I’ve Read All the Orvis Books—and Still Struggle to Catch Trout

I’ve read the Orvis books. The respected ones. The ones everyone points beginners toward. I understand the terminology. I know what should be happening. And yet, when I’m standing in a creek, I still struggle to catch trout. That gap—between knowing and catching—is the real problem no one wants to admit. Too much instruction, not […]

What Comes After Trout Bum

For many fly fishers, Trout Bum is a doorway book. It captures a particular moment in the life of an angler — the freedom, the wandering, the days measured more by rivers than calendars. It strips fly fishing down to movement, obsession, and a quiet resistance to conventional structure. For a long time, that was

Fly tying vise and hand-tied flies on a wooden table beside a quiet creek, illustrating the craft of fly fishing

Fly Tying Isn’t About Flies

It’s About Seeing the Creek Differently Fly tying is often framed as a practical skill: make flies, catch fish. That framing misses the deeper value. Fly tying is not primarily about filling boxes or matching hatches. It is about slowing down enough to notice what actually matters on the water. The act of tying forces

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