There truly is nobody better out there to clearly explain and demonstrate the various casts, rod positions and proper anchor points. It really isn’t even close!😂 (I don’t watch any other instructors out there.😉) Thank you, Simon!
Great clip and very well presented. Leaders can easily give a newbie a very first bad reading on what a new fly line head profile was build for, either return it to share a bad comment about it. You fly line manufacturers should consider a kind of guidance with every fly line, like, include a chart or a set of the actual leaders that best cover a general fishing situation for that head length,, density and profile. Definitely a link to this video print inside a fly line box it’s a must 😾 Thank you Rio and Chris 👏
If you are making a leader land softer, wouldn't you first need to reduce the tippet section of the manufactured leader by some amount and then tie on your lower X tippet in order to get the proper structure for the leader to do what you wanted it to do?
No. Keep your 9' manufactured 4X leader and add, let's say, 24 inches of 5X. You would now have an 11' leader - still properly tapered -- which would be appropriate for tossing a size 12 to 16 dry fly for softer presentation. After you tie on the first fly you would have, then, a 10' 8" leader. If, as you suggested, you cut back the manufactured 4X leader first you might have to add 4X first and then the 5X to achieve a good taper. If you are targeting smaller fish use 5X and add 6X and smaller flies (14 to 20). Try to keep track of the leader length that works best for you depending on the conditions you most fish in, the streams you fish, your casting style and the flies you use the most and forget about what other folks might suggest. Fly Fishing is fun and individualistic.
There truly is nobody better out there to clearly explain and demonstrate the various casts, rod positions and proper anchor points.
It really isn’t even close!😂
(I don’t watch any other instructors out there.😉)
Thank you, Simon!
Great clip and very well presented.
Leaders can easily give a newbie a very first bad reading on what a new fly line head profile was build for, either return it to share a bad comment about it.
You fly line manufacturers should consider a kind of guidance with every fly line, like, include a chart or a set of the actual leaders that best cover a general fishing situation for that head length,, density and profile.
Definitely a link to this video print inside a fly line box it’s a must 😾
Thank you Rio and Chris 👏
Dude. New fly fisher here and you just finally explained everything to me
Very nice review of leaders.
VERY helpful! Thanks a lot! 👍👍🎣
If you are making a leader land softer, wouldn't you first need to reduce the tippet section of the manufactured leader by some amount and then tie on your lower X tippet in order to get the proper structure for the leader to do what you wanted it to do?
No. Keep your 9' manufactured 4X leader and add, let's say, 24 inches of 5X. You would now have an 11' leader - still properly tapered -- which would be appropriate for tossing a size 12 to 16 dry fly for softer presentation. After you tie on the first fly you would have, then, a 10' 8" leader. If, as you suggested, you cut back the manufactured 4X leader first you might have to add 4X first and then the 5X to achieve a good taper. If you are targeting smaller fish use 5X and add 6X and smaller flies (14 to 20). Try to keep track of the leader length that works best for you depending on the conditions you most fish in, the streams you fish, your casting style and the flies you use the most and forget about what other folks might suggest. Fly Fishing is fun and individualistic.