meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
The Orvis Fly-Fishing Podcast

George Daniel on Winter Fly Fishing

The Orvis Fly-Fishing Podcast

James Hathaway

Bass, Fishing, Bonefish, Wilderness, Flyfishing, Trout, How To, Steelhead, Bluegill, Fly, Orvis, Sports, Salmon, Panfish, Education, Rosenbauer

4.81.9K Ratings

🗓️ 30 January 2021

⏱️ 83 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week, continuing our series of podcasts on winter fly fishing for trout, I interview George Daniel, author and guide. George is also an Orvis ambassador and field tester, and teaches fly fishing at Penn State. As you'll discover, there are many similarities with winter fishing in other parts of the country, along with some flies and techniques a bit more appropriate for the Northeast.

In the Fly Box this week, we have some great tips and questions, including:
Do you use touch dubbing, split thread dubbing, and composite loop dubbing techniques?
I'm looking for a fly line to fish streamers for bass, trout, and panfish. Which line should I get?
What leaders do I need for my Clearwater Trout Spey setup, for both Skagit and Scandi lines?
What's your technique for catching largemouth bass, and what are your favorite flies?
Why can't I get my dubbing noodle to behave?
Which intermediate line should I get for fishing streamers and indicators in four to eight feet of water?
A great tip on a method for wetting marabou and other materials without putting them in your mouth.
I went fishing before a cold front and got skunked. I thought fishing was supposed to be good before a cold front.
What line and leader and tippet would you use for trout in lakes in 15 feet of water?

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hi and

0:08.0

welcome to the Orvis Fly Fishing Podcast, this is your Rosenbauer and today's guest is the great George Daniel.

0:17.0

And in our continuing series of Winter Fly Fishing,

0:22.0

we're going to be talking to George and this time

0:24.6

about Winter fly fishing in the Northeast, specifically Central Pennsylvania,

0:29.4

but George's ideas should apply anywhere in the Northeast where winter fishing is legal and accessible.

0:38.9

So George has always got some great ideas and I think you'll enjoy today's interview. But first let's do the

0:49.0

flybox and if you have a question for the flybox, you can send it to podcast at Orvis.com.

0:57.6

You can include a voice file if you want, or you can just type your question into an email and I will try to answer it.

1:06.2

So on to the flybox. The first one is from RK and it's flytime question. I have to

1:12.0

apologize in advance because I'm not going to be a lot of help in these questions, but maybe in answering or not answering the questions, I'm going to lead you in an easier direction,

1:28.0

RK. So I think you'll see, I think you'll see when I answer answer these what I'm talking about.

1:34.3

RK asks, need some advice from the in-house orvis fly-tying sage, been messing around with

1:40.2

dubbing techniques to get shaggy or flies. This has risen to a bunch of questions that I hope you can answer.

1:47.0

First one is touch dubbing. When, if at all, do you personally use touch dubbing technique? Do you have preferred

1:54.4

dubbing types? Musgrat or make for touch dubbing? Do you have a preferred

1:58.4

dubbing wax? Do you have a preferred thread that you use for this technique?

2:02.4

Do you spin your thread after applying the dubbing?

2:05.2

Is spinning your thread after you touch dub even a technique? So I'm going to ask these one of the time.

2:11.3

RK I've never used touch dubbing

2:14.0

and I honestly don't see an advantage to it.

2:16.6

I think it's going to, it might give you a fuzzier fly,

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from James Hathaway, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of James Hathaway and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.