Fly Fishing With Nymphs 4 - Fishing Strategies
For the first part of this blog series, see Fly Fishing With Nymphs.1 - Clingers.
For the second part of this blog series, see Fly Fishing With Nymphs.2 - Swimmers.
For the first part of this blog series, see Fly Fishing With Nymphs.1 - Clingers.
For the second part of this blog series, see Fly Fishing With Nymphs.2 - Swimmers.
For the first part of this blog series, see Fly Fishing With Nymphs.1 - Clingers.
For the second part of this blog series, see Fly Fishing With Nymphs.2 - Swimmers.
For the first part of this blog series, see Fly Fishing With Nymphs.1 - Clingers.
We continue our series of blogs on fly fishing with nymphs by discussing the swimming nymphs.
Swimmer nymphs hide in the cracks of rocks in the slow moving water of pools, pockets, and near the banks of the streams.
A nymph is a nymph, right? Just tie on a Copper John or Hare's Ear and fish it drifting in the current and you'll be fine, right? Wrong and wrong. In the next few blogs, we'll be taking an in depth look at nymphs and how to fish them properly.
We had a chance to go fly fishing on the Little River in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park Saturday, spending a mid winter day with Perfect Fly inventor and trout fishing guru James Marsh. This winter has been unusually warm and wet in our area of the country, so it's good to see the streams full of water again after several dry years.
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