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Dry fly fishing is the heart of flyfishing. Most beginners start with dries and most long time fisherman end with them. All our flies are tied by local tiers who also fish them. Our selection is made up of patterns that work best on our local waters and most are also favorites where ever you may be.
One of the the most popular and versatile dry flies ever created. Imitates many bugs from the Midge to the big Drakes. A fly that should be in ever...
View full detailsThis pattern is an Adams with a yellow tag on the back end. This yellow tag can simulate the egg sack that forms on the mayfly. I find it also can ...
View full detailsThis is an Adams pattern with a big white Wulff wing. The fly is high floating with a great profile.
A pattern from Thomas Ames' Hatch Guide and over the years I have found it to be the most productive pattern for the alder fly hatch that happens o...
View full detailsThis is a large stonefly pattern designed and tied by one of our tier, Dan LaPointe from New Hampshire.
A simple dry fly with two hackle colors. The brown for the fish to see and the white for the fisherman.
An all black version of the Black Wullf.
This is an old pattern added to the Wulff family by Dan Bailey of Montana in the 1930's.
One of the most abundant mayflies in a low profile pattern.
Big and bulky Drake imitation used to imitate our Brown Drakes that hatch around here during the month of July.
A parachute style Brown Drake that sets low on the surface in the film.
Dark body wulff one of the original colors.
This is a great search or stonefly pattern. Used on the small ponds in our area.
This is a very versatile fly. It can be used as a dry or pulled under the surface as an emerger. Just change the color to match different insects.
A big ugly foam thing - fun to fish.
Al Troth's famous Caddis imitation. One of the most popular patterns ever created. The best fly to imitate our prolific caddis hatches that continu...
View full detailsA Maine classic with a profile that represents many different bugs. Popular for ponds.
A great pattern to fish pre-hatch or during a Caddis hatch. E/C stands for emerger / cripple. This is one of my favorite all round emerger patterns.
This is a realistic pattern to copy the large ants that hatch here in the spring. This hatch occurs when we have our first very warm day in the en...
View full detailsSummer time fishing demands a few ants. Try this pattern for one that stays afloat.
The foamulator is a go to pattern when the stoneflies start hatching on our area rivers.
A large dun used to imitate the drake, our largest of mayflies. Popular on our waters starting about the third week of June.
A Green Drake pattern that sets low in the film for a great presentation.
A bright, high floating attractor pattern.
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