Fly
Fishing Small Streams By
Dale East
Picture this; you've spent some time hiking into a
small stream in the back country. It's early morning, mist is
rising and the midges that have been swarming around you
are breakfast for the small browns you have
come to catch. You quietly walk up to the stream,
watching the swirls of rising fish. You tie a nymph onto
your leader and step into the water.
A trout skids away from under your feet,
its flight sending out warning signals as bright as any
neon light. The feeding fish flee in response and you are
left with a section of river devoid of all but the
midges. Welcome to fly fishing the small
stream.
Stop and Look Before Fly Fishing The Small
Stream
Before you get into the water stop and look
at what is in front of you. This is especially true when
approaching the small stream. Trout are well camouflaged,
especially when you are looking down into the water. (A
good pair of Polaroid glasses helps here.)
I like to make my first cast well back from
the waters edge. If there is little cover then I tend to
use a long leader and lay the line on the riverbank,
allowing only the leader to enter the water, as close to
the near bank as possible. That way, if there are any
fish lying close under the bank, I will have given them
first look at my fly.
Reading the Water of the Small
Stream
The waters of the small stream are like
those of any river, just on a smaller scale. The fish
will be in the same types of water that they would be in
if you were fishing any trout stream. When you are fly
fishing the small stream, look for those areas that
provide the fish with their need for protection from
predators, relief from fast flowing currents, and access
to food.
Fishing the Pocket Water
I like to use dry flies when fly fishing
pocket water in a small stream. The fish will usually be
holding out of the main current but close enough to grab
any food that comes floating by, and a drifting fly is
often too tempting to resist.
Often it is not necessary to match the fly
closely to whatever is hatching. Instead I like to fish a
fly that is visible enough for me to see in fast moving
water. Something like a light elk hair caddis works well.
When the strike comes I can see it and I catch more fish
this way than missing the strike by using a less visible,
hatch matching fly.
Fly fishing the small stream usually
requires a more sensitive approach and a finesse that is
not necessary in larger rivers. Experience and practice
are the great tellers here. Ability to read the water is
more critical as the fish are often more easily spooked
than their big water cousins. But when you make your way
home at the end of a successful fishing day in the back
country you know that the time spent learning to fly fish
the small stream has been worthwhile.
About the Author
Dale East is a long time outdoorsman and fly fisher and
publisher of Fly Fishing Wyoming
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