Fly Fishing Guide

Fly Fishing Boats Section


 


Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on Fly-Fishing
Email:
First Name:



Fly Fishing Boats Best seller


"Fly Fishing"
 


Best Fly Fishing Boats products


"Bass Fishing"
 
 
The Second Fly Caster: Fatherhood, Recovery and an Unforgettable Tournament
The Second Fly Caster: Fatherhood, Recovery and an Unforgettable Tournament
by Randy Kadish
Fly Fishing in Wonderland
Fly Fishing in Wonderland
by Klahowya
Fly-Fishing for Trout: The How-To Guide
Fly-Fishing for Trout: The How-To Guide
by Ron Kness Vook
The Art Of Fly Fishing
The Art Of Fly Fishing
by Glenn Shute
The Orvis Fly-Fishing Guide, Completely Revised and Updated with Over 400 New Color Photos and Illustrations
The Orvis Fly-Fishing Guide, Completely Revised and Updated with Over 400 New Color Photos and Illustrations
by Tom Rosenbauer
Our Price: $16.47
Used from: $11.97

Guide to Fly Fishing Knots: A Basic Streamside Guide for Fly Fishing Knots, Tippets, and Leader Formulas
Guide to Fly Fishing Knots: A Basic Streamside Guide for Fly Fishing Knots, Tippets, and Leader Formulas
by Larry V. Notley
Our Price: $4.95
Used from: $1.40

The Little Red Book of Fly Fishing (Little Red Books)
The Little Red Book of Fly Fishing (Little Red Books)
by Charlie Meyers Kirk Deeter
Our Price: $11.53
Used from: $5.99

 

Welcome to Fly Fishing Guide

 

Fly Fishing Boats Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.

The Five Main Types of Fly Fishing Flies

from: Deb St. George - Cherokee-Legends.net

Although there are hundreds of types of flies used for fly fishing, most of them fall into five specific categories, or types. These types are dry flies, wet flies, nymphs, streamers and buck tails, and terrestrials. The main purpose of the fly is to imitate an insect that the fish wants to eat.

A dry fly imitates a natural insect that is floating on the top of the water. Fish are very sensitive to any motion of their water and how currents move the insects they want for food. In fly fishing, if a dry fly is moving even slightly against the current, the fish will have nothing to do with it. The fly may look like something the fish recognizes but it is not acting the same an insect would. The fish recognizes it as something foreign in the water and leaves it alone.

In fly fishing, a wet fly is imitating a drowned, or drowning, natural insect and is fished below the water surface. No one is sure if the wet fly is seen as a drowning adult insect or a nymph from the perspective of the fish. Most fly fishermen today seem to believe that it is seen as a nymph. Because of this less and less wet flies are being sold. Wet fly fishing is the oldest form of fly fishing. It dates back to descriptions of the early Macedonian people.

A nymph is the stage between an egg and the adult in the life cycle of an insect. In fly fishing, flies that resemble nymphs are growing popularity. The nymph fly is just below the surface of the water. When a fish bulges the water without breaking the surface, he is nymphing. This means that the fish is eating the natural nymphs just as they are emerging from their shell. This is what a nymph fly imitates.

Streamers and buck tail flies do not imitate any part of the insect's life cycle. These types of fly fishing flies are much larger and represent small bait fish such as sculpin minnows. The main difference between theses two types of flies is that streamers are tied with feathers, and bucktails are tied completely with hair. Fly fishing that uses these two types of flies generally requires more rod and line manipulation. The movements are supposed to duplicate the motions of the little fish.

Although most flies represent water insects, a terrestrial fly is made to imitate a land insect that has fallen into the water. The two most common terrestrials that are imitated for fly fishing are the ant and the grasshopper.

Besides these basic five categories of flies, there are many other kinds of flies that are used for fly fishing. Some of them are a combination of one or more of the basic categories and some do not fit into any group. The most important thing to remember is that it doesn't matter how the fly looks to you, the fisherman. It matters how the fly looks to the fish.


 

Fly Fishing Boats News

Couple proud of fishing film's impact

Film-makers Jeanie Ackley and Carl McNeil moved to Albert Town from Dunedin over six years ago, eager to spend every available minute in the outdoors making fly-fishing films or travelling. read more

Read more...


Ban on foreign fishing boats

Foreign fishing vessels are going to be banned from operating in New Zealand waters.

Read more...


Beginners hoping to catch on to fly fishing

Daphne Cant, left, threads her line along her pole while beside her, Sylvia Randall, center, gets some help with her reel from Barb Pinney during a women's casting class at the annual Fly Fishing Fair in Ellensburg on Friday, May 4, 2012.

Read more...


Look out trout

In the end, I opted for an immersion approach to learning to fly fish - and no, I am not referring to my first outing on Oak Creek, when I slipped on a rock and fell on my face. Or to the same outing, when I stepped forward after casting my line and found myself in water nearly up to my shoulders.

Read more...


North Korean boat hijacks 3 Chinese fishing boats

A northeast Ohio man is hoping hours of fist pumping will land him a world record. More >>

Read more...


A Wild Day on Malham Tarn

Sean Meeghan can take no more of the commercial scene and gets away from it all on Malham Tarn to enjoy some truly wild fishing on a very wild day... Sometimes I get a little disenchanted with fishing.

Read more...


Dick Pinney's Guide Lines Trout, salmon fishing has been exceptional so far this season

The ice has been out for several weeks even in the far reaches of Maine and New Hampshire and fishing for trout and salmon is winning praises from the people there.

Read more...


 

Warning: fopen(./cache/fly-fishing-boats.html) [function.fopen]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/legends/public_html/fly-fishing/datas/pages.php on line 95

Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/legends/public_html/fly-fishing/datas/pages.php on line 96

Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/legends/public_html/fly-fishing/datas/pages.php on line 97