And there is only one version of a true free fall.

How do we get the free fall? Understanding line, leader and tippet manipulation is beyond the scope of this article, but I’ve written a lot about using a tuck cast on a nymph and about leaders designed for the purpose of providing slack at just the right time and place for a nymph or streamer to free fall.

READ: Troutbitten | Design and Function of the Troutbitten Standard Mono Rig
READ: Troutbitten | Is a Soft and Thin Sighter Best? Not Always
READ: Troutbitten | Fly Fishing Strategies — The Tuck Cast

Likewise, a streamer that is lifted and then allowed to fall is following the time-tested tactic of jigging. Because, across all fishing styles, jigging just works.

READ: Troutbitten | Streamer Presentations — Jigging the Streamer

Lifting the fly is more straightforward. But how should that fly fall downward again? Do we want it to free fall, or should it drop under tension? Both presentations produce different results and responses from the trout.

By using various combinations of rod tip motion and stripping, we are in control of the drop on a streamer. Provide a touch of slack, and the streamer free falls quickly back into position. But hold a degree of tension to the fly after the lift, and the fly falls under tension, moving forward — or toward the attached line. These are radically different looks to the fish, and the trout’s day-to-day response proves it.

READ: Troutbitten | Nymphing — Free Fall and the Drift

Why Do They Eat On the Drop?

This is a question with more theories than sure-things. But one popular answer is that dead and dying baitfish fall to the riverbed.

Sure they do. And how fast is that fall? Do nymphs look the same when they die? And do trout recognize it?

Or, do trout take a fast falling nymph because it looks like a caddis swimming down to lay eggs? Some caddis species do this, but not all.

Does a hapless nymph, dislodged from its rock-hold and tossed around by the turbulence, swim down to regain a foothold on the next rock? Probably.

What other events look like a fly dropping through the water column? Not many. But perhaps that is enough.

And maybe — just maybe — a falling fly checks the boxes of both convincing and curious. Maybe trout eat on the drop because it looks familiar. And when you combine that with the various ways we can change the drop distance, the drop speed and the drop tension, we have enough tools and options at our disposal to make a trout very, very curious.

Fish hard, friends.

 

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Enjoy the day.
Domenick Swentosky
T R O U T B I T T E N
domenick@troutbitten.com

 

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Domenick Swentosky

Central Pennsylvania

Hi. I’m a father of two young boys, a husband, author, fly fishing guide and a musician. I fish for wild brown trout in the cool limestone waters of Central Pennsylvania year round. This is my home, and I love it. Friends. Family. And the river.

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14 Comments

  1. Personally I believe that depth is the crucial factor, presenting your fly at the correct depth for as long as possible significantly increases the chance of success.

    However on spooky, educated or pressured fish then the fly is best when Neutral density. Natural flies or lava don’t suddenly drop through the water column as heavily weighted patterns do. Instead they are subject to the waters undercurrents. Your pattern should represent this and the speed of descent – especially on stillwaters

    Conversely on fresh fish, those that haven’t seen a fly for months/years then sharp/quick movement will actually induce the take .

    Rob Edmunds

    Reply
    • Hi wholeheartedly agree that depth is the most important factor. But the discussion for this article is about what happens while the fly is getting to that depth — as it is falling into the strike zone, for example. Because they eat on the drop too. And it’s worthy of consideration.

      I did not make an argument that that the drop is a more important part than the drift.

      None of these articles stand alone. Here’s a real good one that applies:

      https://troutbitten.com/2020/11/29/nymphing-free-fall-and-the-drift/

      Cheers.
      Dom

      Reply
  2. Hunger and curiosity are just two of the reasons trout will take a fly. Gary LaFontaine’s list also includes reflex, anger, voracity, playfulness, and territoriality. The stimulus of a falling fly could trigger a number of these responses. Real nymphs and baitfish don’t (or rarely) fall through the water column, however crayfish do. My guess is that a falling fly (like a falling jig or Senko in bass fishing) probably is triggering a reflexive take. As someone who only fishes floating flies, so I have no idea how significant this tactic is. What percent of trout do you catch on falling flies? can’t imagine that it is more than 5%.
    As usual, tasty food for thought.

