4 Critical Fly Fishing Tips
by Frank Faldo
Good Fly Presentation
Obviously, the goal when casting a fly is to present the fly to the fish
in a realistic manner. You are trying to simulate nature here. If you
are going for trout in a stream, for instance, this means a drag-free
float of 36 inches over a precise spot that marks the window of a feeding
fish.
Also remember that the Evening
Secret will swarm fish to your spot consistantly, and help you catch
more fish.
Never randomly cast – you have got to pick a spot and hit it. Throw
tight loops that put the fly on target. One important method that can
be used is to overcast the target and stop the line short while it is
in the air. The fly should come back to you and fall on the water with
slack in the leader.
The best trout fishermen fish with only 30 to 35 feet of line, but make
up for this with accurate casting. They read waters will and put the fly
in the pay zone time after time. One of the most important thins they
do is to recognize that presentation and approach are much more important
than pattern.
It is different for bass. Whether a surface bug or a streamer, the offering
must move past a spot where a bass is apt to hold. As the boat drifts,
it is important to pick a precise time to shoot a cast to the target.
Too soon or too late, and the fly won't be in the right spot. This is
where the double haul form of casting becomes essential. It generates
line speed and enables the caster to pick 30 or 40 feet of line off the
water and shoot another without false casting.
When bassing, make your presentation, retrieve 10 to 20 feet, pick up,
and cast again without the need to false cast. After each one, drop the
rod type and keep the butt of the rod near your belt buckle with the tip-top
of the rod pointing at the line. A simple lift will let you execute the
next pickup or strike a fish.
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