A simple way to identify and catch the big one in river!
River dry fly fishing considered as the purest form of fly
fishing inspired generations of writers, artists, poets and even
philosophers to wax lyrical about its pleasures.
The gist to river dry fly fishing lies in the rise. Here, the
angler waits patiently for a rise to begin before he or she
starts to fish. And the art comes in persuading a particular
trout to take your artifical pattern among a host of natural
flies.
Rise forms vary widely from hour-to hour and river-to river.
>From the way a trout breaks the surface (a rise), an experienced
angler can tell how and what the trout feeds.
The classic rise is when a series of concentric rings fan out on
the surface as the trout confidently engulfs the fly as it
drifts past.
Trouts do not rise vertically in the water, instead they drift
back on the current to intercept the fly. The trout will then
return to its station in the stream, usually inbetween weed beds
on a shallow gravel run, under a bridge, overhanging tree or in
a hatch pool, to wait for the next free meal.
Other rises includes:
Nebbing rise occurs when the trout pushes its nose right out of
the water as heavy hatches of flies hover over its head.
Splashy rise is a violent splashing which usually happens in the
evening when the trout are after mayfly or caddis.
Sipping rise happens when insects are trapped in the surface
film and usually leaves a bubble behind.
Sub-surface rise causes all the problems as the rtout seems to
be rising to take a surface fly, bt it is really taking an
emerging nymph. As it does so, it disturbs the water making it
looks like a proper rise.
Head and tail rise are usually seen in smooth stretches of water
to nymphs trapped below the surface film where the whole fish
appears.
The challenge comes in first identifying the fly that the trout
is taking, whether they are taking duns or spinners, or if they
are nymping sub-surface.
After selecting the correct fly, the next challenge comes in
persuading the trout to take it.
The observant dry-fly angler learns by experience to recognize
the different types of rise that commonly make. This will help
him to select the correct fly and present it in a manner that
the feeding fish will accept.
Once a correct imitation fly to match those that the trout are
taking is selected, get a position downstream and cast at but
not over the rising fish.
Highlighted are the common rises, to net that 'big one', all you
need is to match the correct fly to what the trout is looking
for and cast your rod!
Wishing you loads of catch!