Articles

Review: Patagonia Foot Tractor Wading Boots

Still clinging to your old felt boots? Now you can stop.
After almost a year of heavy use, there's still a lot of life left in the Foot Tractor's aluminum bars.

I’ve been a proponent of rubber-soled boots since they first became available, having eagerly tossed my felt-soled boots into a corner in the basement where they’ve remained ever since. Whether or not felt soles conclusively play a role in transporting river-destroying pests like didymo and whirling disease was always of less interest to me than the common sense likelihood that they do, and so giving them up was easy.

Free fly fishing classes from Orvis

Get expert help with the challenges facing new anglers, for free.
Free classes are available in over 40 states.

Fly fishing isn't a sport that is generous with its rewards to novices. To a beginner, the gear is confusing and catching fish can difficult or even seem impossible at times. Knots, tangles and the bird's nests of monofilament that it seems only beginners have the knack to create can push a new angler to unspeakable acts where nets are tossed into forests and rods are kicked into rivers. Often, the key to avoiding such calamities is having an instructor to help navigate the choppiness of the waters faced by new fly fishermen and women.

Cabulco volcano unlikely to impact Patagonia's fishing

Expect Patagonia trout fishing to go on being the best in the world.
The Traful River courses through one of the valleys hardest hit by the 2011 Chilean eruption. Today, the river remains crowded with healthy juvenile and adult trout (photo: Chad Shmukler).

While much of the world marvels at the incredible photos coming out of Chile, where the Calbuco volcano erupted twice over the last few days and spewed a massive cloud of ash high into the sky, there are probably more than a few anglers wondering what might become of their planned trips to Patagonia to chase trout next fall and winter.

Last day permit

When a shot at a permit does come, you don’t waste it. Not ever.
Like many saltwater fish, the appearance of a permit changes depending on its surroundings. This healthy Turneffe Flats permit takes on the purple and blue hues of the skies above (photo: Chad Shmukler).

I’m not angry. I’m just disappointed.

Daniel, my guide for the week at Turneffe Flats in Belize didn’t say it, but it was written all over his face. By all rights, he should have been disgusted. Getting two chances at the same permit or group of permit can be rare. Getting a dozen or possibly even more is unheard of.

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