How to Choose
Start with what impacts your fishing most
Rods, reels, and fly lines usually create the biggest “on-the-water” difference for the money. If you’re upgrading, prioritize the weakest link in your current setup (often an old line, an under-sized reel, or a rod that doesn’t match your typical fishing).
Match the deal to your actual use
Action: If you fish dries at short range, a softer rod feel can be helpful; for wind, big flies, or distance, faster actions are often preferred. Drag: If you’re fishing saltwater, brackish water, or gritty rivers, consider a sealed-drag reel; for trout and lighter duty, simpler drags can be totally fine.
Consumables are the easiest “smart stock-up”
Flies, leaders, tippet, backing, and tying materials are low-risk purchases because you’ll use them up anyway. Sale is also a good time to add duplicates of the small stuff you lose: indicators, nippers, floatant, and fly boxes.
Know why it’s on sale
Most discounted items are past-season colors, outgoing models, or overstock. Performance is typically the same, but sizing/compatibility (boots, waders, reels/spools) is where you’ll want to slow down and confirm details before checkout.
Care & Maintenance
Reels (especially after salt): Rinse gently with fresh water, dry fully, and back off the drag before storage.
Fly lines: Clean occasionally with a line cleaner/cloth to improve shootability and reduce wear in guides.
Waders & boots: Rinse mud and grit, then air-dry completely inside and out to reduce odor and extend life.
Flies & tools: Let flies dry before closing boxes; wipe tools down to prevent rust and keep cutters sharp.
Complete Your Setup
Related Gear
Sale Fly Rods - If you’re building a new setup or adding a technique-specific rod at a discount.
Sale Fly Reels - Great for finding sealed-drag, large-arbor, and classic trout reels at reduced prices.
Sale Fly Lines - A cost-effective way to refresh the most important part of your casting system.
Sale Accessories - Stock up on the small essentials that keep you fishing efficiently.
Related Guides
Sale FAQs
Q: What is the Trident Sale collection?
A: It’s a rotating selection of discounted fly fishing gear across categories like rods, reels, lines, flies, apparel, and accessories. Inventory changes frequently, so sizes, colors, and models can come and go.
Q: Is sale gear new and covered by warranty?
A: Many sale items are new and still covered by the manufacturer warranty, but policies can vary by brand and item type. Always check the product page details if warranty coverage matters for your purchase.
Q: What should I buy first if I’m trying to upgrade on a budget?
A: Fly line is often the most noticeable upgrade for the money, followed by a reel that matches your fishing (drag style and capacity). If your rod is truly limiting your casting or your technique, that’s the bigger step.
Q: How do I choose the right fly line weight on sale?
A: Match the line weight to your rod weight (5wt rod = 5wt line), then pick a taper and temperature rating that fits your fishing. For most trout fishing, a coldwater floating weight-forward line is a safe starting point.
Q: Should I choose nylon or fluorocarbon tippet?
A: Nylon is often preferred for dry flies because it’s typically more supple and buoyant, while fluorocarbon is popular for subsurface fishing due to sink rate and abrasion resistance. Carrying both lets you adapt to conditions.
Q: Are sale flies worth buying in bulk?
A: Yes, flies are consumables, and having multiples of confidence patterns saves time on the water. Focus on versatile staples (attractors, common nymph profiles, and a few streamers) before niche patterns.
Q: What’s the main risk with buying wading gear on sale?
A: Fit and sizing. Boots need to work with your wader booties, and waders need to fit your layering and body shape, double-check size charts and consider how you’ll use them before committing.














































