I'm pretty well versed with reading a stream but I'd still want to spend a day with this man just reading the streams and making educated casts based on his instincts.
Love the show tom, u keep it simple but very effective,and also, u describe tactics with ease, not complicated or too difficult to understand!! Ur a hell of an angler !! Respect from Ireland !!
@@rosenbauert Tom ur a true gentleman, ur too humble my friend !! Keep up the good work , I get great pleasure from watching u fish, and learn something new or refresh my skills when I watch u fish or u speak tactics .. greatest of respect dude ! 👍👌..
Did y'all notice about a quarter of the wayplay your demonstration where you were standing in the water a small trout rose behind you and you didn't realize that I thought that was pretty and that's when you were explaining good spots to fishand the phone line which you're right that's always spot-on in my streams I fish
Super tips I love fishing for brown trout I'm just starting my adventure with the fly but thanks to your films I know that it will be a great thing Regards
And I was also curious I didn't hear you mention the feeding habits or areas in the streams that the golden rainbow trout prefer and they're feeding patterns I know there a newer species of trout from my experience with them they're very finicky and a little harder to catch than a normal rainbow but I've caught my fair share of them
Golden rainbows are strictly a hatchery fish and we really concentrated on wild trout in this show. Hatchery trout are a bit less predictable--but easier to catch, generally.
Summary: Trout could be anywhere, so look every where and conditions are constantly changing so try everything (including stripping a dry fly upstream) and enjoy every second of it. 😜
I hate the "cutthroat are dumb" thing. All the cutthroat by me are snake river cutthroat and while the younger/smaller ones are easy to catch the large ones can be quite finicky especially in pressured water. I think a lot of it comes from people fishing backcountry streams for cutthroat where the fish are very relaxed and easy to catch but as soon as you arrive on pressured water they behave much differently.
I'm pretty well versed with reading a stream but I'd still want to spend a day with this man just reading the streams and making educated casts based on his instincts.
Love the show tom, u keep it simple but very effective,and also, u describe tactics with ease, not complicated or too difficult to understand!! Ur a hell of an angler !! Respect from Ireland !!
Thanks. I am not that great of an angler--maybe just more observant than some people.
@@rosenbauert Tom ur a true gentleman, ur too humble my friend !! Keep up the good work , I get great pleasure from watching u fish, and learn something new or refresh my skills when I watch u fish or u speak tactics .. greatest of respect dude ! 👍👌..
This series is fantastic guys, love the information about finding trout and types of food in different types of streams, that is just gold!
Did y'all notice about a quarter of the wayplay your demonstration where you were standing in the water a small trout rose behind you and you didn't realize that I thought that was pretty and that's when you were explaining good spots to fishand the phone line which you're right that's always spot-on in my streams I fish
Going fly fishing tomorrow, these videos are invaluable
Super tips I love fishing for brown trout I'm just starting my adventure with the fly but thanks to your films I know that it will be a great thing Regards
Glad you like them!
Excellent info, always good to go over basics even if someone’s been doing it for years like myself. Thank I learned a lot.
Glad it was helpful!
Lots of information in this video.
Thanks Orvis team.
Glad it was helpful!
A very informative video as always on the necessities of fly fishing different rivers and streams
Great knowledge and presentation. Thanks from down-under in NZ.
Its funny how at 6:43 you can see a fish rise for a fly while you explain why its a good spot to fish.
Lol well spotted , I seen that aswell , hes a good pro angler ,and a humble guy too!
Yeah, we didn't see that until we looked at footage. And as I remember did not catch a fish in that spot!
This is a really educational video! Thank you!
Nice video Tom 👍🎣 . Great tips on holding spots of trout 👍👍
Thanks so much NFF. Just great information
No worries happy you're enjoying these videos!
I love y’all videos keep it up
You guys need to do one more with mr. Humphreys, he’s a hometown hero
Great vid, you guys! I enjoyed it!
Thanks so much as always!
eurika! i've found the trout! they're in the river!
6:47 a fish blew up behind Tom 😂
6:42
A fish surfaces right in the middle of the foam line as he’s showing us where to fish 😂
good eye josh!
Dang I wish I could bump into this guy on the river and see if he would share some knowledge.
Did you see the rise at 6:47 while Tom was talking?
And I was also curious I didn't hear you mention the feeding habits or areas in the streams that the golden rainbow trout prefer and they're feeding patterns I know there a newer species of trout from my experience with them they're very finicky and a little harder to catch than a normal rainbow but I've caught my fair share of them
Golden rainbows are strictly a hatchery fish and we really concentrated on wild trout in this show. Hatchery trout are a bit less predictable--but easier to catch, generally.
Anybody else see the fish jump as he's explaining it at 6.46 lol
Who noticed the fish jumping at 6:46? :)
Summary: Trout could be anywhere, so look every where and conditions are constantly changing so try everything (including stripping a dry fly upstream) and enjoy every second of it. 😜
Exactly!
The first part is more specific while this one is more special cases
I hate the "cutthroat are dumb" thing. All the cutthroat by me are snake river cutthroat and while the younger/smaller ones are easy to catch the large ones can be quite finicky especially in pressured water. I think a lot of it comes from people fishing backcountry streams for cutthroat where the fish are very relaxed and easy to catch but as soon as you arrive on pressured water they behave much differently.