Fly Fishing Flies Types
Although there are hundreds of types of flies used for fly
fishing, most of them fall into five specific categories, or
types. These types are dry flies, wet flies, nymphs, streamers
and buck tails, and terrestrials. The main purpose of the
fishing fly is to imitate an insect that the fish wants to
eat.
A dry fly imitates a natural
insect that is floating on the top of the water. Fish are very
sensitive to any motion of their water and how currents move
the insects they want for food. In fly fishing, if a dry fly is
moving even slightly against the current, the fish will have
nothing to do with it. The fly may look like something the fish
recognizes but it is not acting the same an insect would. The
fish recognizes it as something foreign in the water and leaves
it alone.
In fly fishing, a wet fly is
imitating a drowned, or drowning, natural insect and is fished
below the water surface. No one is sure if the wet fly is seen
as a drowning adult insect or a nymph from the perspective of
the fish. Most fly fishermen today seem to believe that it is
seen as a nymph. Because of this less and less wet flies are
being sold. Wet fly fishing is the oldest form of fly fishing.
It dates back to descriptions of the early Macedonian
people.
A nymph is the stage between an egg and the adult in the
life cycle of an insect. In fly fishing, flies that resemble
nymphs are growing popularity. The nymph fly is just below the
surface of the water. When a fish bulges the water without
breaking the surface, he is nymphing. This means that the fish
is eating the natural nymphs just as they are emerging from
their shell. This is what a nymph fly imitates.
Streamers and buck tail flies do not imitate any part of the
insect's life cycle. These types of fly fishing flies are much
larger and represent small bait fish such as sculpin minnows.
The main difference between theses two types of flies is that
streamers are tied with feathers, and bucktails are tied
completely with hair. Fly fishing that uses these two types of
flies generally requires more rod and line manipulation. The
movements are supposed to duplicate the motions of the little
fish.
Although most flies represent water insects, a terrestrial
fly is made to imitate a land insect that has fallen into the
water. The two most common terrestrials that are imitated for
fly fishing are the ant and the grasshopper.
Besides these basic five categories of flies, there are many
other kinds of flies that are used for fly fishing. Some of
them are a combination of one or more of the basic categories
and some do not fit into any group. The most important thing to
remember is that it doesn't matter how the fly looks to you,
the fisherman. It matters how the fly looks to the fish.
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