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Trout Tips | Page 13

  • Fishing TROUT Magazine Trout Tips

    Fishing a two-fly rig downstream

    Fishing two-fly rigs downstream is a great way to pull trout from under rocks and structure

    By Jim Strogen As a wet fly fisher, I love to dance my nymphs, Woolly Buggers and leeches downstream in front of rocks and log jams. This strategy surprises many of my friends. They worry about being visible to the fish, and stirring up the creek as they approach a hole. In the small streams…

  • Fly tying Featured Trout Tips

    Building a better ‘Bugger

    Tim Flagler ties up his version of a 'better 'bugger' using weighted wire and a tougher construction

    The Woolly Bugger might be the most-tied fly on the planet — for many of us, it was the first fly we ever tied. There's a reason for that, of course. It's among the easiest patterns to master, and, no matter how many times some creative vise-wizard comes up with the next great streamer pattern,…

  • Trout Tips Featured Fishing Fly tying

    Hopper season

    Fly fishing with grasshopper patterns can bring big trout to the top, even on small, backcountry streams

    grasshopper fly patterns

    Every year about this time, grasshoppers start to show up on the banks of my favorite backcountry trout streams. By mid-July, a few warm days have managed to string themselves together, and, although not terribly big, the hoppers are now officially prolific.  They’ll get bigger and bigger as summer progresses, but right now might be…

  • Trout Tips Featured Fishing

    Add movement to mimic subsurface insects

    Learn about the bugs we mimic when we fish, and work to match not only how they look, but how they move

    By Jim Strogen We all know the value of matching the hatch, but often that thinking seems more focused on dry fly fishing. I prefer to fish under the surface. I know that the “bugs” are in front of the fish in their aquatic stages much longer, sometimes a year or more, than during their…

  • Fly tying Featured Trout Tips

    Finesse Dubbing Part II

    As we noted last week, applying dubbing can be a little tricky. But, as Tim Flagler showed us, there are ways to make it simpler. Below, in his second installment video on the topic, Tim shows us how to take the dubbing noodle we've created and carefully move it closer to the hook shank for…

  • Trout Tips Featured Fishing

    Finesse dubbing

    dubbing a fly pattern.

    Using dubbing to craft fly bodies and collars shouldn't be that difficult, regardless of the material you use in the process. But, for those new to the craft, dubbing can often give them fits at the vise. Below, Tim Flagler shows us how to craft the simple dubbing "noodle," or a length of dubbing that…