4.8 • 1.9K Ratings
🗓️ 8 July 2022
⏱️ 94 minutes
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You may have never heard of redeye bass or seen one. Yet they are a wonderful fly-rod fish. They live in spectacular, clear mountain streams and take a fly very well. They’re mainly found in the deep South, particularly in Alabama, so they’re a great fly-rod target in places where you would not ordinarily think of fly fishing. They’re a native species that deserve more visibility from the fly-fishing community and my guest, Matthew Lewis [44:27], is perhaps the world expert on fly fishing for them.
In the fly box this week, we have some interesting questions and great tips from listeners, including:
What percentage of the time do trout in lakes feed on the surface?
What is a go-to fly for late summer fishing on small streams?
What can I do to prevent foul-hooking so many fish? And when I hook a trout in the belly, is it sure to die?
Do oils from our hands harm trout?
Do you have some general rules of thumb for how rain affects fly fishing?
I am using wide gape hooks and missing a lot of small brook trout. Is it the hook that’s my problem?
I saw some large brown trout in shallow water around spawning season and could not get them to take a fly. What can I do?
What do you think of the Double Davy Knot?
A listener shares a killer nymph pattern he developed.
When I practice casting, why does the end of my leader fray and my fly line loop come apart?
Do you ever guide?
I fish a stream with rainbow trout, and for the first six months of the season I can’t find them. Where do they go?
How much less backing fits on a spool when I use 30-pound backing instead of 20-pound?
Are the natural materials we use for fly tying from ethically treated animals?
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0:00.0 | Hi and welcome to the Orvis Fly Fishing Podcast. |
0:14.6 | This is your host Tom Rosenbauer and this week we're going to be talking about a pretty |
0:19.9 | special fish. |
0:21.2 | It's a native species. |
0:23.6 | It lives in beautiful clear water streams. |
0:27.6 | It takes a fly really well and you know what? |
0:31.3 | You can't catch one in the Rocky Mountains or the Catskills or the Pacific Northwest. |
0:38.4 | You can only catch one in the deep south. |
0:42.1 | The fish we're going to talk about today is Red Eye Bass and many of you probably have |
0:46.8 | never heard of Red Eye Bass. |
0:48.5 | Don't know what they look like. |
0:49.7 | Don't know where they live. |
0:50.7 | Well, we're going to find out today and if you do live in the south, particularly in |
0:55.6 | Alabama, you have a great fish to target on a fly rod and world expert fly fisher for |
1:04.6 | Red Eye Bass, Matthew Lewis is going to be our guest today. |
1:08.5 | It's going to tell us all about why it's worthwhile to chase these small members of |
1:15.1 | the bass family and threats to their environment and the kind of places they live. |
1:21.4 | So I think it's an interesting podcast and you know, it's another fish to chase with |
1:27.3 | a fly rod in places where you normally wouldn't think there would be a lot of fly fishing. |
1:34.4 | So I hope you enjoy it. |
1:37.2 | But first, the fly box. |
1:40.7 | The fly box is where you ask questions and I try to answer them or I research them and |
... |
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