Trout Fishing on The Fly

fly fishing rod

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One of my favourite methods for fishing trout, well really any fish, is using my fly rod and artificial flies. I also tie most of my own flies. For me that’s just part of fly fishing. There’s just something extra in fishing when you make your own flies and lures.

Some of these flies are so tiny that I am amazed every single time I hook into a brook trout with them. Others are bigger and some are ones I actually use for fly fishing Atlantic salmon, Smallmouth bass and Chain pickerel. I do like to use a lot of top water flies, just to watch the action when I get a strike. It’s so cool and makes me keep coming back for more.

When I am fishing new water I always take both my spinning rod and fly rod. That way if the terrain is too tough to get a fly rod through I can use my spinning rod but most places I go I tend to be able to use my fly rod. I also must admit I don’t do that well on those windy days so the spinning rod does come in very handy.

Flies I Use To Catch Brook Trout

I like tying my own trout flies for those days on the water and I never go with anything complicated so even if you never tied an artificial fly you would be able to put one of these together.

Most often, almost 100% of the time I use dry flies. It’s just so much fun watching them take it from the surface of the water, but every once in a while I will use a wet fly, a streamer or even a nymph to get below the surface if they aren’t taking anything from the surface.

My personal favourite dry, wet and streamer trout flies:

Dry Flies – Hair Wing Dry Flies – size 8-18

  • Gray Wulff
  • White Wulff
  • Irrisistible

Dry Flies – Fan Wing – size 10-20

  • Adams
  • Royal Coachman Fanwing
  • Dark Hendrickson

Other Trout Dry Flies I Use

  • Misquito size 10-20
  • Brown Bivisible sizes 10-20
  • Brown Hackle Peacock sizes 12-20

Wet Flies

  • Black and Grizzly Weighted Wooly Worm – size 2-10
  • Coachman Lead Wing Wet Fly sizes 12 -18
  • March Brown English Wet Fly sizes 10-14

Streamers For Brook Trout

  • Mickey Finn – size – 6-10
  • White Maribou Streamer sizes 10-14
  • Black Woolly Bugger – size – 6-10

Brook trout fishing, whether on your spinning rod or fly rod is a great hobby but always think conservation for our children and their children. Practice CPR – Catch, Photograph and Release.

Note there is nothing wrong with eating a few trout. I love to keep a few for dinner in the early spring when the water is still ice cold here. They taste great but for the rest of the year I always release them unless I hurt them during the fight and know they won’t survive.

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A Few of My Favourite Confidence Trout Flies

Brook Trout
Image by Aaron Gustafson via Flickr

I am sure, we as fishers, all have our confidence baits. I have confidence baits for any species I have fished regularly and it also applies to my fly fishing trips.

About a month ago a friend took me out fly fishing for some brook trout here in New Brunswick. It was close to Sussex but he would shoot me if I said exactly where. Well he might not actually kill me but he might never take me fly fishing again and that surely would kill me. So I’ll keep tight lipped on this one.

When he told me where we would be going I prepared the confidence flies and put them all into one fly box and I put my favourite dry fly on before I ever left the house.

We had a great day and landed many brook trout. All of which we promptly released as it’s a catch and release area only.

Here is a little video that I watched on Youtube this morning and thought you might like to see some of the trout flies I love to have with me.

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Fly fish
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Trout fishing tips come in quite handy especially for beginner fly fishing. Some knowledge on the specificity of the trout species would be great, as these fish have a metabolism closely related to water temperature. Their metabolism accelerates with temperature increase. If the water where they live is cold, as it is in deeper waters, they show less active and a reduced appetite.

Moreover, at the beginning of every year those interested in catching trout start to be directed towards warm waters as trout leave behind cold deep waters for environments more favorable to spawning. Also, during fall trout start to move towards colder and deeper waters where they would be better off during the cold season. Yet fishermen should not expect them to travel distances too rapidly. The migration cycles from one place to another follow the seasons and last for several months.

Also good to know when trout fishing is that these animals are social ones. Similar sized marine fish will tend to gather in schools. Therefore, if you have already caught some trout, you are likely to catch more in the same area as long as you do not throw the dead caught fish in the water to panic the rest of the school.

In addition, trout fishing locations are not difficult to find. trout prey on smaller fish, but they are not great hunters due to their slow motion features. They rather wait for the prey to come along and then strike. Sometimes, they feed on injured marine animals even though this kind of food might not be part of their regular menu. They normally eat craw-fish, minnows, worms, insects, frogs and so on. For an experienced fisherman, knowledge of the eating habits and the mating peculiarities is no secret.

