Dry FlybeginnerRocky Mountain West
Flybox sourcing profile
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Pattern Ledger
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Sourcing Ledger
TWG checkout is closed. These are current sourcing leads, scored by mapped tier, region, species, fly type, and named-pattern evidence. Confirm availability directly with the tier or shop.
Matched on Rocky Mountain West, dry flies, trout. New Mexico/Southwest trout shop lead for Rio Grande, San Juan, Pecos, and high desert water.
Matched on Rocky Mountain West, dry flies, trout. Colorado tier and shop lead for Rocky Mountain trout, bass, and predator patterns.
Matched on dry flies, trout, dry. Large pattern house with broad freshwater and saltwater fly categories.
Matched on dry flies, trout, parachute. Broad retail catalog for standard trout, warmwater, salmon/steelhead, and saltwater patterns.
Matched on dry flies, trout, dry. Broad by-type catalog useful for common benchmark patterns and inexpensive backups.
The Parachute Adams is the fly you tie on when you have no idea what is hatching but refuse to admit it. It imitates everything and nothing simultaneously -- a philosophical achievement in feathers and thread. The white post means you can actually see it on the water, which is more than can be said for your dignity after the third missed hookset.
Madison River
MT · Freestone River
Henry's Fork
ID · Spring Creek
South Platte River
CO · Tailwater
Frying Pan River
CO · Tailwater
Map unavailable. Locations for Parachute Adams: Madison River, MT; Henry's Fork, ID; South Platte River, CO; Frying Pan River, CO
region guide
The Rocky Mountain West holds the finest trout rivers in North America. From the gin-clear tailwaters of Colorado to the sweeping freestone rivers of Montana, these waters offer everything from technical dry fly fishing to aggressive streamer hunting. This is your river-by-river guide to all of it.
species science
Trout don't see the world the way we do. They perceive ultraviolet light, detect motion through contrast rather than color, and see a dramatically different fly at ten feet of depth than at two. Once you understand their four-cone visual system, you'll never choose a fly the same way again.
hatch guide
Mayflies are the foundation of trout-stream entomology. This guide covers every major hatch — BWOs, PMDs, Green Drakes, Sulphurs, Tricos, and Hendricksons — with the biology, timing, and fly selections you need to fish them effectively across the country.
technique
Water temperature controls everything. Metabolism, feeding intensity, insect emergence, dissolved oxygen, where fish hold, and whether they'll eat your fly. Understanding thermal dynamics across freshwater and saltwater systems is the single most reliable way to predict fishing quality before you even leave the truck.
technique
Every river tells you where the fish are, if you know how to listen. Reading water is the fundamental skill that separates productive anglers from persistent ones. The ability to look at a stretch of river and identify the handful of spots that hold fish — and dismiss the vast majority that don't — is worth more than a lifetime of fly pattern knowledge.
technique
Most anglers open their fly box and stare at it like a menu in a foreign language. But fly selection isn't mystical — it's a decision tree. Start with what the fish are eating, narrow by presentation depth, match the profile and size, and you'll arrive at the right fly in under sixty seconds. Here's the system.
technique
Every major trout and steelhead river in America has a USGS gauge station publishing real-time flow and temperature data for free. Learning to read it is like having a scout on the river around the clock. Here's how to turn CFS numbers and trend lines into fish-catching intelligence.
technique
Ninety percent of a trout's diet is consumed subsurface. Yet ninety percent of the magazine covers show a dry fly floating on calm water. The decision between nymphing and dry-fly fishing isn't about preference — it's about reading the situation and making the choice that puts your fly where the fish are actually feeding.
technique
We release fish and feel good about it. But does the fish survive? The science is both encouraging and sobering. Catch-and-release mortality varies from nearly zero to over forty percent depending on species, water temperature, fight duration, handling, and a handful of other factors entirely within the angler's control. Here's what the research says and how to maximize survival.
Dry FlybeginnerFind a tier or trusted source
Rocky Mountain West
#12 - #18
Al Troth's iconic caddis imitation. Elk hair wing, palmered hackle. Floats like a cork in fast water.
Rainbow Trout · Brown Trout · Cutthroat Trout · Brook Trout
Dry FlybeginnerFind a tier or trusted source
Rocky Mountain West
#8 - #16
Oversized attractor dry that suggests stoneflies, caddis, and hoppers depending on size and color. A western staple.
Rainbow Trout · Brown Trout · Cutthroat Trout · Brook Trout
Dry FlyintermediateFind a tier or trusted source
Rocky Mountain West
#14 - #22
Craig Mathews' flush-floating mayfly emerger. Deer hair wing, trailing Z-lon shuck. Sits in the film like a natural.
Rainbow Trout · Brown Trout · Cutthroat Trout
Dry FlyintermediateFind a tier or trusted source
Rocky Mountain West
#12 - #22
Al Caucci and Bob Nastasi's no-hackle mayfly. Deer hair wing fans 180 degrees over a dubbed body. Deadly on flat water.
Rainbow Trout · Brown Trout · Cutthroat Trout
Dry FlybeginnerFind a tier or trusted source
Rocky Mountain West
#10 - #16
Lee Wulff's high-floating attractor with a peacock herl body, red floss band, and white calf tail wing. Visible in any water.
Rainbow Trout · Cutthroat Trout · Brook Trout
Dry FlyintermediateFind a tier or trusted source
Rocky Mountain West
#16 - #22
Mayfly imitation for Baetis hatches. Olive body, dark dun wings. The cold-weather dry fly that saves slow days.
Rainbow Trout · Brown Trout · Cutthroat Trout