Many thanks to EJTU for hosting me, and the question of the day (with a better answer!)

On Wednesday night I spoke to the East Jersey Trout Unlimited group about wet flies — specifically, getting into wet fly fishing, with the program title being “Wet Flies 101.” What a great group, very involved audience, and a gratifying turnout. The passion this group has for fly fishing is very evident. I’m already looking forward to coming back, especially if I can start the evening off with a burger and an IPA at ReBar just a few minutes away.

During the post-presentation Q&A, I was asked a really good question. I didn’t like my answer, and it bothered me all the way home. I’d like to represent the question, and give what I think is a much better answer.

Q: You say when you’re swinging wets, you have to wait a few seconds before you set the hook or you’ll lose the fish. How come when you’re nymphing you need to set the hook right away? A: I don’t know if this is a definitive answer, but I can tell you my best calculated guess. When you’re swinging or dangling a wet fly downstream in current, you’re fishing a tight line. There’s tension present. And then, you have a moving fish applying force, and then quickly changing the direction of that force. My advice to clients is to feel the hit, ask the question, “Are you still there?” and then set the hook. Do that, and the fish essentially hooks itself. When you’re nymphing, the fish behaves differently. It doesn’t rise from the depths, then turn and swim a few feet back down to the bottom. It’s typically feeding on station, near the bottom, perhaps not moving much at all, or maybe just a few inches. It sees your nymph, opens its mouth, and eats the fly. It’s a far more passive transaction. Setting the hook forcefully downstream seals the deal before the trout can reject the fly (if it does that at all). When you’re nymphing, you can still catch fish without setting — we’ve all had instances when we’re not paying attention and we manage to hook and land the fish regardless — but setting the hook had and fast will certainly result in more trout to net.

Do this when nymphing — a downstream set with a low, hard sweep — and your catch rate will soar. Hooksets are free, so look for a reason to set the hook on every drift!

3 comments on “Many thanks to EJTU for hosting me, and the question of the day (with a better answer!)

  1. Charlie maccia's avatar Charlie maccia says:

    Good morning Steve. I asked the question. This is an excellent answer. I understand it now. Thanks for taking the time to do so. Your presentation was excellent, I really enjoyed it.

    Charlie
    EJTU/Verona Nj

    • Steve Culton's avatar Steve Culton says:

      Charlie, I’m so happy that the answer found you. I don’t claim to know everything, but I usually do well in Q&A and I was entirely unsatisfied with what I came up with at the meeting. All’s well that ends well, and I’m glad you enjoyed the presentation.

  2. Steve Culton's avatar Steve Culton says:

    This comment is from David Deming. I don’t do this, but you may want to give it try and see how it suits you. “My fishing buddy in Tennessee (Watuaga River) only fished wets. His advice was to leave 1-2 feet of slack between your hand holding the line and the reel. Then hold the line very lightly in your hand. A strike should take the line right out of your fingers, let that slack go, then set the hook. This allows the fish to hit and turn back to his lane. He also said the wet fly hit is one of the most violent a trout hits with. If you are tight at the strike, you will either loose the set or have the fly plucked from the tippet!! My experience follows this, most fish lost on a taught strike, and lots of lost flies; very hard to let that slack go!!!”

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