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The Orvis Fly-Fishing Podcast

Late Fall and Winter Nymphing, with Alex Waller

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

🗓️ 4 November 2022

⏱️ 83 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

My guest this week is Alex Waller [41:36] from New Zealand. You've likely seen his great videos on Orvisnews.com or on You Tube, in his channel Trippin on Trout. Alex shares his techniques for fishing nymphs in late fall and winter with us, and his techniques are a bit different than what most of us use, so you make pick up some tips for your own trout fishing wherever you live. And because he often fishes for migratory rainbows coming out of giant Lake Taupo, his techniques will play well with Great Lakes "steelhead".

In the Fly Box this week, we have a host of interesting questions, including:

What is the most buoyant natural material for dry flies?

Does adding UV resin to dry flies affect their buoyancy?

What is the best way to carry and store tube flies?

Is there a universal rule for what size nymph you can use on a dry dropper?

How do I keep my hook gap clear of materials so I don't miss strikes?

What should I do when a big fish shakes its head when fighting?

If black is the most visible color for flies, why do some anglers prefer black hooks when fish are spooky?

If black is most visible in murky water, why do some people recommend bright flies under these conditions?

I am stuck in the rolling plains of the Midwest, four hours from a trout stream. Can I still go fly fishing?

A local river is highly pressured with very clear water, so everyone uses tiny midges.

Would a bigger fly work sometimes?

What is the best upgrade I can make to my Clearwater outfit, without spending hundreds of dollars?

Do you ever swing wet flies in small streams?

If so what leader do you use?

When do you use a strike indicator instead of a dry dropper?

And what kind do you use?

I have a floating line for striped bass fishing and have done well with it. What other line would you recommend?

What do you suggest if I want to try night fishing for striped bass?

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hi, and welcome to the Orvis Fly Fishing Podcast.

0:14.1

This is your host, Tom Rosey Power, and my guess this week is Alex Waller, and you probably

0:21.3

know Alex from his great videos that you've seen on the Orvis blog, orvisnews.com or

0:29.0

a YouTube called Trippin' on Trout.

0:31.6

Alex is a guide from New Zealand, and I thought because we're getting into the late fall winter

0:39.4

season when Nymphing is probably going to be the most productive way to catch trout, at

0:45.4

least in the Northern hemisphere, I thought we would get some tips from Alex on how he

0:52.2

fishes Nymphs at the opposite end of our season.

0:58.1

In other words, he's going into spring now, we're going into winter, and I thought it would

1:04.0

be really, really educational to find out how he fishes cold water with Nymphs, especially

1:11.9

since Alex is fishing a lot of rivers that flow into large lakes, and there's big rainbow

1:19.0

trout coming out of those lakes.

1:21.7

It's going to be a very similar situation to our great lakes, Lake Run Rainbow, or Steelhead

1:29.0

if you want to call him that, so his techniques will be valuable, not only to trout anglers,

1:35.6

but also to Steelhead anglers.

1:40.4

But first, before we talk to Alex, let's do the fly box.

1:46.6

That's where you ask me questions.

1:49.0

You can send your question to podcast at orvis.com, either just type it in your email, or you can

1:57.2

attach a voice file, and I may read it on the air.

2:02.1

I don't answer a mile, particularly if I've answered something in the past few weeks, so

2:07.1

for the benefit of those of you who don't listen every podcast, if I don't answer your

2:12.1

question, you may want to go back into the episodes from the past six months or so, and

...

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