Yes Tom is great. Hey Tom watched your video on fishing small streams & creeks. After watching I went back to a small stream I found awhile ago & caught my first three native rainbows fly fishing. Thanks Tom
Been fishing for a lot of years. Had the pleasure of meeting you at the Orvis store in Avon, Ct. few years back. I think you might have the best job on the planet!!!!
Although i dont live in "trout country" i do have canals, rivers, bays, inlets, oceans and all have currents & tides effecting them. Alot of your knowledge your sharing is still relevent to my fishing. Thank youTom.
As always, this was a very informative and well presented video. Tom, you are definitely my favorite host, (just don't tell the other guys 🤫). Thank you all for sharing this knowledge with us!
wish there was this much information on tarpon as there is trout. i go fly fishing for tarpon and trout. they are my two most favorite fish to go for. all i need to figure out about tarpon is when they might be feeding and presentations of the fly i front of a string
@@newflyfisher oh but i love the content, you guys helped me catch 14 trout on the water when i went because i had no clue what fly to use and then i remembered to look at the water and catch some of the bugs they were eating. i caught my biggest brown trout on fly
Just like the podcast this video answered so many questions perfectly. Great tutorial. I am currently locked into a daily game of chess with a particular small brown trout on my local small mountain stream. He’s holding in the tail of a pool on a sharp, almost 90° bend. I now realise since watching this video that what I have been doing is the parachute cast to drift my tiny size 16 fly on 2lb tippet nicely downstream to him. Due to the rocky nature of the stream and the thick forest surrounding, directly upstream is the only position I can approach from. I have changed as many variables as I can but I have no choice about the position. Seems like he spooks immediately I present. I am wondering if it’s actually my retrieve that spooks him. Seems to me the problem with the parachute cast is that the retrieve means dragging your fly back upstream creating disturbance in the water over the fish. I have tried really slow gentle retrieve with the drowned fly under the water making no visible disturbance. And more positive lifts to take the fly off the surface quickly and fly it home. No luck either way as yet but I wonder what the accepted knowledge is on this point. What is the best way to retrieve without disturbance when forced to repeatedly parachute cast? Thanks Tom 👍🏼
No good way to retrieve it just do your best. For snotty fish like this, I generally have my best luck fishing for them right before dark when they lose a bit of their caution. Or at first light with a nymph or soft hackle.
Hey Tom! love the videos. I love using my nz indicator, i noticed you were rocking two indicators on one leader? One orange and one white. im curious as to why? Thank you
The real question is Orvis or Simms? Great video 👍. I agree the hungry trout are often in the faster moving or shallow water. I don't the middle of deep pools unless there is some flow or structure.
Я скоро стану одним из вас, из Китая ко мне на маленьком параходике добирается удилище, шнур и катушка. Я умею плести мушки без тисков и диковинных перьев. А как я щелкаю кнутом может позавидовать любой ковбой. Мне не нужна форель, мне нужен голавль и язь, окунь и жерех.))) Есть у меня вопрос по флотантам нельзя ли их все заменить кусочком свинного копченого сала? Запах дыма как он вашей форели на вкус? Мажите ли вы мушки Мегастрайком?
Rosenbauer takes some of the mystery out of fly fishing. He knows how to relay information so most fishers can grasp it quickly and intelligently./
Tom is the best. Bob Ross of fly fishing.
I watch many Trout Fishing videos, this one is certainly amongst the best I’ve ever seen! Thanks a lot for it, and I look forward to the next part.
Glad you enjoyed it, you will love Part 2 even more!
Yes Tom is great. Hey Tom watched your video on fishing small streams & creeks. After watching I went back to a small stream I found awhile ago & caught my first three native rainbows fly fishing. Thanks Tom
That is awesome!
Thanks Orvis, this is a great tutorial for beginners and will shine a light for thousands, well done. I look forward to more of this quality..
Thanks so much for this video. I've been fly fishing only about 6 years now. I am totally 'hooked'. Very informative video. I learned so much!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Been fishing for a lot of years. Had the pleasure of meeting you at the Orvis store in Avon, Ct. few years back. I think you might have the best job on the planet!!!!
Wow you are a Fashionista Tom R. So many cool outfits!! You knowledge is equally impressive!
Great refresher for me. Love the big fish large leaping in the background at @ 5:12 just in front of your hat brim. Thanks Tom!
Glad you enjoyed it
This one is getting bookmarked; a really nice summary and loved the fish-view graphics to understand what’s going on and why fish love certain spots.
"Tom Sawyer Rosenbauer", a great video from a modern master. Thanks from down-under in NZ.
Thanks Tom. This is a truly superb lesson. You always do a great job and this is one of your best. Same for Pete as well.