    Reply
    • Can’t speak for everyone but in certain conditions the drop will outfish a dry 2 to 1 for me. I tend to do it with weighted/beadhead cdc soft hackles and drop the fly under tension as opposed to free fall…helps with strike detection as they often hit early in the drop.

      Reply
      • Greg, your terminology here has me thinking that you are confusing the term drop for a nymph in a dry dropper setup. But just for clarity,that’s not what I’m talking about in this article.

        Also, I would argue that dropping a nymph under tension produces fewer hits that allowing it to free fall — (opposite is true for a streamer). In fact, I think one of the biggest mistakes tight line and euro nymphing anglers are making today is too much contact. This is especially true from those who use extra light setups. They believe they are getting truer dead drifts. However, if there was no tippet attached to that light nymph, it would still plummet to the bottom in a second or two. The fact that it does not, proves the point. Even 7X tippet must be managed with grace. The attached line always influences the fly.

        Cheers.
        Dom

        Reply
        • I understand what you are saying, and I’m not talking about the nymph in a dry dropper set up. I like to fish a nymph on a drop in the summer, when flows are low and fish are used to eating terrestrials off the surface, but the bigger ones are a little bit shy about coming all the way up to eat a dry, but many times in my streams they will take a subsurface presentation more readily.

          A heavy nymph plummeting to the bottom in these low flows looks unnatural, and hangs up. The CDC hackle allows a much slower fall through the water column. When I say I like to fish it under tension, what I really mean is that I don’t aggressively tuck to introduce a lot of slack with the cast. I want a fly first entry, but minimal slack after that. Too much slack / too much of a tuck upfront and you lose early strike detection. I find that the fish many times hit very early on the drop.

          Reply
          • It’s surely a fine line. I don’t want a lot of slack either, with that tuck. But I’d rather allow the fly to free fall for a moment or two, simply because I get more hits than if I enter under tension. Minimal slack, as you say, for lower water especially, is my goal as well.

            Also, I agree that they are more responsive on the drop during the summer. That’s when I float the sighter the most often. And I start that with a tuck cast, with a touch of grace for the flies. Otherwise, they drag far too much, far too often.

            Cheers.
            Dom

    • “What percent of trout do you catch on falling flies? can’t imagine that it is more than 5%.”

      It’s WAY more than 5%. Hell, many nymphing anglers who are all-in on the idea of a super light setup spend almost all of their time with the fly dropping and not in the strike zone. If fish are eating on the drop,the frequency is more like 90 percent.

      Cheers.

      Reply
      • Very surprising to hear. “If” they are eating on the drop. I assume that this is, again, more common than a DFO guy like me might imagine. Very interesting, but this does reinforce the idea that these are reflexive strikes. In bass fishing few prey items fall at the rate if a jig, a spinnerbait, or even a plastic worm, yet tons of bass are caught on the drop. The nice thing about reflex strikes is that it is an automatic response to the stimuli – when in the right mood, as you said. Great discussion as i find the topic of trout behavior fascinating to explore. Can’t wait for Season 4 Podcast. One topic that might be of interest to listeners is how to pick a river to fish when multiple options are available, especially for those with limited time.

        Reply
      • Yes totally agree. In the spring when water temps are ideal and fish are used to eating in all different areas of the water column I will fish lightly weighted / cdc hackled nymphs and catch 95% of fish before the nymph ever hits depth, at least where I am (blueridge mountain freestones/brookies).

        Reply
  3. FYI it is also well known among bass fisherman that bass will often take a fly or lure on the drop.

    Reply
    • Sure thing. As I mentioned above, eating on the drop is popular among fishing styles — and fish!

      Reply
    • I agree. I was a bass fisherman for years. Fishing plastic worms or jigs, the majority of the strikes were on the drop or fall.

      Reply

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Domenick Swentosky

Central Pennsylvania

Hi. I’m a father of two young boys, a husband, author, fly fishing guide and a musician. I fish for wild brown trout in the cool limestone waters of Central Pennsylvania year round. This is my home, and I love it. Friends. Family. And the river.

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