Vermont is blessed with a wide range of fishing opportunities. Chuck Kashner guides fly, spin and ice fishing trips in Southern Vermont. BEGINNERS ARE WELCOME! Learn to fly fish or hone your skills with patient on stream instruction. All equipment, tackle and flies provided. To book a trip please call Chuck at 1 800 682-0103 or email at cdkashner@gmail.com
Tuesday, March 29, 2022
Tuesday, January 25, 2022
What nymph should I use?
The first consideration in selecting which nymph pattern to use should be the bottom composition.
With silty muddy bottoms or during high water periods after rain...Black rules! Steelhead guys who often face stained water love purple/blue uv highlights. Here in New England, a black hare's ear is a go to April fly.
With sandy bottoms you should consider tan hare's ear nymphs to be your first choice. Especially if your hatches consist of pale colored mayflies like cahills, sulfurs or yellow drakes.
Weedy bottoms calls for olive nymphes! I dye gray squirrel fur with yellow rite dye and a shot of vinegar to produce this pattern.
It's wise to have size 10, 12, 14, and 16's in the color the fits your situation. The bigger flies carry more weight which will get deep faster. Thank you for the view and please stay tuned. I plan to try to make sense out of the different european techinques, where and how they may apply here. Take care and let's go fishing!
Tuesday, January 18, 2022
Top 10 Battenkill dry flies
Wednesday, January 5, 2022
UGLY BUGS & How to tie them
The UglyBug is a pattern I develped over the last bunch of guide seasons!
Tie some, they are deadly, easy to tie and materials are easy to source.
Build up a thread base, the waxed thread helps hold the dubbing. Dubbing loop and ruff it up to get that buggy look. If you get the dubbing right, the flash & fibers look very much like the air bubble on a hatching caddis pupa!