595 episodes

The Orvis Fly Fishing Guide Podcast provides weekly tips from acclaimed fly fishing author and lifelong fly fishing enthusiast, Tom Rosenbauer. Get the most from your time on the water!

The Orvis Fly-Fishing Podcast Tom Rosenbauer, The Orvis Company

    • Sports
    • 4.8 • 1.8K Ratings

The Orvis Fly Fishing Guide Podcast provides weekly tips from acclaimed fly fishing author and lifelong fly fishing enthusiast, Tom Rosenbauer. Get the most from your time on the water!

    This Podcast May Save Your Life, with Ralph Cutter

    This Podcast May Save Your Life, with Ralph Cutter

    Ralph Cutter [36:53] is an extremely perceptive, pragmatic angler with a lifetime of experience in white water, both fishing and in watercraft and water rescues.  He feels that what we’ve been taught to do if we fall in wearing waders is all wrong, and he has a number of tips for getting to shore safely that most of us don’t know about.  He also recommends a second wader belt for wading in very tricky waters.  He’s proven this through countless experiments on the water.  If you spend any time at all wading in rivers, you must listen to this podcast—or you can read an article in Fly Fisherman magazine he wrote a number of years ago through this link: How to Wade Safely and Get Out of Dangerous Situations - Fly Fisherman
     
     
    In the Fly Box this week, we have questions that range from the very basic to more advanced, and tips from listeners as well, including:
    Why do my CDC dry flies sink like a rock? I am not feeling strikes when I am nymph fishing.  Are there improvements I can make to feel more fish? Would a longer rod help more in nymph fishing? Why aren’t knotless leaders marked with a small segment of color so that the butt, tippet, and transition sections are clearly demarcated? A listener clarifies the issue of whether northern strain brook trout were ever stocked in the southern Appalachians If I want to fish pools that are 8-10 feet deep with a Euro rig, do I need an 8-10-foot tippet? What do I do if I am fishing a dropper rig and my upper dropper tippet breaks off or gets too short?  Do I need to tie another surgeon’s knot? If I am fishing straight upstream, do I need to mend my line? If my hook bends after removing it from a snag and I bend it back into place, will that weaken the hook? I have trouble tying a dropper onto the bend of a hook.  I lose tension and pressure before cinching the knot down.  Do you have any tips to help this? The water temperature was in the 40s and there was a mayfly hatch, but I only caught fish on nymphs and nothing was rising.  Why did this happen? Does choosing a fly rod really depend mostly on the size flies you’re throwing?  When I fish a small bass fly, I don’t want to try to land a bass on my 3-weight.  

    • 1 hr 13 min
    How to Preserve Native Trout Species, with Ted Williams

    How to Preserve Native Trout Species, with Ted Williams

    The use of the natural toxin rotenone to remove invasive, non-native species of trout to protect native species is a controversial topic. Does it really work? What does the poison do to the insect, mammal, and bird populations? Ted Williams [52:36], a proponent of these tactics in selected waters, discusses where reclaiming populations has been successful and also places where it would not make sense. Ted is one of the foremost environmental writers of our time and is never afraid to stick his neck out, so you may agree with what he says or you may not, but you’ll learn some important biology in the process.
     
    In the Fly Box this week, we have a host of interesting questions and some great tips from listeners, including:
    A plug for Trout Unlimited’s “Trout in the Classroom” projects What is your favorite rod for small streams, what size flies do you use, and where do I find the biggest trout in small streams? Can I use nymphs in small streams?  They have not worked for me. How do you test water temperature?  Do you need to suspend the thermometer deep in the water? How can I catch walleye on my fly rod? At what water temperature should I fish for bass? How long do you stick with one fly before changing it, and what do you look for in new water? Have you found any difference between painted and unpainted flies on streamers? I want to do some writing about fly fishing.  How do you handle criticism when you do this? What is the best practice for tipping guides? Do you recommend studs for rubber-soled waders, and how often can you remove them and then put them back? On cloudy days I can’t see as much with my polarized glasses?  What should I do? How long does it take for trout to get back into their normal positions after a flood? Should you present streamers differently in the early season than you would later in the spring? The dry fly on my dry/dropper rig keeps twisting.  What can I do to avoid this? How do you get your fly to fish in deep water running along the bottom? I keep breaking my tippet where it connects to my tippet ring even though I am using a lighter tippet to my flies.  What can I do?

