October Caddis Soft Hackle
As mentioned before in the blog on the blog for the October Never Sink Caddis this is a major food source for fish entering fall and the winter months. It is one of the top hatches for producing large trophy size...
As mentioned before in the blog on the blog for the October Never Sink Caddis this is a major food source for fish entering fall and the winter months. It is one of the top hatches for producing large trophy size...
Legendary fly angler Gary LaFontaine said that the October Caddis hatch is one of the four best hatches for an angler to catch a trophy sized trout. With this in mind it is important to be prepared when they start...
This pattern has been a go to for us this year. The fish have especially loved the metallic colored beads paired with the shiny body of this fly and the fish can't resist. We have combined a few different patterns...
The Royal Wulff is not only a beautiful fly to look at, but also so fun to fish for rising trout. It is an attractor pattern used when there are no hatches going on. The original pattern calls for calf...
Either the Parachute Adams or the Adams Cripple Emerger can be fished alone, or and tandem to increase your odds of a hook up. Bonus if you get a double with them too!!! This combination is easily one of our...
The Parachute Adams is quite easily one of the most tied and fished dry flies on the planet. There is a reason for this, and that is that it flat out just works. The reason it is so effective is...
Our Adams Cripple Emerger can imitate the bug as it is sitting in the surface film vulnerable as an emerging insect, or crippled and just sitting on the surface film. It is effectively tied in a multitude of sizes ranging...
The Purple Haze Parachute Dry Fly is one of the most used and productive dry flies in the west today. There is something magical about the color purple and how it holds its color as it transcends into the...
As many of you know we don't really tie traditional nymph patterns, and replace the traditional pattern with a soft hackle version. We do this because the soft hackle brings the fly to life even on a natural dead drift...