The Troutbitten Podcast, Episode 11, is now available everywhere that you listen to your podcasts. ** Note ** The Podcast Player, along with links to your favorite players is below. Pushing through the tough times — dealing with bad weather and difficult conditions...
Articles With the Tag . . . winter fishing
Fly Fishing in the Winter — Something is Always Gonna Hurt
** NOTE: This is Part Eight of a Troutbitten series on fly fishing for trout through the winter months. You can find the full series HERE. ** Joey reeled up and waded downstream toward me. He kept to the left bank and walked through thin currents, where he’d caught...
Fifty Fly Fishing Tips: #24 — Transitions are tough
Today's article is a remix from a couple years ago. It's a good one. You can find it here: Fifty Fly Fishing Tips: #24: Transitions are Tough Enjoy the day Domenick Swentosky T R O U T B I T T E N domenick@troutbitten.com
Fly Fishing in the Winter — Egg Tips
** NOTE: This is Part Seven of a Troutbitten series on fly fishing for trout through the winter months. This will all read a little better if you back up and find Parts One, Two, Three, Four and Five and Six. ** Smith and I found ourselves on another...
Fly Fishing in the Winter — The System
Here are my methods for catching trout in my favorite season.
I’ve grown to love these bitter months, not only for the solitude and peace beyond the dead end roads, but for the challenge of a different game. And once you dig in, when you spend some time fighting, and you finally gain comfort against the elements, you’ll find a season more predictable than any other. Because winter feeding options are limited for a trout, and the angler may take advantage of that — if he’s persistent.
The rewards for finding a winter fishing system are both high numbers and larger trout. The range for error is wider. It’s harder to hit the mark. But when you do find the target, success flows freely . . .
Fly Fishing in the Winter — Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes
Yesterday afternoon topped off at thirty-eight degrees. That’s warm for a winter fisherman. I had five hours until dark, and I knew the temp would drop a bit at the end. There wasn’t much wind, no sun, and I had a long walk upstream to start my day. I thought about all those factors when I lifted the hatch of my SUV. Staring at the big bag of winter gear that goes everywhere with me, I knew exactly what to wear.
What follows here is my own system for staying comfortable (enough) while fishing the winter months. Soft, snowy days in the silent forest, with the solitary song of flowing water passing through are my favorite. I prefer January over July. I welcome the first crisp days of fall and the wool gloves that come with me.
Fly Fishing in the Winter — Your Hands
I fish with some very tough, die hard trout fishermen. But cold wind and colder water gets the best of everyone who isn’t prepared. And when we get temps down into the low twenties and teens, that’s when the guy who stubbornly wants to wear a ball cap and no gloves simply doesn’t make it.
The toughest thing facing a winter angler is not picky trout. It’s the weather.
There’s a good solution to every winter situation we encounter. And all of those solutions require your hands to operate.
Good winter fishing starts and ends with warm fingers . . .
Absence | Goodbye, Winter
I hold on to winter longer than anyone else I know. I love winter for what it is, for what it makes me feel, for what it turns me into — for how it forces family to huddle closer, and for how exquisitely alone I feel outside.
Winter is the season of absence.
Night Shift — Tracks
** Note: This January 2015 post is rewritten and revisited here. So many of our favorite waters are accompanied by railroad tracks, and walking the familiar but odd stride required by the spacing of the wooden ties has become instinctive to me. Â The tracks are a...
Fifty Fly Fishing Tips: #24 — Transitions are tough
The river is full of challenges and the trout dictate the terms. A versatile angler is ready for anything. But it helps to be thoughtful about every transition, every time you alter your rig or tactics on the water. Is the change a good bet? And if so, what adjustments need be made?