    • 1 hr 34 min
    Tips for Early Season Trout-Fishing Success, with BJ Gerhart

    Tips for Early Season Trout-Fishing Success, with BJ Gerhart

     
    This week, my guest is guide BJ Gerhart [33:50], a longtime veteran guide at Three Rivers Ranch in Idaho and one of the savviest anglers I know.  He shares his tips for getting around the common problems of early season trout fishing, mainly cold water and high flows.
     
    In the Fly Box this week, we have some helpful tips from listeners, and some interesting questions for Tom, including:
    If adult trout can’t see UV light, as you said in last week’s podcast, what should I do with all the UV and flashy materials I have in my fly-tying collection? What kind of standard trout flies are closest to the kebari flies used in tenkara fishing? When fishing a dry dropper, all the trout took my dry fly yet when I removed the nymph I stopped getting strikes.  What caused this? Why are beads on nymphs usually gold? Why is my casting worse when I use beadhead flies? What are the main differences between the 9-foot and the 8-foot, 5-inch Helios rods for a 10-weight line? Why is fly fishing for salmon in Great Lakes streams not as popular as steelhead fishing? When choosing a fly line for a two-handed rod, should I add the grain weight of the sinking head to the grain weight of the Skagit head? A great tip for wading safety with a buddy A listener raves about the Orvis rod repair team Do you think I should stop trout fishing at 60 degrees just to be safe? Are there public resources I can use to find out if a river might be too high to fish? A listener gives a tip for adding a long mono rig easily without the need to tie a clinch knot to the permanent loop in a fly line.

    • 1 hr 23 min
    How Trout See, with Jason Randall

    How Trout See, with Jason Randall

    Can trout see color?  Can they see UV light?  How does a trout's window on the outside world affect how they feed and how they notice predators like us?  How can a trout see so well at night and also in bright light when they have no eyelids, and their pupils don't constrict?  Jason Randall [31:10] is an experienced fly fisher and scientist, and he stays up on the latest scientific papers on trout and also talks to leading scientists, and is one of the best at distilling this information for us ordinary anglers.  This is a fascinating podcast and Jason does a great job of explaining trout vision.
     
    In the Fly Box this week, we have some great questions but also a bunch of great tips from listeners, including:
    When water is low and the sun is bright, what tactics do you recommend for Great Lakes steelhead?
    Four great fly-tying tips from a tier in the UK
    I am looking at the 10-foot Helios rods.  For all-around fishing, should I get the 3-weight F model or the 4-weight D model?
    A guide from the mid-Atlantic shares tips on targeting snakeheads
    A young fly tier asks for advice on a moderately priced vise for tying bass flies
    Why do my 9-foot 6X knotless leaders keep breaking?
    A new fly fisher from Ohio recounts a wonderful experience he had on the river
    A listener provides some great tips on rooftop rod carriers
    A listener asks for suggestions for a book on the history of trout in North America
     

    • 1 hr 21 min
    All About the Henry’s Fork, with Brandon Hoffner

    All About the Henry’s Fork, with Brandon Hoffner

    My guest this week is Brandon Hoffner [35:55], executive director of the Henry’s Fork Foundation, and the topic is the diverse habitat and trout-fishing opportunities of this world-famous river that has influenced so many anglers, techniques, and fly patterns over the years.  Like all trout rivers today, the Henry’s Fork also has its share of environmental issues and we’ll explore how the Henry’s Fork Foundation works to maintain this magical fishery.
     
