PODCAST: Dry Fly Skills Series #5 — All About the Flies — S12, Ep5

by | Sep 1, 2024 | 2 comments

 The Troutbitten Podcast is available everywhere that you listen to your podcasts.

** Note **  The Podcast Player, along with links to your favorite players is below.

Here we are at the part of the season where we address everybody’s favorite question — what fly are you using?

We’ve argued for years that the leader is the most consequential element in the system — much more important than the fly. That said, the fly must be reasonable.

Most anglers are so focused on the flies because it’s the easiest thing to change. We’re quick to blame the pattern. And it’s a lot easier to clip off one fly and tie on another than to really break down your approach, your cast and your dead drift.

The better approach is to perfect those elements and then . . . maybe change the fly.

I carry a box of dry flies, just like I carry a box of streamers and a box of nymphs and wets. The flies matter. But more than anything, it’s about matching the moment, the water type, the lifecycle of the bug – and even the wind conditions. For us, those conditions — those situations — dictate our next fly choice. We don’t guess on patterns. Instead, we think about things, develop a theory and test it with the next fly choice and (hopefully) a great presentation.

My friend, Matt Grobe, joins me for this discussion.

Resources

READ: Troutbitten | Category | Dry Fly Fishing
VIDEO: Troutbitten | The Perfect Parachute Ant
READ: Troutbitten | When Should You Change the Fly?

Listen with the player above, or . . .

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Season Twelve of the Troutbitten Podcast continues next week with episode six. So look for that in your Troutbitten podcast feed.

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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2 Comments

  1. Any type of beetle in various sizes is my go too!!

    Reply
  2. I like Tom Rosenbauer’s approach to dry fly selection, it is based on the distinction between infertile, generally smaller and higher gradient, rocky streams v. fertile, generally lower gradient, often weedy, bug rich waters.

    INFERTILE WATERS
    Opportunistic feeders that can be easily prospected with larger, bushy/buggy dry flies. In these environments where aquatic prey items are relatively scarce. Generally smaller trout (typically) rise willingly to Humpies, Wulffs, Irresistibles, Bushy Parachutes, Elk Hair Caddis, or terrestrials.

    FERTILE WATERS (Spring Creeks, Limestone Creeks, Tailwaters, “select” Freestoners)
    Generally selective feeders that prey on a very wide variety of aquatic insects. Fly selection in these bug-rich waters usually has to match a very specific species of fly in a specific size, posture, silhouette, and stage of development. Familiarity with insect identification and observation of bugs in the drift is critical. These are the waters and fish that tend to be difficult, however the reasons surface feeding trout choose to ignore your dry fly can often have nothing to do with the fly. Your mere presence and/or lining can put trout on high alert, despite continued feeding, As Gary Borger states, on a scale of 0 – 10, drag is a 100; “Drag-free drifts catch fish” and “Dead flies don’t swim” are apt mantras. Often these seemingly selective feeders ignore your fly simply because it is not within one inch of their drift line, and sometimes it’s a matter of timing as they are not looking up and ready to eat. And there are times when your fly is correct in every aspect, other than the very subtle motions of the naturals that are impossible to duplicate. Finally, there are the maddening smutters feeding on the TDS hatch

    And then there are those times your casting, mending, and line control are perfect, and motion is a non-factor. These are the times when fly choice needs to be dialed in. There are few secrets when it comes to selecting appropriate mayfly, caddisfly, stonefly, or terrestrial patterns.

    In fertile, bug-rich waters, DFO anglers are faced with fly selections that must cover matching the hatch, breaking the hatch, headhunting individual fish, and prospecting. On the NY tailwaters where I fish, mayfly and caddisfly emergers rule during most hatches. Hatch breakers for me are typically beetles, spinners, large drake duns, and an old school fly I would never leave home without: LaFontaine’s Sparkle (Caddis) Emerger. These same patterns cover headhunting non-hatch risers; prospecting is almost always a beetle thing for me, and occasionally hoppers. If I were restricted to just three styles of dry fly on my waters, they would be biot body DHEs, Coffin flies, big lead-belly beetles, and sparkle emergers.

    My 2 cents on a topic I am fairly passionate about.

    BTW, great analysis on upstream v downstream approach. Your distinction between wade angling and drift boating was spot on. The only fishing from above I do is across and just slightly above with a negative reach cast. Approaching from directly above when wading also kicks up plumes of silt and debris that will put fish down.

    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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