Consejos y tutoriales
Trout in June feed in three columns simultaneously — surface for adults, film for emergers, bottom for nymphs. A single fly covers one column. A dry-dropper covers two. The math is the argument.
Most anglers think about what they're fishing and how. The smart anglers think about when. In summer, the last 90 minutes of legal light routinely outfish the entire midday window combined — and most anglers are off the water before that window even opens.
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.
Every region has a famous late-spring hatch — and a producing hatch nobody talks about. From Sulphurs and Slate Drakes in the East to Hex and smallmouth in the Midwest, Yellow Sallies and spinner falls out West, this is the regional fly fishing guide to the hatches that actually catch fish from late May through early July.
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.