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Fishing Tips: Beginner’s Trout Spey

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Are you a little spey curious? Red’s Fly Shop has a new 10-video series dedicated to trout spey for beginners. Check out the first episode here, and keep the series going at Red’s Fly Shop.

Wild, Coho X Chinook Hybrid Salmon Discovered in British Columbia

Two salmon researchers found something quite unexpected: second-generation hybrid Pacific salmon in the wild. The fish samples collected contained genetics from both coho and Chinook salmon, prompting the researchers to ask how the hybridization occurred.

The current hypothesis: drought and climate change.

According to one of the researchers, Andres Araujo, “For a hybrid to exist we need overlapping spawning grounds and timing.”

This has occurred over the past few years in the river system due to drought conditions that forced the two salmon species to spawn in overlapping areas.

CBCNews Canada reported that the first instance of a wild hybrid was brought to the attention of researchers by a member of the Cowichan Tribes during a tagging study being done in partnership between the First Nation and the province.

While hybrids are rare in salmon, this discovery certainly raises red flags about the conditions wild salmon are being forced to endure thanks to rapidly changing climate conditions in the Pacific Northwest.

To learn more about the hybrids, check out these articles from CBC News and the New Scientist!

Short Bus Diaries Volume 3: Behind the Scenes with Wild Fly Productions

The long-anticipated release of the 3rd rendition of the Short Bus Diaries is finally here! The Wild Fly Productions crew has invested in a new bus, that may just be the upgrade they needed to make it back out west. The new bus takes them to the Colorado Rockies where they fish some new water, meet new friends, and host a meet-up just outside of Denver. Adam from Wild Fly Productions shares a behind-the-scenes story of finding the new bus and the latest adventure to Colorado, check it out below.

“We had been planning Short Bus Diaries Volume 3 since we got back from filming Volume 2, in Montana last summer. We already had some new ideas for the series and wanted to go to a popular DIY destination. We decided on Colorado for a few reasons, #1, it’s not that far from SLC, so the bus could make it. #2, we wanted to do a meet-up with fans, and outside of Denver was the perfect spot for the first meet-up. And #3, it’s an awesome DIY fishery with tons of rivers and lakes to explore.”

“We were gearing up to head out on this trip in May. As we are getting things prepped, I called the storage unit (where the bus is stored) and I received the worst news a bus owner can receive: the bus is dead. And I don’t mean the battery, we are talking about massive engine failure.”

“Honestly, we knew this was coming. We are just lucky it didn’t happen while filming Vol 2. We already had plans in the works to get rid of this bus after Vol 3 and get a new one for Vol 4. So, our plan was forced to happen sooner than we expected. The hunt began again for a new bus. Again, Craigslist served us well as I found the perfect bus there.”

“Less than a week later I had finally achieved my dream, I had been promoted from Short Bus Captain to Short Bus Commodore with my new fleet of 2 busses.
Due to the bus failure, we had to postpone the trip to the Summer of 2021. We spent the next few months re-designing our new-to-us bus. Wood prices were outrageous, and we were salvaging every piece of scrap wood we could out of the old bus. The new build consisted of: auxiliary battery and isolator separate from the cranking battery bank, inverter, interior lights, 2 bunk beds were built so we had 4 beds in the bus, storage racks, dinner table, fly tying desk, lower storage underneath the bus, and trailer hitch with wiring.”

We were all excited to use the new upgrades and even more excited about driving the new bus. It’s still a bus, so it’s not going to be in the newest installment of Fast and Furious. But it was much better than the old bus. This one gave us zero issues on the trip and is much faster and more comfortable than the last bus. This one is much more livable and comfortable.

About 2 weeks before our trip we were getting awful reports from CO due to high heat and low water over the entire west. Some rivers were being closed, but even if rivers weren’t closed, we were questioning the ethics of fishing the areas we were planning to with the heat and water conditions.

The only good reports we received were high country/ alpine lakes. We didn’t feel like this was worth doing a whole SBD video series on and not showcasing more of what Colorado has to offer to the DIY angler. So we postponed the trip yet again to early fall in hopes of finding cooler weather.

