Egg PatternbeginnerAlaska
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Sourcing Ledger
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Matched on Alaska, egg flies, salmon. Alaska-specific fly shop with fly categories for trout, char, grayling, salmon, and steelhead.
Matched on egg flies, trout, egg. Broad by-type catalog useful for common benchmark patterns and inexpensive backups.
Matched on egg flies, trout, trout. Arizona and Southwest shop lead for desert trout, bass, canal carp, and warmwater patterns.
Matched on egg flies, trout, trout. Southern Appalachian trout shop lead tied to the Davidson River and regional freestones.
Matched on egg flies, trout, salmon. New England tier lead for brook trout, landlocked salmon, and coastal striper patterns.
Salmon eggs are Alaska's universal currency. Every fish in the river eats them -- trout, char, grayling, and more salmon. This yarn egg is so simple it barely qualifies as fly tying, and yet it is arguably the most productive pattern in the forty-ninth state. Some things do not need to be complicated to be perfect.
Russian River
AK · Salmon River
Kenai River
AK · Salmon River
Bristol Bay rivers
AK · Salmon River
Map unavailable. Locations for Alaska Glo Bug: Russian River, AK; Kenai River, AK; Bristol Bay rivers, AK
region guide
Alaska is fly fishing distilled to its most primal form. Five species of Pacific salmon, trophy rainbow trout fattened on salmon eggs and flesh, Arctic grayling in waters that have never seen a hatchery truck — this is the complete guide to planning and fishing the Last Frontier.
seasonal playbook
Summer is fly fishing's season of abundance. Sixteen-hour days, prolific hatches, aggressive fish, and the full spectrum from mountain trout to saltwater flats. This is your playbook for making the most of the warmest, longest, most generous months of the fishing year.
species science
Steelhead are rainbow trout that went to sea and came back transformed — chrome-bright, ocean-strong, and wired with a grab reflex that makes them eat flies they have no biological reason to eat. Understanding the science behind the chrome changes how you fish for them.
species science
Pacific salmon are born in gravel, grow in rivers, vanish into the ocean for years, then navigate thousands of miles back to the exact stream where they hatched — to spawn and die. Their lifecycle is the most dramatic story in freshwater biology, and understanding it makes you a better angler.
Egg PatternbeginnerFind a tier or trusted source
Alaska
#6 - #10
Realistic egg pattern with a contrasting dot of red or orange yarn in the center, imitating a fertilized or developing salmon egg. The blood dot trigger dramatically increases strike rates compared to plain eggs.
Rainbow Trout · Dolly Varden · Arctic Grayling · Arctic Char
Egg PatternbeginnerFind a tier or trusted source
Alaska
6mm - 10mm bead, #6 - #8 hook
Hard acrylic or glass bead pegged two inches above a bare hook. The most realistic egg imitation available. Controversial in some circles, devastatingly effective in all of them.
Rainbow Trout · Dolly Varden · Arctic Grayling · Arctic Char
StreamerbeginnerFind a tier or trusted source
Alaska
#2 - #8
Marabou leech with a fluorescent egg head. The combination of leech body and egg trigger makes it one of the most versatile patterns in Alaska. Catches everything from king salmon to Dolly Varden.
Silver Salmon · Rainbow Trout · Dolly Varden · Chum Salmon
NymphbeginnerFind a tier or trusted source
Alaska
#8 - #14
The same universally effective nymph that works everywhere in North America. Peacock herl body, white biot wings, brown hackle. In Alaska, it fills the gap when fish are not keyed on eggs or flesh.
Arctic Grayling · Dolly Varden · Rainbow Trout
NymphbeginnerFind a tier or trusted source
Alaska
#8 - #12
John Barr's tungsten-headed nymph, sized up for Alaskan waters. The extra weight and flash make it effective in the faster, deeper runs of salmon rivers where standard nymphs cannot reach.
Arctic Grayling · Dolly Varden · Rainbow Trout
NymphintermediateFind a tier or trusted source
Alaska
#4 - #8
Large, heavily weighted stonefly nymph for tumbling through fast Alaskan freestone rivers. Rubber legs and a dark body imitate the giant stonefly nymphs that inhabit clean gravel substrates.
Rainbow Trout · Dolly Varden · Arctic Grayling