Of each color, size and type, Always buy (or make) two flies: only to lose it in an overhanging tree, it's so irritating to have found the winning fly on a particular day.
Don’t worry too much if you can't match the natural nymphs and flies perfectly, - it's how in the water the fly behaves that matters just as much as how it looks. You must follow the white river fly guide.
Always attempt to make your artificial work in the same sort of way and try to think how the natural fly does behave. So vary how you retrieve your fly, but don't twitch methodically. Concentrate all the time and Put a bit of imagination into it. Results will rocket.
It's probably true to say that by the angler, 90 percent of takes are never even guessed at. Without the angler having a clue what's happened a trout can suck in a fly and swim up, and then reject it. Keep everything tight to the fly and with hawk-like concentration, watch both your leader and your line for this reason. You can often be rewarded and Strike if you think anything is a miss.
Use bite indicators for Very often anglers - on the line to help with bite indication little pieces of putty or polystyrene are used. In bait fishing, these act like floats. When fishing for grayling in winter on rivers, they are especially useful in norfork river fly fishing. Always for very difficult situations, consider having a packet with you.
The induced take is one of the most useful tricks in nymph fishing. The idea here is that beneath the surface, you can see a trout looking at your nymph. You do it for it; it can't make its mind up, so. At precisely the moment the trout comes to investigate, you do this by twitching the nymph quite vigorously. In the water, the nymph rises 6 inches (15cm) or so and in the trout, this triggers an instant reaction.
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