

With the rivers a bit swollen for Grayling on the fly, the recent milder weather might coax us in to dusting off the tackle in the corner of the garage for a trip to a local still water.
Here are a few methods you can try;
Short Line Booby
Definitely not one for the traditionalist but you need to approach winter fishing slightly differently (if you want to catch)
A fast sinking line is used with a very short leader (12 inches max) a floating booby fly is used and the line is fished with a dead slow retrieve. You want the fly line to completely sink to the bottom which will have the effect of the booby popping up a few inches or so and moving around as you retrieve (hopefully past the nose of a snoozing trout)
3 Buzzers – Top, Middle & Bottom
A nice long leader with 2 droppers. A beaded buzzer on the point and then 2 buzzers on the droppers further up. The midge larvae is present in most still waters all year round
Fly Under a Dry
Alright, there isn’t much on the surface at the minute to justify using dries but if you cannot bring yourself to use a float indicator then a nice large dry fly such as a wulf or daddy long legs with a buzzer or small nymph hanging underneath it may do the trick, The type of dry isn’t that important as we are not really expecting a take on it however you never know! This method allows the nymph to be fished static at a fixed depth which can be effective when the fish are more dormant.
Good luck, that’s all for now!
Find the top winter still water flies using our fly finder.
