News

The Maryland Department of Agriculture, in collaboration with the Department of Natural Resources, is set to treat a section ...
Dud was down at The Lunker Hole on Lewis Creek before it even turned yellow in the east. He had some thinking to do, and, as ...
Anglers miss so much of what is happening under water. We spend a lot of time trying to hide things like split shot and ...
The Baltimore County Department of Environmental Protection and Sustainability is expanding the area that is being treated ...
To fly fish for trout effectively, it’s important to be familiar with the food sources that your flies are designed to imitate. Many of the best trout anglers ...
Remember, it is easy to get lost at Ruby Lake NWR due to the many channels that zig-zag over several thousand acres, so stay ...
Live midge flies still coat interior walls, mostly in the boathouse, but also some areas on Deck 2. Today was a cleaning day in both areas." ... salmon and trout.
Trout love to feed on them as they emerge. They are commonly called duckflies, though Whelan has no idea why. The ones you saw seem to have hatched somewhat earlier this year, possibly as a result ...
Try the Fryingpan River or Upper Roaring Fork River for midge fly fishing in winter, or Gore Creek in Vail. There are plenty of rivers that rarely freeze over — the trick will be finding the fish.
In the 1980s and 1990s, wooly buggers were the primary trout fishing fly on the White River. Now, anglers catch a lot of fish, and a lot of big fish, with tiny nymphs and midges.
MATCH THE HATCH: Our trout flies imitate common insects like stoneflies, mayflies, midges, caddis flies, ants, and hoppers in nearly all of their lifecycles. Great for fly fishing year round all ...
Midges hatch year-round in most trout waters, meaning that a midge imitation is never really a bad option. If you’re fishing a larger nymph without much success, cut a length of thin tippet and ...