On the other hand, these fish are prey themselves therefore, in the normal habitat, there should be rocks and alls sorts of sea vegetation to provide them a safe retreat. That is why trout fishing gets carried out in areas where they could find safety like small or big rocks, weeds and other shady or sunny well-lit areas where the eye makes it difficult for them to be spotted.

Successful trout fishing may also depend on the type of bait that is chosen by the anglers. Bait should vary according to both the season – spring, summer, autumn or winter – and the spawning cycle of this fish species. Hence, those new to trout fishing should pay attention to more experienced anglers to learn the basic steps.

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Fly Fishing
Image by wvdave.geo via Flickr

Fishermen within the UK are blessed with a limitless selection of lakes, waterways, shores and rivers where tons of freshwater and saltwater fish species deliver great recreation. Although each fisherman has his inclinations, several desire to try and catch salmon or trout. Ahead is a bit of information about the form of fly fishing tackle you may want when searching for trout.

About Trout and Flies

Because the diet plan of the trout is highly wide-ranging, they’ll get caught by several different baits and lures. Trout munch on minnows as well as various other small shoal fish, along with grubs and worms turned up by the current. The main food source for trout, though, is bugs. It’s possible to capture trout utilizing bait as easy as earthworms or imitation spinning lures, or as sophisticated as colourful hand-tied representation of insects also known as flies. Fishermen who want the biggest challenge and excitement from their trout fishing expeditions generally select the strategy that makes use of flies.

Trout Fly Rods

Rods for fly fishing tend to be crafted from a wide range of materials, including state-of-the-art carbon fibre along with simple split cane. Fibreglass rods are widely used also. For fishing lakes, a large number of fishermen choose a more lengthy rod, sometimes 11 ft. or more. Lengthier fishing rods are also preferred by wet fly fishermen. Dry fly anglers usually choose a reduced fishing rod roughly eight to nine feet long. Whenever fly fishing in rivers or from shore, a lot of anglers make use of a rod approximately nine to ten ft. long, together with a less heavy line.

Trout Fly Reels

The selection of a reel is highly personal and is dependent upon the angler’s form. Quite a few want to allow the trout to take off having the line whilst playing it out more by hand than by using the reel. Some people love the difficult task of going up against the fish using a smaller line, choosing to wind the fishing line back onto the fishing reel by using the crank. Functions to look for consist of disk drag or spring and pawl click drag, ball bearings, anodised paint finish and big arbours. A lot of fly fishermen take pleasure in utilising premium reels from days past, such as those created by J.W. Young of Redditch. Old-fashioned reels from Pridex and Beaudex also are well-liked, as well as the low-priced Rimfly models.

Trout Fly Lines

Initial trout fly lines had been produced from silk. Present day lines appear in a dizzying range of models, types and weights. Some lines are double tapered, some others are either {weighted or floatingfloating or weighted}. Weighted lines are designed to sink gradually, quickly or somewhere in between. To some extent, the preference of fishing reel influences the choice of line. Plastic line is well-known with trout fishermen and is not difficult to keep. Some anglers pick a double tapered floating line for both lake and river sites. Double tapered line also is rather durable and more versatile than other forms of line. Reasonably priced fly line is available from Aircel, Shakespeare, Cortland and others.

When equipped with the right fly fishing tackle, UK anglers can drastically raise their odds for success.

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White River Fly Shop  Fly Tying Kit - Trout TyingAre you amazed at how well a good artificial trout fly holds up and attracts trout? It is pretty cool and I was certainly impressed the first time I did any fly fishing for trout.

Have you ever tied a trout fly or any fly for that matter? If you haven’t you are missing out on an awesome hobby to go right along with your fishing hobby.

Ha, after I tied my first trout fly and actually catch trout with it I started tying my own trout flies. I also put away my spinning rod for a couple of years.

Tying flies for your fly fishing trips is pretty easy, if you start with simple but effective trout flies. I started with a couple of dry flies that only had a few items and that we of course simple to tie.

It’s been so long ago I don’t actually remember what the name of that trout fly was but I do remember what I tied it using.

  • a mustad hook about size 12.
  • black thread, right from my wife’s sowing kit. :)
  • a couple of brown hen hackle, very common colour for dry flies.
  • brown fur or yarn
  • a few fibres from the brown hackle for the tail of the trout fly

That was it, a very simple fly to tie and it stayed on the top of the water where I wanted it to and it caught lots of brook trout.

So, if you want to give trout fly tying a try you can’t go wrong with the White River Fly Shop Fly Tying Kit – Trout Tying then get tying.

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