Special thanks to everyone who came out to the 4 Noses Brewery event we hosted. We could not believe how many folks showed up! But more about that later on in the series…Follow along with the series on our YouTube channel @WildFlyProductions. We will be posting a new video every Sunday until the new year!

Article by Adam Hudson of Blue Line Flies / Wild Fly Productions.

Be sure to check out Wild Fly Productions on YouTube here.

120 Hours in Bull Trout Country: Behind the Scenes with Wild Fly Productions

Wildfly Production’s Backyard Bronze – Behind the Scenes Episode 1 & 2

 

Prettier in Water

We could see our breath when we got out of the car. “Do you think I need to put my jeans on under these?” My father asked, rubber chest waders wrapped around his ankles.

“Ya know by the time you’re actually walking around and what-not you’re gonna wish you didn’t have them on,” I told him, “waters not all that cold yet.”

By mid-summer, Shenandoah National Park was closed to all angling, and to some, it was already overdue. Blue Ridge Mountain streams that would typically flow and pool deep enough to make you think twice before crossing had shrunk to puddles in a stairwell of dirt and pebbles. Crossing them in dry Chacos around late July I couldn’t help but wonder where the native brook trout could possibly shelter. I dreamt up deep pools that I knew didn’t exist along well-traveled streams. I dreamt of safe gullies where they’d slumber all day until the sun went down and then hit the dark topwater with the jubilee of a cool mayfly hatch.

A streamflow chart of a section of the James River Basin via USGS Weather.

“You’re really not gonna eat it if we catch one?” He persisted.

“ Nope,” I said proudly, “throw ‘em back today and they’ll be bigger tomorrow.”

I’d always thought of my father as the quintessential fisherman. On my desk is a photo album of his offshore endeavors up and down everything that touches the Chesapeake Bay, all the way out to the Gulf. He told me once that he’d caught enough fish through the years to fill up a pick-up truck just with their eyeballs.

Beside that photo album is a tattered citation fading to yellow, eleven years old and he landed a chunky rainbow stocker at Hutchins Pond. Back then to get a citation at Conwell’s Sport Shop in Lothian, MD you had to prove your catch. Which he did, one of a half dozen dangling from his stringer. That night on his dad’s tailgate he learned to clean a trout and get out all the little bones that hide in the filet. They’d have them for dinner that night, all of them. As we always did in our house too. We never hunted what we wouldn’t eat and the same goes for what we reeled: rockfish (striped bass), croakers, spot, white perch, crappie, trout, the occasional catfish if my mom was out of town.

“Well if I catch one,” he poked, “I’m eating it.”

His first day of fly fishing began with trying to keep a gas station sausage gravy biscuit from plopping over the sides of a styrofoam tray in the passenger seat of my hatchback. No easy task going through the entrance of Shenandoah National Forest while the sun still tries to reach over the mountain.

I chose a spot without much of a hike in. It was my honey hole all spring. Could spend hours at one pool just watching that little hairy hook until the splash sent a jolt through seven and a half feet of fiberglass and nestled in the turbid seam of my chest. Even when I wasn’t catching I’d find myself just stopping for a sit and look around. Letting the splashing river wring out any stress I packed in. That’s where I wanted him to catch his first brook trout.

We started at the deepest pool I knew. Turns out I underestimated how cool the water had gotten in the valley by mid-October and that day was constantly reminded of such. He began so proud of the assortment of bushy dries and beaded nymphs he picked up at a yard sale over the summer. Not nearly as earnest on them as he watched them quietly drift from one end of the pool to the other, undisturbed.

We trekked over every fallen tree and pile of rocks he could hurdle. Some of the skinny water that I’d normally skip looked slow and deep enough to hold fish after the fresh storm. And they did. Several popped and splashed as his stimulator hit the water.

We’re still working on setting the hook.

“Now!” I hollered as softly as I could, as if they were listening to me from below the surface. After a few more botched hook-sets he insisted he’d walk along the path until he found a gentler clearing than the river rocks I was hopping along. The sun was finally high enough to look down upon the river and grace it’s still pockets with some warmth; which I knew would help our efforts but it also meant it was getting closer to when we had to meet the gals for lunch.