Glad you liked it!
Nice. A really useful consolidated presentation of years of experience, observation, study, and research. I look forward to Part 2. Thank you.
Awesome, thank you!
Essential viewing for beginners or, refresher, for experienced anglers.
Although i dont live in "trout country" i do have canals, rivers, bays, inlets, oceans and all have currents & tides effecting them. Alot of your knowledge your sharing is still relevent to my fishing. Thank youTom.
As always, this was a very informative and well presented video. Tom, you are definitely my favorite host, (just don't tell the other guys 🤫). Thank you all for sharing this knowledge with us!
Another excellent presentation. Thanks Tom and Orvis for providing this. Y
Great show and super informative! Looking forward to seeing the next episodes!!
AMAZING video! Can't wait for part 2!!
Coming soon!
Great video and packed with a lot of useful information! I will use my new knowledge on my fly fishing premiere next week.
Very nicely done guys.
Thank you kindly!
Great video, lots of useful information and ideas. Thanks I look forward to Part 2!
wish there was this much information on tarpon as there is trout. i go fly fishing for tarpon and trout. they are my two most favorite fish to go for. all i need to figure out about tarpon is when they might be feeding and presentations of the fly i front of a string
our hope is to have tom do a shows on: tarpon, redfish and sea trout in the future
@@newflyfisher oh but i love the content, you guys helped me catch 14 trout on the water when i went because i had no clue what fly to use and then i remembered to look at the water and catch some of the bugs they were eating. i caught my biggest brown trout on fly
Just like the podcast this video answered so many questions perfectly. Great tutorial. I am currently locked into a daily game of chess with a particular small brown trout on my local small mountain stream. He’s holding in the tail of a pool on a sharp, almost 90° bend. I now realise since watching this video that what I have been doing is the parachute cast to drift my tiny size 16 fly on 2lb tippet nicely downstream to him. Due to the rocky nature of the stream and the thick forest surrounding, directly upstream is the only position I can approach from. I have changed as many variables as I can but I have no choice about the position. Seems like he spooks immediately I present. I am wondering if it’s actually my retrieve that spooks him. Seems to me the problem with the parachute cast is that the retrieve means dragging your fly back upstream creating disturbance in the water over the fish. I have tried really slow gentle retrieve with the drowned fly under the water making no visible disturbance. And more positive lifts to take the fly off the surface quickly and fly it home. No luck either way as yet but I wonder what the accepted knowledge is on this point. What is the best way to retrieve without disturbance when forced to repeatedly parachute cast? Thanks Tom 👍🏼
No good way to retrieve it just do your best. For snotty fish like this, I generally have my best luck fishing for them right before dark when they lose a bit of their caution. Or at first light with a nymph or soft hackle.
Rosenbauer Rules!
Nice video Tom 👍🎣. Fantastic water-craft tips 😊
Thanks 👍
Hey Tom! love the videos. I love using my nz indicator, i noticed you were rocking two indicators on one leader? One orange and one white. im curious as to why? Thank you
You will have to wait a few weeks when I explain it in detail in our show on Indicators and Dry Droppers!
i like so much your videos good information and fishing you make to look so easy i from colorado
The real question is Orvis or Simms? Great video 👍. I agree the hungry trout are often in the faster moving or shallow water. I don't the middle of deep pools unless there is some flow or structure.
I would vote for Orvis
Tom great as usual
Nice tutorial! Great job !
Great video, greetings from Scotland U.K. im off fishing the local river tomorrow so will be bearing your advice hopefully catch a Troot or two !
Glad it helped, have fun tomorrow!
If I ever meet this guy...the beer's are on me
tom will definitely take you up on that!
Très beau reportage.
Is it not some where in between Art and Science and Instinct and Luck?
You're wrong that it's not a science. It literally IS a science. ;)
I cant tie a fly. Up its legs are so small, and finding trout , just call
Hear trout , hear trout 😁😊👍j
Я скоро стану одним из вас, из Китая ко мне на маленьком параходике добирается удилище, шнур и катушка. Я умею плести мушки без тисков и диковинных перьев. А как я щелкаю кнутом может позавидовать любой ковбой. Мне не нужна форель, мне нужен голавль и язь, окунь и жерех.))) Есть у меня вопрос по флотантам нельзя ли их все заменить кусочком свинного копченого сала? Запах дыма как он вашей форели на вкус? Мажите ли вы мушки Мегастрайком?
READ TROUT BY RAY BURGMAN A SHITLOAD OF TIMES THEN U WILL UNDERSTAND FLYFISHING FOR TROUT
How to find trout in rivers, step one: Go to where the truck dumps them in. Thats it. Thats how.