Level Up Your Fly Fishing Game

Embracing the art of fly fishing is easy with these 5 tips from a seasoned angler.

Catching our first few fish on a fly is what seals the deal. Learning to cast, finding waters with good potential, and deceiving fish with a delicate lure of fur and feathers is a truly rewarding experience and one that can truly turn the head of the susceptible.

Smedley-Fly-Fishing-1

One of the beautiful things about angling is there’s always more to learn and fly fishing is no exception. In fact, there are a dizzying number of techniques, gear and knowledge swirling around the fly fishing sphere that can help us to fine tune our presentation and catch more fish. Here are a few to get us started:

Smedley-Fly-Fishing-2

Appropriate Gear

The type of fish we are targeting should dictate the weight of the rod and fly line we are using. Casting small light flies to 12-inch creek trout will be much more effective and fulfilling with a five-weight rod and line. If we target smallmouth bass then a six or seven-weight rod and line would be more appropriate. Larger game fish like salmon, pike and muskie, who attack larger flies and fight with a ferocity that corresponds to their size, might demand an 8- to 10-weight rod and line. Like any sport, there is always something to buy, but tailoring our acquisitions to the fish we’re targeting enhances enjoyment and success.  

Smedley-Fly-Fishing-3

Get A SINK-TIP Line

I generally take two rods with me when fly fishing. One is rigged with a full floating line and great for fishing dry flies on surface and wet flies just below surface, but when the fish are down a little deeper I switch to a rod with a sink tip line to quickly get my fly down. We don’t need two rods provided we have an extra spool for our reel rigged with a sink tip line, or we can simply tie a sinking tip to our floating line. Flies sink faster and deeper with a sink tip making it a much more efficient way to work various depths of a lake when the surface action is nil or marginal. Sink tips are also effective in rivers, drawing the fly down quickly before being swept out of the pool or run by strong current.

Smedley-Fly-Fishing-4

Watch For Food

Choosing what fly to use can be tough but look for hints along streams and in shoreline shallows by turning over rocks to see what creatures might be found. We’ll find things like leeches, minnows, crayfish, scuds and nymphs. Watch the water’s surface for hatching insects and look in trees and shoreline shrubs to see what has landed or is flying around. Looking in our fly box for something that looks similar to the available food is a good place to start. If we don’t have any flies that represent the food the fish are eating, then we’d better get some.

Smedley-Fly-Fishing-5

Tie Our Own Flies

Smedley-Fly-Fishing-6

Once we gain confidence on how, where and when to catch fish, try taking some of our own hand-tied creations to our favourite water. There are loads of articles, books and videos on fly tying and the gear and materials needed are widely available. We can even scrounge our own tying materials like grouse feathers, deer and moose hair and squirrel tail. I’ve even used the hair from my dog to tie flies that have worked quite well. It’s rewarding indeed to catch a trout on a fly we’ve tied ourselves. 

Smedley-Fly-Fishing-7

Practice Catch And Release

Smedley-Fly-Fishing-8

Once a sleek rainbow or corpulent brook trout has done us the service of arcing through the air to crash down on our fly or dart up from the depths to inhale our minnow imitation, slipping the creature back into the water is a great way to ensure we can return again to experience more of the same. As we get better and better at fly fishing, releasing most of what we catch will become a necessity.

Find Fly Fishing Trips In Northern Ontario By visiting:

About James Smedley

Professional photographer and writer James Smedley’s contributions—more than 400 pieces and close to 1,000 images—to U.S. and Canadian books, magazines, and newspapers have earned him over 40 national and international awards. In addition to teaching photography workshops, James is the travel editor at Ontario OUT of DOORS magazine. James has fly-fished for brook trout and arctic grayling in far northern rivers and continues to cast for trout, bass, and steelhead near his home in the northern Ontario town of Wawa where he lives with his wife Francine and daughters Islay and Lillian.

 

Visit James at www.jamessmedleyoutdoors.com

Recommended Articles

Late Summer Smallmouth Bass Fishing

Explore Lake Huron as you stay at Bruce Bay Cottages and Lighthouse in Bruce Mines.

Hit The Hard Rock Cafe for Perch & Crappies

Get the most out of your next ice fishing adventure for perch and crappies.

Fish for Canadian Musky Success

A simple strategy for catching muskies, fish as many islands as possible.

Lake of the Muskies: An Angler's Paradise in Northwest Ontario

It’s not a question of will you catch a musky, but of how many.

How To Dress Really Warm On The Ice This Winter

3 must-wear items for staying warm—so you can enjoy your day on the ice!

Ontario's Trophy - Splake Prize

It is fair to say that Ontario offers the finest fishing for splake anywhere in the world

Judas Bait Muskies

How to Lure Fish into Betraying Their Presence

Ontario Multi-Species Fishing Lodges

High quality angling and top notch accommodations await at these fishing lodges.

Family Friendly Fishing Vacations

Ridgewood Cottages is the perfect family getaway for angling or a relaxing vacation.

Double Trouble Trout

Twice the Fun Ice Fishing

Ontario’s Array of Fishing Opportunities

From drive-to, fly-in, and train-in lodges, to outpost camps in Ontario, here's everything you need to know.

Reading Water

Reading water can be done a number of ways

Ontario’s Top Musky Fishing

Ontario is the epicenter of big musky fishing.

Fly-in Destination

Errington's Wilderness Island is ideal for families and friends

Cast Back for Giant Muskies

Some of the biggest muskies I’ve caught over the years have come on cast-back baits

Bigger, Better, Deeper

The most valuable fishing lessons are the ones you learn early on without any help.

Wabigoon Walleye Extreme

Trophy-sized Walleye in the 30" Class

5 Reasons To Go Fishing In The Fall

Tips for catching Ontario trophies.

5 Ontario Fish Species to Target on Fly

As technology has improved fly anglers have the ability to target multi-species on fly.

Cash in on Early Season Walleyes

Opening day of the walleye season in Ontario is one of the most-anticpiated dates for anglers..