Articles

Destroying Angel

Chapter 1: Ratiocination
Illustration: British Freshwater Fishes, 1879.

My watch said noon. That meant that Wulff would be at his bench tying flies, the one time he was not to be disturbed. Still, I was on an errand for someone I thought was both prettier and more valuable than even one of Wulff’s most beautiful and effective creations. I’d much rather take his brow-beating than to explain to Rosalita why she had to sit in the hoosegow one minute more than necessary.

Review: Douglas Outdoors DXF fly rod

Douglas' all-around performer offers real value
Photo: Spencer Durrant

Potentially lost in the shuffle among many new, mid-priced offerings from household-name rod makers is Douglas Outdoors’ DXF rod lineup. Based out of upstate New York, near the east coast’s Salmon River, Douglas Outdoors is a small rod company which just happens to be making some of the best rods I’ve fished during the better part of the last decade which I've spent, amongst other things, reviewing fishing gear (and mostly fly rods, at that) for a living.

Review: Orvis Ultralight Waders

Orvis' new, lightweight waders offer a premium in packability and comfort without sacrifice
Photo: Cosmo Genova

I spent the fair part of this past year watching Orvis’ new Ultralight waders endure a full season’s worth of abuse as rentals, while working my summer job at a fly fishing outfitter on the Upper Delaware River system. Despite the innumerable anglers who squeezed into them over the course of the spring and summer months, we had zero problems with any of our rental pairs.

Photo: Tim Sickles

Chances are, watching guide Santos Madero work a streamer is like nothing you've seen before. Instead of the long casts, big mends and extended swings or retrieves most anglers associate with streamer fishing, Madero works short. Really short; with stout, heavy flies intended to get to the bottom fast and move water.

RIO intros new DirectCore Jungle Series fly lines

New line is aimed at anglers that chase golden dorado, peacock bass, tigerfish and more
Photo: Remington Kendall

If you've never tried to fish a coldwater line in tropical conditions, the idea of needing a line specifically designed for those conditions may seem almost like a gimmick; a ruse to trick you into buying superfluous gear. At least that's how I took it, some 20 years ago, when I headed south for my first tropical fishing trip of any kind. In truth, it wasn't even tropical. I was headed to South Carolina to chase tailing redfish in sweltering, early September heat.

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