
Dry Fly Patterns
Dry fly fishing is the most visually satisfying form of fly fishing. Watching a trout rise and take a fly off the surface never gets old, no matter how many times you've done it. Getting there requires having the right fly in the right size at the right moment, and that means understanding the major hatches and carrying patterns that match them. The Adams covers a broad range of mayflies. The Elk Hair Caddis handles caddis hatches in sizes 12 through 18. PMDs, BWOs, Pale Evening Duns, sulphurs, Tricos, each has its time and place, and the angler who knows them all has a real advantage.
Hundreds of dry fly patterns tested across dozens of rivers and hatches over many seasons - that's the foundation behind the recommendations you'll find here. We've distilled that experience down to the patterns that consistently produce trout, organized by hatch and situation in the guides below.

How to Tie the Sparkle Dun: Essential Emerger Pattern for Selective Trout

How To Tie Galloup's Dungeon

How To Tie a Green Drake Dry Fly

How To Tie The Goddard Caddis

How To Tie the October Caddis Fly

How to Tie A White Wulff Fly Pattern

How to Tie the Candy Shop Callibaetis Dry Fly

How to Tie the Mosquito Dry Fly

How to Tie the Corn Fed Caddis Dry Fly Pattern

How to Tie the Black Caddis Dry Fly Pattern

How to Tie the Light Cahill Dry Fly Pattern

How to Tie the March Brown Emerger Fly Pattern

How to Tie the Front End Loader Caddis Fly Pattern

How to Tie the Mimic May Dry Fly

How to Tie the Adams Irresistible Fly Pattern

How to Tie the Sulphur Dun Dry Fly

How to Tie the Gray Drake Spinner Dry Fly Pattern

How to Tie the Film Critic Emerger Fly Pattern

How to Tie the Puterbaugh Foam Caddis Fly Pattern

How to Tie the Gray Fox Dry Fly Pattern
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