    In the Fly Box this week, we have a roundup of questions and tips from listeners, including:
    What is the advantage of a 9 ½-foot rod over a 9-footer or 10-footer? A great tip from a listener on how to remove salt water from flies you have fished When would you use a Tenkara rod over a traditional Western rod?  And do you have a favorite Tenkara rod? Does Tom Rosenbauer actually tie the flies in the Orvis Tom Rosenbauer fly selection? What is the history of the famous Orvis Far & Fine graphite rod, and what line would you put on it? For small creeks, is it better to use a 2-weight or a 3-weight line? What can I substitute for goose biots on the tail of a stonefly nymph? Can you explain the pros and cons of polyleaders vs. sink-tip fly lines? What are the best fly lines on the new Helios 7 ½-foot 3-weight rod and the new 8-foot, 5-inch 7-weight rod? A listener talks about how he uses the new Orvis wading staff as a hiking staff as well. Will the heat inside a car in summer hurt my Orvis raincoat? A call from Captains for Clean Water with some great news from the Everglades

    • 1 hr 33 min
    Disturbing News on Montana's Smith River, with David Brooks

    Disturbing News on Montana's Smith River, with David Brooks

    The Montana Supreme Court recently reversed a decision that would have blocked a copper mine on the headwaters of the Smith River.  Where we thought we had a win in preventing a mine in the wrong place, we now may have to live with that mine.  David Brooks [33:02] on Montana TU tells us how, at the very least, TU and other organizations convinced the mine to put in a number of mitigation solutions that were not in their original plan.  Trout Unlimited has one more hail Mary on this issue, which you can learn about in the podcast.  This is a tough subject to listen to, but we learn that we can never give up on environmental issues, even when it looks like we've won. 
    (To sign a petition in support of Trout Unlimited's position preventing the mine from expanding onto public land, click here https://montanatu.org/protect-the-smith-sign-the-mineral-withdrawal-petition/
     
    In the Fly Box this week, we have some more fun and positive topics, including:
    What is a tailing loop in fly casting?
    To practice casting for a saltwater trip, should I just use yarn or should I use a hookless fly similar to the size I will be casting?
    What is the purpose of a wing on a wet fly?
    Does the loop at the end of a fly line cause energy loss?
    How can I photograph striped bass beneath a bridge?
    Can I keep fly rods in my cartop quiver in hot weather?
    A great tip from a listener about using white poster board on the surface of an old rolltop desk.
    Another tip from a listener on using inexpensive drill gauges to size hunks of deer hair and beads.
    Would a one-piece rod be better than a four-piece rod?
    How do I keep debris from drifting downstream when fishing the top of a riffle?
    What is a good all-around fly line for bonefish and redfish?
    I had a fishless day and then a guy with a spin rod caught a trout right in front of me.  Should I have switched to a streamer earlier?

    • 1 hr 6 min

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5
1.8K Ratings

1.8K Ratings

Thomas O71 ,

Fly fishing podcast

Almost 70 years old and look forward to weekly podcast especially the fly box with great ideas and information. Started with a bamboo rod and now use fiberglass fly rods for bream and crappie on small lake. Still use vintage fly reels with good drags and still have a Shakespeare auto reel that works. Use Orvis lines, flys and tippets but still can’t afford the orvis rods and reels.

gavdawg1313 ,

Great Podcast

This podcast is great and incredibly informative. We need more of Lewis Coleman though.

Ed Mack ,

Like hiring a guide for an hour. Best fly fishing podcast ever.

Pretty exceptional. Great for all skill sets.

Top Podcasts In Sports

New Heights with Jason and Travis Kelce
Wave Sports + Entertainment
Pardon My Take
Barstool Sports
Mind the Game with LeBron James and JJ Redick
ThreeFourTwo Productions and UNINTERRUPTED
Cheap Heat with Peter Rosenberg
Peter Rosenberg
The Bill Simmons Podcast
The Ringer
The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz
Dan Le Batard, Stugotz

You Might Also Like

Troutbitten
Domenick Swentosky
Wet Fly Swing Fly Fishing Podcast
Dave Stewart
Anchored with April Vokey
April Vokey
Untangled: Fly Fishing For Everyone | Ventures Fly Co.
Ventures Fly Co.
Mill House Podcast
Mill House
The Wadeoutthere Fly Fishing Podcast
Jason Shemchuk, Wadeoutthere