meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
The Orvis Fly-Fishing Podcast

Winter Fly-Fishing in the Far North, with Timbre Pringle

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

🗓️ 24 December 2020

⏱️ 86 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Continuing our exploration of winter trout fishing techniques, this week my guest is angler and photographer Timbre Pringle [40:08]. You have likely seen photos of Timbre or ones taken by her and her husband Darcy in Orvis catalogs and ads, as well as many of the fly-fishing magazines. She doesn't exactly fish in the far north as she fishes in Alberta, in southern Canada, but for most Americans any place in Canada seems like the far north. Timbre gives her tips for fishing her local river, the Bow, in the winter, but she offers tips that will work during the winter in any trout stream.

In the Fly Box this week, listeners share the following questions, comments, and tips:
I have been taken to task for telling people to never trust anglers who tell them to "never" or "always" do something, yet I tell people to always check their knots.
A tip for carrying two rods in one case.
Will a textured Orvis Pro Fly Line give me more distance?
Where do you start making changes when things just aren't working?
How do you estimate the depth of the water where you're going to fish your nymph?
I saw a recommendation in a book for an 8-foot rod for 6/7 weight line for trout. Most other people in my river use 3-weights. What gives?
Can I fish a dry fly on my 10-foot, 3-weight Recon rod?
Are the flow levels I see online useful?
How do I fish nymphs in a deep, slow plunge pool?
Should I spit on my flies to get them to sink?
What do you think about UV tying materials?

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

And the Oh, uh, oh, oh, and uh,

0:14.0

uh, and uh,

0:15.0

uh, hmm,

0:17.0

uh,

0:18.0

uh, uh, uh, uh, Oh, Oh, Hi and welcome to the Orvis Fly Fishing Podcast. I want to wish you all a Merry Christmas and happy Kwanza and I guess I'm late for

1:09.4

happy Hanukkah to some of you and happy Junkinu to my friends in the Bahamas and

1:16.2

happy new year I don't know when this exactly when this podcast will be will be

1:22.4

aired probably just after Christmas.

1:24.8

Now anyway, my interview this week is with the woman who has the coolest name in

1:31.8

fly fishing, Timber Pringle. And Timber is a

1:36.4

photographer and you've probably seen pictures of Timber and her husband Darcy, they're a husband and wife

1:45.2

photography team who do a lot of images for the Orvis website in the catalog, but

1:50.9

Timber's also an experience angler and fishes during the winter.

1:55.6

So this is my continuation of my series on winter trout fishing and we're getting different

2:02.4

perspectives from different people.

2:05.5

Timber lives in Alberta, so obviously it gets cold and snowy up there and it'll be

2:11.2

interesting to see her tips on winter trout fishing.

2:15.0

But first let's do the flybox and if you have questions for the flybox, you can send your questions to podcast at Orvis.com.

2:27.0

You can put them in the body of an email, or you can attach a voice file.

2:31.0

And the first question this week is from Tom from Lassen County, California.

2:38.3

This is my first time writing the show

2:45.0

I have been listening for three years now and have worked through most of the older episodes.

...

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.