Frontier Anglers - Dillon Montana Trout

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  • Опубліковано 28 гру 2024
  • Mark Melnyk travels to Dillon Montana early season in hopes of catching the Salmon Fly Hatch. Frontier Anglers' Shaun Jeszenka, is dialed in on these famed Montana Rivers as he and Mark have an unbelievable week targeting trout with new techniques!
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    #orvis #trout #flyfishing #bassfishing

КОМЕНТАРІ • 16

  • @daveschlom4033
    @daveschlom4033 12 годин тому +1

    Hey Mark. I am dealing with the loss of a fishing brother. So content like this is really wonderful and healing in its own small way. I ALWAYS enjoy your content and the way you share it with authenticity. Love to you from "the comments below," and I feel sorry for the one with negativity. You keep doing what you're doing. As a content creator in a different medium, the old adage comes to mind, "You can please some of the people..." You please most of us all of the time brother.

  • @eugenemonty6469
    @eugenemonty6469 15 годин тому +2

    Best show yet, this one and the last one on the Bighorn 👍🏻👍🏻

  • @braddeats5439
    @braddeats5439 Годину тому

    Outstanding episode Mark and Shaun! Loads of great content and useful information in this one, thank you fellas!

  • @waynesnelley3900
    @waynesnelley3900 20 годин тому +2

    Awesome video Mark! Colin would have been proud of you!

  • @robertheal261
    @robertheal261 18 годин тому +1

    Great show, Mark!

  • @calmwatersflyfishingjeffpa8391
    @calmwatersflyfishingjeffpa8391 3 години тому

    Awesome show!

  • @brendansmith234
    @brendansmith234 10 годин тому

    So what was the weight?

  • @biggarfish
    @biggarfish 22 години тому

    Didn’t know Colin had passed until seeing this! 😢 RIP Colin

  • @jerrytweak
    @jerrytweak 9 годин тому

    Do you prefer to never fight the fish on the reel after a bit in the fight? Just feel like the drag system on the reel is more smooth and would keep some of those fish on that broke off instead of holding the line. You probably know more than me, so genuinely curious.

  • @mikecoughlin5419
    @mikecoughlin5419 20 годин тому

    What size tungsten pencil weight on the dropshot rig?

    • @shaunjeszenka7556
      @shaunjeszenka7556 18 годин тому

      1/8 ounce. Woo! Tungsten are the best. They come in an olive drab color.

    • @Rnh240
      @Rnh240 17 годин тому

      Whatever size gets you on the bottom I suppose. Half the fun is figuring it out.

  • @dankochanek8056
    @dankochanek8056 4 години тому

    Glad you guys are back. Makes winter go by faster. But those video recorded angles of your feet and stuff. Not a fan. Liked it when we saw you cast and the fish
    ate the fly not the afterwards catch.

  • @danyboisvert5912
    @danyboisvert5912 День тому

    Rip my friend! 😢

  • @davidstakston1950
    @davidstakston1950 12 годин тому

    For the guide, why do trout like yellow flies? The willows have the VITAL first pollen in the early spring for the honeybees and the endangered female bumblebees that hibernate in the stream banks over the long, cold Montana winters. The cottonwoods have a resin that bees use to make propolis used in their hives which has anti-microbial properties.

  • @davidstakston1950
    @davidstakston1950 12 годин тому

    Mark, go back and watch this video observing the vegetation on the stream bank where you are catching nice trout. I cannot understand why the DNR don't restore the native riparian zone trees along the streams, rivers and lakes. When they build a reservoir, they never restore the native riparian zone trees along the shoreline of the reservoir. The DNR fish biologists and fly fishermen are ignorant to the fact that 80% of the nutrients in the food chain of the aquatic inhabitants of the stream, river, lake and reservoirs comes from the native riparian zone trees alongside the streams, rivers, lakes and reservoirs. P.S. Not much luck along the river with the upland pine trees. Check to see if there were any kilns to make charcoal for the mining industry along the Montana rivers. Black willow trees made the best charcoal for gunpowder back in the 1800's.