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True-Fly Patterns

  • Parachute Cricket

    Parachute Cricket

    Like a swiss cake roll with legs, crickets are a summer and fall favorite among hungry fish!  From the big size 8 Mormon Crickets of the West to the small summer-chirpers of the East, these dark-profiled dry flies are a blast to fish throughout the...

    $1.75
  • Parachute Hopper

    Parachute Hopper

    Like hamburgers from heaven, grasshoppers falling from the shore are well-loved and eagerly anticipated by the hungry trout lurking beneath stream banks.  Probably the most popular and functional terrestrial insect, and the star of the "Hopper -...

    $1.75
  • Foam Hopper

    Foam Hopper

    A more buoyant and durable version of the parachute hopper, the Foam Hopper will take a beating and keep on fishing!  There are few trout foods as eagerly anticipated each summer and fall as clumsy grasshoppers falling off the banks and into the...

    $1.75
  • Rust Ant Black Ant Rust & Black Ant

    Ant

    While small in stature, what ants and termites lack in size, they make up for in numbers.  Each summer, across the United States, when the stars align and the temperature is right, ants will swarm and take flight.  Both flying ants and their...

    $1.50
  • Black Flying Ant Rust Flying Ant Black & Rust Flying Ant

    Flying Ant

    While small in stature, what ants and termites lack in size, they make up for in numbers.  Each summer, across the United States, when the stars align and the temperature is right, ants will swarm and take flight.  Both flying ants and their...

    $1.50
  • Cicada - Black/Orange Cicada - Olive/Tan

    Cicada

    Among the largest of terrestrial trout foods, the Cicadas will emerge from the soil each summer to chirp through the summer nights.  While present in modest numbers most years, the Cicadas will burst from the soil in almost plague-like proportions...

    $1.75
  • Trout Chow Fly

    1%er (Trout Chow Fly)

    The 1%er or Trout Chow fly is seen as an abomination by many, and gets its name because this is how the rich elite anglers get their big fish on private water, they feed them trout chow!  We are all in agreement, fishing with a trout chow...

    $1.50
  • Blue Braided Butt Damsel Olive Braided Butt Damsel

    Braided Butt Damsel

    A common invertebrate family found on lakes and backwaters from sea level to above 10,000 feet, the bright blues and greens of the adult damselfly should catch the attention of feeding trout, panfish, or bass in your favorite summer fishing...

    $1.50
  • Cranefly

    Cranefly

    Among the largest of midges on our water, the Crane Fly looks like a Boeing 777 when compared with its peers.  Known by a number of names from "Mosquito Hawk" to "Skeeter Dragon", the general image being communicated is that this is one BIG midge!...

    $1.50
  • Black Tent Wing Caddis

    Black Tent Wing Caddis

    Used to match a wide spread of black caddis species from coast to coast, the Black Tent Wing Caddis in an ultra realistic dry fly pattern used to match the adult caddis fly.  With black caddis regularly covering waters in blanket hatches throughout...

    $1.50
  • October Caddis

    October Caddis

    One of the largest caddis species on the water, the October Caddis looks like something that would fight Godzilla in a 1970's Japanese monster movie.   In addition to its large size, the October Caddis is unique due to its burnt orange color...

    $1.50
  • Green Drake Sparkle Dun

    Green Drake Sparkle Dun

    Among the largest moving water mayfly species in the western US, the Green Drake dwarfs other mayfly species when it emerges each summer.  Due to the size of its wings and the time needed to stretch and dry them during their emergence, the Green...

    $1.50
  • Hendrickson Sparkle Dun

    Hendrickson Sparkle Dun

    One of the first and most prolific mayfly hatches each spring in the upper Midwest, Appalachia, and New England, the trout wake from their winter stupor to pursue these emerging Hendrickson mayflies with gusto!  While often overlooked and under...

    $1.50
  • Sulphur Sparkle Dun

    Sulphur Sparkle Dun

    The Sulphur Mayfly is among the most notable and eagerly anticipated (by both trout and the fly angler) late spring to early summer hatches for the whole Eastern seaboard.  The frantic emerger working its way through the surface of the water is one...

    $1.50
  • Trico Sparkle Dun

    Trico Sparkle Dun

    A common summer through fall mayfly hatch throughout most of the US, the small-statured Trico mayflies will emerge in such numbers that they will commonly blanket the waters from which they hatch!  During these abundant hatches, trout will actively...

    $1.50
  • PMD Sparkle Dun

    PMD Sparkle Dun

    While present throughout the US, the Pale Morning Dun (PMD) is most prolific and considered a vital food source for trout out west.  Usually emerging from the water in the morning and again at dusk, the PMD Sparkle Dun floats low in the water and is...

    $1.50
  • BWO Sparkle Dun

    BWO Sparkle Dun

    The little Blue Winged Olive (BWO) mayfly of the family baetidae is arguably the most important moving-water mayfly hatch for both the trout and the fly angler.  Capable of producing two generations per year, the BWO's high level of activity...

    $1.50
  • Albino Hex

    Albino Hex

    The queen of North American mayflies, the Hexegenia or Hex mayfly is only outclassed in size by one other species.  Found across the United States burrowed into the silty bottoms of lakes and large rivers, the Hex mayfly nymphs will emerge to...

    $1.50
  • March Brown Pearlwing Spinner

    March Brown Pearlwing Spinner

    While most prominent in the central and eastern United States, the March Brown will also be found in many western streams and rivers, stretching as far north as Alaska.  The common name of March Brown is a little deceptive as the largest and...

    $1.50
  • Parachute March Brown Emerger

    Parachute March Brown Emerger

    Since the nymph of the March Brown Mayfly spends its aquatic life cycle burrowed into the bottom of the streambed, it is during the emergence that fish get their first shot at eating these tasty trout treats!  The Parachute March Brown Emerger sits...

    $1.50
  • March Brown

    March Brown

    Beautifully imitating the adult March Brown mayfly down to the yellow ribbed segments along its abdomen, the March Brown dry fly is tied specifically to match this important trout forage species.  While they emerge at dusk, the adult March Brown...

    $1.50
  • Parachute PMD Emerger

    Parachute PMD Emerger

    Close cousins to the Sulphur and Pale Evening Dun, the Pale Morning Dun or PMD hatch is the stuff of mayfly legends!  Filling every portion of the water column and the skies above (almost) every Western River, when the PMDs are active, the trout...

    $1.50
  • Eastern Green Drake Spinner

    Eastern Green Drake Spinner

    The spawned out mayfly spinner, floating on top of the water after death, is among the easiest food and fastest calories for the feeding trout.  Immediately after spawning, the male mayflies will fall to the water, spreading their wings wide in...

    $1.50
  • Green Drake Parachute Emerger

    Green Drake Parachute Emerger

    The Jumbo Jet of Western mayflies, the Green Drake takes a long time to spread its wings and get off the water.  During the Green Drake hatch, trout will key in and actively feed on the emergers as they struggle to free their wings from their...

    $1.50