I took controlled steps on the mossy boulders. Picking and choosing where stable footing would let me hoist myself up. As I made it over another pool I found my father crouching behind a tree trunk. Flicking his Eagle Claw Featherlight more fluid than I’d seen all day. The line flowed as if it were a part of his arm itself. I watched him as he let it go, I waited with his stillness and leapt with his jerk of the rod toward the sun.

And that is where it’d stay.

A fishless barb clung to a cluster of leaves above him. He gave it an unsuccessful tug just as he saw me watching from below him. With a humble smile he pointed to the pool he stood behind. I signaled to stay put as I crouched over another set of rocks. When I stood tall the pool was at my chest, falling over its ledge no more than ten feet in front of me.

I short armed my first cast into the tumbling water and quickly retrieved my line before the elk hair caddis got snagged in whatever so many flies get caught on in the white water. I pulled a few more tugs of line out and flung to the head of the pool where the water curved around a perturbing rock as if it were a well-used dirt road. I can’t remember if it was the glare or the trembling water but I do remember that I set the hook, not because of any splash or glimmer of orange fin, but seeing my father out of the corner of my eye hoisting his arms up in anticipated victory.

I pinched the line with my pointer finger and tilted upward to feel the undeniable tug towards darker water. I kept the rod above my head as I fumbled to common ground. There was no citation on the other end but it was honorary enough to put on a brief show. I reeled slowly as my father asked again if I really had it. I bowed the rod tip behind me and dragged it close enough so he could net.

“Not all that bad for the first of fall,” I told him as he lifted his hand from the underside of the net. A brookie just a knuckle smaller than his hand. He tilted back and forth to see the sunlight shine her blue and red specks for the first time. In its back was a patterned topography map of the Blue Ridge Mountains weaving down its spine. It held steady on the bottom with us for a moment after he slipped it back into the seam.

“Even prettier in the water,” he said.

We sat on a down tree off to the side of that pool as he clamored over what vigor the trout gobbled up my fly. A man I’ve watched crank in tuna off the Gulf, a man who has billfish hanging above the fire mantle melted into an eleven-year-old boy at Hutchins Pond again with a six-inch Brook trout in his hands. I unwrapped a couple of turkey with mustard sandwiches and kept my eyes on the water as my father took long breaths of all that was around us. That was all he needed that day. His first Brook trout on the fly could wait until tomorrow.

We netted fewer brookies than I had expected. The angling wasn’t perfect, at times it was just a couple of kids chuckin’ dries, but amongst plenty of strikes and shaky hook-sets there was a passage of the new season among us: soon the leaves, Brook trout bellies, and everything else would be bright orange. I pointed out where they’d soon be spawning and went on about how we have to tiptoe around the natives’ fragile space.

There is a romanticism to rainbows and browns of the west: shiny, sharp silver peaks, seemingly boundless river systems, reel battles rooted in brute force.  The vastness of them is what lures us. Brookies are Appalachia. Worn and rounded by years of silt and timber. Catching a brook trout in an Appalachian stream is as close as us East Coasters will get to life before folks started tinkering with every bit of woods they could touch. For such a fragile little fish the brookies have fought through enough timbering, acid rain, and 6X tippet to make any salmonid proud (even if it is technically a char). They were here first, and with any luck, they’ll be here last.

Article by BJ Poss, check him out on Instagram at @billyjp.

7 Things You Never Knew About Brook Trout

How to Tie: The Full Pint Streamer

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In this week’s “How to Tie” video feature, Troubitten ties his own creation and a streamer that should be fished during cooler months to provoke big hungry trout, the Full Pint Streamer.

Difficulty: Hard

Winter in many places of the country is now in effect. Waters are cool and cooling more by the day with temperatures continuously dropping. Trout inevitably become more lethargic during this time, but the Full Pint Streamer will bring out the worst in big trout looking for a larger meal item. During the winter months, throwing streamers is an exciting break from nymphing all day and should not be counted out.

