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Fly Fishing Flies Explained (Streamers, Nymphs, Dry Flies & More)

Fly Fishing Flies Explained (Streamers, Nymphs, Dry Flies & More)

So, what's the difference between a streamer, dry fly, nymph, and wet fly? How do you fish them? SUBSCRIBE for more Fly Tying Tutorials Trout fishi...

Rio Flies are a practical way to stock your fly box with proven patterns for trout rivers and saltwater flats. From ready-made assortments that cover key scenarios to dependable singles for quick restocks, this collection helps simplify fly choice when time matters. Use the filters to narrow by species, pack size, and availability, then build a kit that fits your water and season.
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Showing 1 - 24 of 43 products
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Rio Blind Charlie FlyRio Blind Charlie Fly
Rio Rio Blind Charlie Fly
Sale price$3.79
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Brammer's Imposter FlyBrammer's Imposter Fly
Rio Brammer's Imposter Fly
Sale price$19.99
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Rio Trout Hopper Dropper Fly AssortmentRio Trout Hopper Dropper Fly Assortment
Rio Rio Trout Hopper Dropper Fly Assortment
Sale price$37.99
Only 2 units left
Brammer Seasoned Geezer Fly
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Rio Tarpon Fly AssortmentRio Tarpon Fly Assortment
Rio Rio Tarpon Fly Assortment
Sale price$59.99
Only 2 units left
Rio Bonefish Fly AssortmentRio Bonefish Fly Assortment
Rio Rio Bonefish Fly Assortment
Sale price$44.99
Only 1 unit left
RIO Crazy Charlie Fly
Rio RIO Crazy Charlie Fly
Sale price$3.79
Rio Trout Terrestrial Fly AssortmentRio Trout Terrestrial Fly Assortment
Rio Rio Trout Terrestrial Fly Assortment
Sale price$34.99
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Rio Streamer Fly AssortmentRio Streamer Fly Assortment
Rio Rio Streamer Fly Assortment
Sale price$61.99
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Partridge Soft Hackle Fly
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Rio Signature Euro Nymph Fly AssortmentRio Signature Euro Nymph Fly Assortment
Rio Rio Signature Euro Nymph Fly Assortment
Sale price$59.99
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Rio Permit Fly AssortmentRio Permit Fly Assortment
Rio Rio Permit Fly Assortment
Sale price$75.99
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Rio Bonefish Signature Fly AssortmentRio Bonefish Signature Fly Assortment
Rio Rio Bonefish Signature Fly Assortment
Sale price$39.99
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Fiddler On The Reef FlyFiddler On The Reef Fly
Rio Fiddler On The Reef Fly
Sale price$12.49
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Rio Tan Caddis Dry Fly AssortmentRio Tan Caddis Dry Fly Assortment
Rio Rio Tan Caddis Dry Fly Assortment
Sale price$35.99
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Rio BWO Dry Fly AssortmentRio BWO Dry Fly Assortment
Rio Rio BWO Dry Fly Assortment
Sale price$31.99
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Rio Yellow Sally Dry Fly AssortmentRio Yellow Sally Dry Fly Assortment
Rio Rio Yellow Sally Dry Fly Assortment
Sale price$33.99
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Rio Alaska Salmon Fly SelectionRio Alaska Salmon Fly Selection
Rio Rio Alaska Salmon Fly Selection
Sale price$74.99
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Rio Trout Spey Fly AssortmentRio Trout Spey Fly Assortment
Rio Rio Trout Spey Fly Assortment
Sale price$67.99
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Thin Mint Bugger TB Fly
Rio Thin Mint Bugger TB Fly
Sale price$3.79
Boyle's Swamp Fox Fly
Rio Boyle's Swamp Fox Fly
Sale price$7.49
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Mulberry FlyMulberry Fly
Rio Mulberry Fly
Sale price$4.49
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Boney Foo Foo Fly
Rio Boney Foo Foo Fly
Sale price$3.29
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Rio Flies Quick Picks

  • Best All-Around Trout Assortment: Rio Trout Hopper Dropper Fly Assortment - Built for anglers who want a ready-to-fish topwater + subsurface mix for summer through early fall trout fishing. It’s an easy way to cover surface eats while keeping a productive nymph trailing behind.
  • Best for Streamer Fishing: Rio Streamer Fly Assortment - Great for anglers targeting bigger trout (or covering water fast) with baitfish and leech-style presentations. It helps you rotate profiles and colors quickly when fish want movement instead of a dead drift.
  • Best for Bonefish Trips: Rio Bonefish Fly Assortment - A practical flats-focused assortment for anglers who want a starting lineup of proven shrimp/crab-style bonefish patterns. Ideal when you want to show up with the right “bread and butter” options without overthinking the first box.
  • Best for Tarpon Trips: Rio Tarpon Fly Assortment - Designed for anglers planning dedicated tarpon days where fly durability and the right silhouettes matter. It’s a simple way to build confidence before you start fine-tuning to local forage.
  • Best Value Single Fly (Add-On): Rio Blind Charlie Fly - A smart add-on when you need an extra, proven flats pattern for bonefish-style situations. Great for rounding out an assortment so you’re not short on a key fly after a few fish (or a few mangroves).

