Consejos y tutoriales
The Yellow Sally is one of the most consistent — and most under-fished — hatches in American fly fishing. From late May through August, on every wild trout watershed in the country, fish key on small yellow stoneflies in ways most anglers misread. This is the deep dive on the hatch: where the pattern came from, how to actually read it, the three mistakes anglers make, and the eight flies that earn their place in a Sally fly box.
Most anglers fish the salmonfly hatch like a one-day event. The ones who understand the wave fish it for four to six weeks — moving up-elevation as warming water releases nymphs higher into the watershed each week. Here's how to map your own pilgrimage on any Western river.
Stoneflies are the biggest, meatiest insect in most Western rivers — and trout know it. Here's how to fish them year-round as nymphs, then capitalize on the salmonfly and golden stone dry fly window when it arrives.