The mallard and marabou used in the body of this fly, paired with a heavy conehead, create movement that trout unequivocally love. This is crucial during the colder months to entice a bite. Only reaching about 3.5 inches long, this articulated streamer imitates a small vulnerable baitfish exceptionally. The Full Pint Streamer may be smaller than other famous articulated streamers, but its profile and production compete with the best.

This winter, the Full Pint Streamer should be in every streamer box when on the water. Tying this fly will take time and patience, but the final product is worth every minute. Accompanied by your favorite pint or beverage, this can become a night cap experience on any cold winter day. Enjoy the experience and be excited for the outcome while tying the Full Pint Streamer.

Ingredients:

  • Hooks: Gamakatsu B10s (#4 for rear, #2 for front)
  • Connection: 19 strand Beadalon wire, with 6mm red-orange acrylic bead
  • Thread: White Uni Thread 6/0
  • Conehead: Large Copper Cone (front hook)
  • Weight: 15 wraps of .025” Lead Wire (front hook)
  • Tail: Tan Marabou
  • Body and Collar Dubbing: Hareline Superfine Dry Fly Dubbin (Sulphur Orange)
  • Body: Mallard flank natural and Mallard flank dyed wood duck color (tan/brown)

Now you know how to tie the Full Pint Streamer.

Video and ingredients courtesy of Troutbitten.

Fishing Tips: Setting Up a Nymph Rig

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Check out this video from Wildfly Productions and Due South Outfitters outlining everything you need to know to set up a nymph rig. There’s many different ways to set up your rig, but this video does a great job of outlining the basics. Check it out!

Gear Review: Norfork Expedition Sea Run Travel Case

In this gear review, we will be taking a look at the all-new Norfork Expedition Travel Case from Sea Run Cases. This new case comes in at a more friendly price point of $399.00, lower than their previous extra luxury models that are around the $500.00 mark. With a simplified interior, the Norfork Case is designed with the everyday angler in mind. As always we were extremely excited to get our hands on one of these new Italian-made premium travel cases from Sea Run.

To break in the Norfork Expedition Travel Case we took it along with us to Northern Russia, where we put it to the test, taking it through 5 different airports, a helicopter, a hovercraft, and a daily dose of jet boat rides. Read on below to learn more about our experience with this new case from Sea Run Cases.

Click here to check out the final review stats.

Upon Opening:

Given that we had taken the original Expedition Travel Case on a few different trips, we were excited to receive the new Norfork Case. The case arrived very similarly to the Original Expedition, the patented double-wall composite exterior of the case glimmered its ruggedness. The ABS Construction of the exterior feels like it could take a beating, similarly to when you pick up a hard YETI Cooler. Scratchproof, dustproof, critter-proof, and even TSA proof!

After unlocking the stainless steel TSA Compliant combination locks, the interior of the case is where details were made more simple than the original Expedition Case. Instead of having hand-lined Italian canvas on the inside of this case, there is marine-grade closed-celled foam that lines the inside. Making this case more friendly for on-the-water use than the other models. The inside of this case can get a little wet and the foam won’t absorb water like on the other canvas-lined travel cases. A plus for anglers that are using their case on the water in wet environments.

What also stood out was the open layout of the case, its extra-deep bottom compartments were able to fit four large arbor reels (as seen above) along with the standard terminal tackle. Our favorite feature of this case is the separator where the rods are and where the bottom compartment is. This screams “safety” for the precious fly rods.

Field Testing:

Our team has had the opportunity to bring the new Norfork Expedition Case on a two-week trip to the northern tundra of Russia. Find out how it fared below! 

Norfork Expedition Case in Russia:

First and foremost if it wasn’t for the Norfork Expedition Case I wouldn’t have had any fly reels, rods, lines, or other terminal tackle. The 5 plane rides from the United States, meant that my checked luggage was lost. Lucky for me I had the Norfork Expedition Travel Case as a carry-on. I was able to fit all of the basic fishing equipment in the case, as well as an extra pair of fishing pants a shirt, which saved me big time with the lost luggage.

