The purpose of this article is to help the beginner fly fishing. The terminology and the basic methods used in fly fishing may be unknown to the beginner at fly fishing, so we will commence from the very beginning. So, if you are a beginner fly fishing person, please read on.
The things needed for fly fishing are usually called tackle, but if you want to be more accurate about the sort of tools you need, you can add the words “fly fishing”. Therefore, you get the phrase: “fly fishing tackle”. Fly fishing tackle, or gear, fundamentally comprises artificial flies, a fly rod, a fly reel and fly line. The set-up is: the fly is affixed to the line, which is wound around the reel, which is attached to the rod or pole, which is used to cast the fly or other bait.
In order to be able to cast the fly as far as possible, the line has to be a bit heavier than other types of line, as a weight is used in other forms of fishing to achieve the same effect. Furthermore, the artificial flies come in all sorts of shapes, sizes and colours to reflect real, live flies, depending on the type of fish the angler wants to catch.
Generally speaking, the artificial fly is made of hair, plastic, feathers, fabric, fur and other materials in order to make the lure as closely resemble as possible the insect or fly most commonly eaten by the particular species of fish at that particular month or time of the day. This means that each fishing spot requires that you choose a certain type of artificial fly that will look like the insects living in the area where your desired species of fish frequent. Therefore, a type of fly employed in one part of the country may not work as well as you’d think in another.
There are variations in the classification of flies too. They fall into two basic overall categories, which are referred to as ‘attractive’ and ‘imitative’. The imitative artificial lures resemble real insects, while the attractive flies only rely on colour or the reflection of light in order to attract fish without necessarily looking like the fish’s natural prey.
These classifications are then used to further sub-divide artificial fly fishing lures into: a] dry (resembling grasshoppers, dragonflies, etc. which float on or near the surface of the water); b] sub-surface (looking like larvae, pupae) and c] wet (looking like leeches and minnows and other small fish or fry).
The main difference between fly fishing and non-fly fishing is that fly fishing depends a lot on the weight of the line to get the artificial lure to that part of the water where your fish are schooling, probably at a distance from the bank. The line is often camouflaged and hollow.
Non-fly fishing relies rather on the attached weight, often made of lead, to draw the line off the reel and carry it forward to the right spot, where the weight will also take the bait or lure down to the feeding fish.
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