November 20, 2009

Fly Fishing Books

Trout Fishing

Mastering the Hatches

by Charles Meck

illustration by Dave Hall

The recipe for catching trout during a hatch is one part timing, one part preparation, and a healthy dose of luck. Excerpted from 1001 Fly-fishing Tips: Expert Advice, Hints, and Shortcuts from the World's Leading Fly-fishers, Headwater Books (January 2008), 219 pages, soft cover.

Trout Fly Patterns
Clockwise from left: Catskill-style, parachute and Compara-dun fly patterns.

CARRY SEVERAL sizes of the same pattern. Always carry the size that most appropriately matches the hatch; but also carry smaller patterns.

Carry several patterns that match the same hatch. For the most common hatches, I carry hackled, parachute, and Compara-dun style versions of the same fly.

Sink the pattern, if changing size or pattern doesn't work.

Move during the hatch if you don't see risers. Don't be afraid to drive or walk up or downstream. Sometimes fish tend to pod up; other times, water or hatch conditions vary in a stream from one area to the next.

Increase your odds by covering multiple bases with multiple flies. Fish both the adult and emerger, or emerger and nymph, or another combination.

Arrive at the right time. Know when the bugs hatch and be there. In the spring, fall, and winter this is often midday; in the summer, plan to be on the water late.

Fish on lousy days. Aquatic insects that hatch on overcast days tend to remain on the surface longer than when they hatch on bright sunny days. Trout are also less wary and feed more readily on cloudy, overcast days.

Fish tandem flies. Cover multiple bases with multiple flies. Fish both the adult and emerger, or emerger and nymph, or another combination.

"1001 Fly Fishing Tips"Travel. Extend your fishing time for the super hatches — Green Drakes, for instance — by traveling from stream to stream, generally from south to north or from low to high elevation to follow the hatches at their peaks.

Location is everything. Sulphurs and drakes emerge in totally different areas of stream in different habitats. Drakes prefer silty bottoms; Sulphurs (and many other mayflies) prefer riffles. Learn and seek out the habitats different insects prefer.

Take time out to identify what is hatching. You don't need to know Latin, but sometimes a bug looks a different color or size up close than it does flying in the air. Take time to discern how fish are feeding on the insects: Are they boiling just under the surface or leaping out of the water?



Charles Meck's numerous works include Trout Streams and Hatches of Pennsylvania, Arizona Trout Streams and Their Hatches, Mid-Atlantic Trout Streams and Their Hatches, Fishing Small Streams with a Fly Rod, and Meeting and Fishing the Hatches. This article was excerpted from 1001 Fly-fishing Tips: Expert Advice, Hints, and Shortcuts from the World's Leading Fly-fishers (Headwater Books, January 2008, 219 pages). Copyright © Headwater Books (www.headwaterbooks.com).
1001 Fly Fishing Tips

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