The fitted canvas cover for the Norfork case made it easy to travel through the various airports and was no problem fitting into the overhead compartments on the airplanes. On the last flight since the plane was so tiny, the gate agent asked me to gate check the case. I had no problem doing this as the TSA locks gave me the confidence that the thousands and thousands of dollars of fly fishing gear would not get messed with. Making this case a nice insurance investment.

Upon arriving in Russia, we boarded a Russian M8 Helicopter that took us to the middle of the tundra where we would chase Atlantic Salmon for the next two weeks.

The Norfork Case was the perfect boat companion when we were on the trip. We were able to bring a good amount of extra reels, rods, lines, and tippet, for the changing conditions of the Atlantic salmon fishery. We ended up breaking two different fly rods during the trip so having backups was nice. The Russian tundra had rainy days, sunny days, and even close to snowy days. The new Norfork Case held up to these conditions and will always be an essential piece of gear for fly fishing travel trips across the world.

Final Review:

Portability:

4 star rating

Protection:

5 star rating

Storage:

4 star rating

Accessibility:

5 star rating

Security:

5 star rating

Waterproofness:

4 star rating

Look:

4 star rating

Price:

4 star rating

Conclusion:

With a price point of $399.00, the all-new Norfork Expedition Travel Case is a necessity for the traveling angler. The bulletproof exterior and weatherproof interior of the case makes this piece of equipment one that will most definitely last a lifetime. The TSA locks provide a sense of security and insurance that your fishing trip will go as planned. And not to mention being organized with your fishing gear on a travel trip can only mean more time for fishing.

Click HERE to check out the Norfork Expedition Travel Case

Gear Review: Sea Run Travel Case

Archeologists Discover Fishing Rods and Flies Dating Back 12,000 Years

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Archeologists from the Römisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum Archaeological research institute in Germany recently found fishing tackle dating back nearly 12,000 years near the Jordan River watershed in Israel. The uncovered artifacts included barbed hooks, flies, sophisticated weights, and flexible rods used to land fish from a few inches long all the way up to 2-meter long carp.

Researchers found that several of the hooks had residue of plant materials and feathers on them, indicating that these early anglers were likely using artificial flies and lures, pushing back the earliest known instances of fly fishing by thousands of years.

You can read more about the discovery, here!

Skagit Casting: Basic Tips, Techniques and Gear

As someone who has always held a love for the art of casting, naturally, I found myself infatuated with skagit casting. I spent hours watching YouTube videos and reading anything that I could get my hands on when it came to casting a two-handed rod.

What are the Benefits of Skagit Casting?

Minimal Back Cast: With no backcasting required, two-handed casting allows you to cast with little to no interference from obstacles behind you.

Less effort: When those long two-handed rods are loaded with a heavy shooting head, they create a ton of energy, therefore, allowing you to cast with a lot less effort than your standard weight forward floating line.

Longer casts: With a little practice, you should be able to cast further and cover more water that may not have been accessible to you with a single-handed rod.

Line Selection, Scandi versus Skagit:

There are two styles of spey lines, Scandinavian (Scandi) and Skagit. When it comes to two-handed fishing in Alaska, we generally migrate toward the shorter more compact Skagit lines. Skagit lines are preferred because we generally fishing weighted flies and sink tips, in order to reach the desired depths to catch our target species. There are specific instances Scandi lines may be applicable, however, our rivers tend to run deep and can be quite fast so Skagit is often the line of choice.

Skagit Casting Basics:

Photo: Toby Nolan

Loading the rod- While preparing to make a cast, the weight of the line either on the water or in the air bends the rod, which is called “loading the rod”. When the rod is loaded, it is collecting the energy necessary for the following cast. While setting up your spey cast, this can be achieved a couple of different ways, either by using a waterborne anchor cast or airborne touch and go cast.

In order to properly load your spey rod, there are a few fundamentals that must be developed.

D-Loop- A “D” loop is when the line forms a capital “D” shape behind the rod prior to forward acceleration. This is the most important step to two handed casting. If properly formed, your “D” Loop holds the responsibility of loading your fly rod.