How to Choose Rio Flies

Start with the scenario (not the pattern name)

Action: Decide what you need your fly to do in the water column first: float (dry), drift subsurface (nymph/wet), or swim and get noticed (streamer/baitfish). Then use the filters for target species and pack size to narrow down quickly.

Best for: Anglers who want fewer decisions on the water, especially when traveling, fishing new rivers, or building a first fly box.

When assortments make the most sense

Action: Choose an assortment when you want coverage across sizes, colors, and styles without buying a dozen singles. Assortments are especially helpful for hopper-dropper season, streamer days, and saltwater trips where losing a few flies is normal.

Avoid if: You’re trying to match one specific local hatch precisely, then you’ll usually want specific sizes and specific patterns rather than a mixed pack.

Trout vs. saltwater: think “feeding behavior”

Action: For trout rivers, you’re often rotating dries, nymphs, and streamers based on whether fish are rising, holding deep, or actively chasing. For saltwater (bonefish/tarpon), you’re usually prioritizing sink rate, landing softness, and a clean profile that matches shrimp/crab/baitfish forage.

Tip: Carry at least two weights/versions of your core flats patterns, lighter for skinny water, heavier for wind/current and deeper edges.

Materials & Durability

  • Rinse after saltwater use: A quick freshwater rinse helps reduce hook corrosion and keeps materials from getting crunchy.
  • Dry your flies before storage: Open your fly box after fishing so flies can dry fully, this helps prevent rust and mildew in materials.
  • Retire beat-up flies strategically: Demote chewed-up patterns to “search flies” for aggressive fish, and keep cleaner flies for spooky conditions.
  • Check hook points often: Even quality hooks can roll or dull after rocks, mangroves, or a few fish, touch up or replace as needed.

Complete Your Setup

Related Gear

  • Rio Flies - Start here if you want species-focused assortments and a few key single patterns.
  • Fly Assortments - A fast way to stock a box for a destination, hatch window, or technique.
  • Leaders - Match leader taper and material to the presentation (dry fly vs. subsurface vs. saltwater).
  • Tippet - Dial in stealth, abrasion resistance, and turnover based on fly size and conditions.
  • Weights, Indicators & Floatants - The small stuff that controls depth, drift, and dry-fly flotation.
  • Fly Boxes - Keep assortments organized by type, size, and destination so you can change quickly.

Related Guides

Rio Flies FAQs

Q: What are Rio Flies?

A: Rio Flies are fly fishing patterns and pre-built fly assortments under the RIO brand, covering trout and saltwater species. They’re a good fit when you want proven options without building a box one fly at a time.

Q: Are Rio Flies good for beginners?

A: Yes, especially the assortments. A mixed pack helps you learn when to use dries vs. nymphs vs. streamers without guessing which specific patterns to start with.

Q: Should I buy a fly assortment or individual flies?

A: Choose an assortment if you want broad coverage for a season, trip, or technique. Buy individual flies when you’re matching a specific hatch or you already know exactly what you need more of.

Q: What’s the best way to pick the right flies for trout?

A: Start with what fish are doing: rising fish point to dry flies, no surface activity often points to nymphs/wets, and aggressive chasing favors streamers. Then match size first, profile second, and color third.

Q: What colors should I bring for bonefish?

A: Many anglers carry light/neutral colors (like tan/white) plus a few options with a bit more contrast for darker bottoms. It’s also smart to have multiple weights so you can match depth and current.

Q: Do I need different flies for tarpon vs. bonefish?

A: Typically yes. Bonefish flies often prioritize shrimp/crab profiles and subtle landings, while tarpon flies commonly focus on larger silhouettes, durability, and the right sink/hover behavior for the scenario.

Q: How should I store flies after a day on the water?

A: Let them dry completely before closing your box for storage. If you fished saltwater, rinse flies with fresh water and dry them to help reduce corrosion.

Q: How do I know what fly size to use?

A: For trout, match the natural insects you see (or the size fish are eating). For saltwater, size often follows forage size and conditions, bigger profiles can help in wind or dirty water, while smaller flies can help in calm, clear flats.

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