Muddler Minnow-A Fly Fisher’s Fly

Fly Fishing Muddler Minnows
If I had to pick only one fly I could only fish with all year long, I would have to choose the Muddler Minnow. I like this fly pattern because it is so versatile, and it seems to produce on big rivers, small streams, and lakes. Popular sizes ranges from size 4 down to size 10 and it doesn’t have to be tied perfect to be effective. In fact, I have a friend of mine who once told me that “the worse it looks, the more fish it catches.” So if you are tying your own Muddlers and they don’t look that good, do not worry they may still catch fish.
The Muddler Minnow is a great fly for Rainbow Trout, Brown Trout, Cutthroat Trout, Brook Trout, Steelhead, and most other game fish. This fly has two major things going for it. First, it looks like a wide variety of fish forage. For example, to the fish, a large Muddler may look like a grasshopper, big stonefly, or even a small field mouse. The smaller Muddlers may look like caddis flies, small minnows, or small sculpins. Second, it can be fished just about any way you want using a dry line or a wet line, dead drifted on the surface, down and across the current, or cast and striping the fly. Don’t be afraid to give the Muddler some action. Make it look like alive trying to get away from a predator, or make it look like a big fly trying to get off the surface of the water.
A Muddler Minnow fishing tip that works when fishing slower currents or lake fishing: Cast out to a spot. As soon as the fly hits the water, twitch the fly a couple of times while stripping in about 2 feet of line, and then let it sit for 5 seconds, then twitch and strip in again working the fly back to you. Make another cast to a different spot about 6 feet from the first spot. Try not to fish over the same place over and over.
Just as there are endless variations of the Muddler Minnow, there are just as many ways to fish the Muddler. For example, in the summer, you can fish it like a hopper; twitch and pause making it look like a big insect has just fallen in the water. Skate the Muddler, and make it wake across the current while at the same time giving the fly the action of an injured minnow trying to escape a charging predator. In the springtime try the smaller sizes, and fish the fly with a sinking tip line close to shore, giving it a short stripping action. During early mornings and late evening of summer and fall use the larger sizes of the Muddler, giving it action along the edges of deep pools and cut banks.
Please remember to be careful while you are on the river, do not harm our wonderful land, don’t litter, and please practice catch and release for the next generation.
Stanley Stanton is an Oregon Fly Fishing Guide and McKenzie River fly fishing guide, Visit: http://www.oregon-fly-fishing-with-stan.com For additional fly fishing tips and information about Fly-fishing for Rainbow Trout, Steelhead Fly fishing and salmon fishing. Email: stan@oregon-fly-fishing-with-stan.com The above author authorizes distribution of this article and that it be reprinted or Published in its entirety, including this resource box.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Stanley_Stanton
Tying the Muddler minnow I use is pretty straightforward. Check it out the Muddler minnow in our fly tying section.
Related articles
- Can’t Hardly Wait For Fishing Season To Open (stepbysteptips.com)
- Secrets of Fishing For Brook Trout (thejoyofflyfishing.com)
Tagged with: brook trout • Brown trout • Cutthroat Trout • Fish • fly fishing • Muddler Minnow • Rainbow Trout • Trout
Filed under: brook trout • fishing tips • fly fishing • flyfishing • new brunswick
Like this post? Subscribe to my RSS feed and get loads more!







Thanks for the reminder James. Like many beginners at fly fishing, I quickly filled my boxes with a large variety of flys and never properly gave some of the tried and true patterns the chance and respect they deserved. Rest assured that this spring I’ll re-evaluate the contents of my boxes and dig into the forgotten corners.
Muddlers are EXTREMELY popular here in Ontario. They’re most popular up in the Nipigon area, but I use them all year in southern Ontario for Browns and Brookies in our local trout streams.
Awesome post James!
Over the years I have used and abused a lot of my collection and before I knew I was so low on my favourites that I started using some of the older, never used flies.
It’s always nice to find a new confidence fly.
Dave, I lived in Ontario growing up but never heard of fly fishing until I moved to New Brunswick. But I use to fish for catfish just south of Lake Simcoe. If I remember it’s was Black River that ran up highway 48 to Sutton.
Never got to fish for any of the really cool species like today.
Just a few more weeks and we will be able to go fishing again.
Hey James,
Can you email me. I crashed my computer and had to reinstall. I lost everything
Need your help to get my wordpress going again…sorry
Jamie that sucks. I have had my system crash and it all a couple of times. I send an email right away.
Hi! You’ve got fantastic places to fish in Ontario. I’m form Poland and we don’t have so good possibilities, but muddler is also very good lure for brown trouts and rainbows
Hey Jarek the muddler seems to a tasty treat for a lot of fish.
But I don’t live in Ontario, I live in New Brunswick, Canada