Photo by Owen Humberg

Anchor point- Your anchor point is the point at which your “D” Loop makes contact with the water. For waterborne anchor casts, it should be placed slightly ahead of you and roughly one rod length away on your intended casting side (usually the downwind side so you do not hook yourself in the back of your head). On touch and go casts, your anchor should briefly touch down to form your “D” loop, while loading the rod and preparing for your forward cast.

Straight and Level- In order to be accurate with a spey cast, the fly rod should travel along a straight plane toward the intended target. This is the same concept as single hand casting. Imagine there is a piece of string running through your tip top guide, which points directly at your target.

Skagit Casting Tips and Techniques: 

Photo: Toby Nolan

Pull don’t push- A very hard habit to break if you are used to fishing with a single hand rod. Pulling, as opposed to pushing, helps ensure a high stopping point on the forward stroke. This helps eliminate a wandering rod tip, which can either open your line loop or close it causing a tailing loop.

Slow down- As with all fly casting, it can be easy to rush a cast. If you accelerate too quickly you can “blow your anchor” and your casting will not prosper. Every single movement, during a skagit two-handed cast, should be controlled. Slow is smooth and smooth is fast.

Relax- Spey casting and skagit casting should be effortless (respectively). Trying to force a cast will get you nowhere and often end in frustration.

Grip- Grasp the fly rod with a relaxed grip. I took some advice from an experienced spey/skagit caster, my good friend Tim “The Muddler Man”. He said, “grab the bottom handle of your fly rod with only the top two fingers of your bottom hand. Just enough to control the rod, but don’t squeeze the bejesus out of it”. What I found is this not only helps me relax but forces the “pull” with my bottom hand.

Understanding the Basic Skagit Casts:

Photo by Gaby Mordini

Waterborne Anchor Casts – Waterborne anchored casts utilize both the surface tension of the water and the “D” Loop to load the rod.

The Double Spey 

The Snap-T Cast

The Perry Poke 

Touch and go/Arial Anchor Casts: A touch-and-go cast contains a continual stroke, in which the line remains off of the water for most of the cast.

The Single Spey (A highly efficient cast but can be challenging to master)

The Snake Roll (one of the more complex touch and go style casts)

How to Setup a Skagit Setup:

Unlike other fly fishing line setups that you just attach the fly line to the backing on your reel, a Skagit setup typically requires a few different pieces of equipment including a running line, a shooting head, a sink tip or leader, and tippet. From your backing, you attach a running line like the Airflo Ridge Running Line. Many people just use straight Mono as the running line’s purpose is just to shoot out of the reel when you cast. You want it to be slick but also want to be comfortable grabbing it with your fingers. After your shooting line comes the shooting head which is the tapered part of your setup. Below we outline different shooting heads as they do vary based on equipment, conditions, and casting style you are doing.

After your shooting head, you will attach a sink tip or leader. For the most part with skagit setups, you will use a sink tip like an Airflo Flo Tip. The Airflo Skagit Flo Tips are a range of highly versatile hybrid sinking tips that combine an intermediate section and a heavy tungsten sink tip for smoother casts. Looped at both ends for easy connections and color-coded for line identification. They come in different sink rates and sizes based on conditions. The Airflo Flo Tip Set is a great beginner’s set that will give you the essential sinking leaders. After your sink tip you will attach a couple feet of tippet.

Skagit Line Shooting Head Recommendations:

AIRFLO SKAGIT DRIVER

This is my line of choice when swinging bigger rivers for trout, steelhead, and smaller salmon species. This is a fantastic mid-length Skagit head that allows me to cast big flies while still being able to achieve a good amount of distance. This is your all-around Skagit head. It can do everything from throw heavy sink tips to light flies and leaders with ease. If you are going to choose one line, this is it.

Total Length 24′

AIRFLO SKAGIT SCOUT

Short, compact, and powerful, these lines perform well on switch rods and single-hand rods. From casting aerodynamically challenged foam mice to unweighted epoxy smolt patterns, these short compact Skagit heads allow for quick casting on smaller creeks and streams.

Total Length 15.5′

AIRFLO SKAGIT COMP F.I.S.T.

This is my go-to Skagit head when swinging for King Salmon and Winter Steelhead. It has a sink tip built into the head so it gets down in a hurry. This line has the ability to get down deep when paired with an appropriate sink tip.

Total Length 22.5′

AIRFLO RAGE COMPACT

A hybrid head, the Rage bridges the gap between Skagit and Scandi heads. Its thick tip and aggressive taper turn over any leader/fly combination imaginable. This head is great for year-round steelheaders that want to throw lighter tips and small flies in the summer and fish in the winter. This head can cut through the wind like none other Scandi style line will.

Total Length: 31.5 Feet

Skagit casting is a fun and effective way to fish and should be a tool in every fisherman’s quiver. With the amount of information available to the public, it no longer takes years of practice to become proficient in the two-handed casing game.

Jake from Airflo testing a two-handed line out at Airflo’s Headquarters in Montrose, Colorado.

For more information on finding the right Airflo fly line shoot Airflo an email at orders@airflofishing.com, or check out https://airflousa.com/ and be sure to follow them on Instagram at @airflofishing.

Words by Oliver Ancans (@Olleyeh). 

April Vokey’s 3 Tips for Improving your Spey Cast

12 Year Old Catches Wild Steelhead on Spey Rod

Fly Fishing Art Gift Guide

Whether you’re shopping for an art lover, wondering what to get the guy who has everything or sweating the recent supply shortages, Flylords has your back this holiday season. We’ve compiled a list of talented artists whose work will bring a smile to everyone on your gift list this year. From books to photographs to sculptures, you’ll find creations that transport your loved ones to their favorite spots on the water and inspire their next fishing adventures. Better yet, they’ll outlast that Cinnamon candle you were planning to re-gift. Check out their phenomenal work below!

Table of Contents:

Authors

Painters

Illustrators

Photographers

Digital Artists

Potters and Sculptors

Knife Makers

Leatherworkers and Jewelers

Custom Rod Artwork

More Fantastic Artists

Authors

John Gierach

Author Spotlight: John Gierach

Painters

Sarah Landstrom

Artist Spotlight: Sarah Landstrom

Paul Puckett

Artist Spotlight: Paul Puckett

Mandy Hertzfeld

Artist Spotlight: Mandy Hertzfeld

Illustrators

Travis Sylvester

Artist Spotlight: Travis Sylvester

Shelly Marshall

Artist Spotlight: Shelly Marshall

Casey Underwood

Artist Spotlight: Casey Underwood

Photographers

Matt Jones

Pizza & Photos with Matt Jones

Robert Hawthorne

Photographing Bears in Alaska with Robert Hawthorne

Hillary Maybery

Photographer Spotlight: Hillary Maybery

Digital Designers

Drew Wilson

Fish Anatomy Art, COVID, and Tattoos with Drew Wilson

Andrea Larko

Artist Spotlight: Andrea Larko

David Owens

Artist Spotlight: David Owens

Potters and Sculptors

Jeff Szarzi

Artist Spotlight: Jeff Szarzi

Rachel Lubarski

Artist Spotlight: Rachel Lubarski

Cody Richardson

Staying Afloat #3: Cody Richardson’s Creations

Knife Makers

Joe Mangiafico

Artist Spotlight: Joe Mangiafico

*Joe is no longer taking commissions for this holiday season, but you can order the trout-themed knife he designed for Boker Solingen, here.

Leather Makers

Stanestcu Leathercraft

Stanescu Leathercraft: Fine Leather Fishing Gear

Edgar Diaz

Staying Afloat #7: Sight Line Provisions

Customized Rod-Grip Designer

Tim Johnson

Artist Spotlight: Tim Johnson

Looking for more inspiration? Check out these other fantastic artists!

Painters

BA Dallas, George Hill, Remington Robinson, David Danforth, Piper Nunn

Photographers

R. Valentine Atkinson, Greg Koch, Reuben Browning, Dane Ulsifer, Sean Landsman, David Reilly, Isaias Miciu Nicolaevici, Josh Hutchins, George Holz, Chandler Rogers, Sue Moodie, Brian Grossenbacher, Jessical Haydahl Richardson, David Anderson, Patrick Clayton

Illustrators

Jay Talbot

Digital Designers

Anthony Annable, Richard Blanco