Here is some great tips from our friends over at Orvisnews.com on streamer fishing in the fall.
When the nights start to cool and leaves start to change colors, the thoughts of brown trout turn to procreation. To build up energy for the spawning ritual and to put on weight before the lean winter ahead, even big trout start to feed more aggressively, abandoning their notorious wariness in the process. Because spawning can be extremely competitive—as the fish battle for prime beds and mates—browns also become more territorial, attacking anything that invades their staked-out home turf. The combination of these behaviors makes fall the prime time to cast big streamers, which the trout see as both high-calorie meals and alien invaders. And, as many streamer fanatics have discovered, throwing two streamers together not only catches more fish, but the tandem rig will often draw strikes when a single fly won’t. Twice as Nice When I guided in Montana in the mid 1990s, we often fished a lake that held some huge Kamloops rainbows and an astonishing population of damselflies. It was there that I learned to fish a tandem rig that featured an olive Woolly Bugger up front and a jointed damselfly nymph trailing behind it. The system worked great, and the prevailing theory was that the Bugger caught the trout’s attention and then the nymph presented itself as a tasty morsel. The rainbows would often hit the streamer, but it never occurred to me to fish two streamers because I couldn’t see the logic in it.
It wasn’t until years later, when my friend Steve Hemkens and I floated the Colorado River below Glenwood Canyon with guides Bob Streb and Paul Zimmerman, that I saw the wisdom of casting two big hunks of meat at the bank. According to Streb, a New York native who has guided in Colorado for years, he first learned the system from Bill Perry, one of the better-known guides in the Vail Valley.
“I don’t know who originally came up with the idea, but it was Perry who really figured out the basics of the technique we use now, which has evolved quite a bit.”
Streb’s system is designed for anglers working from a drift boat or a raft, and he believes that the moving boat makes all the difference. It’s important to work downriver fairly quickly, both to cover as much water as possible and because the commotion of fishing such a big rig and battling big trout is effectively “spooking the pool,” or putting all the nearby trout on high alert. The boat also allows you present the flies at different depths, especially over deep ledges well off the bank.
“Everyone focuses on the first few feet off the bank,” Streb says, “but the fish will sometimes hold much farther out into the current.”
That’s why it’s important that you strip your flies all the way back to the boat and then pause before picking up your line to cast again. This pause gives the streamers a “dying” motion that can trigger a strike from a fish that’s been following the retrieve but hasn’t yet made the decision to attack. It’s the fly-fishing equivalent of the figure-8 that pike and muskie anglers use to draw boat-side strikes. Gearing Up Over the years, Western anglers have developed several systems for fishing tandem streamers. While Streb prefers to use a floating line and heavy flies, others—such as streamer guru Kelly Galloup—advocate for a sinking-tip line and lighter patterns. Other options include loop-to-loop weighted tips and even shooting heads. Streb believes that heavy flies are more versatile for fishing different depths and offer a more dramatic dying motion when you pause your retrieve.
A 7-weight rod will give you enough oomph to cast two heavy flies in windy conditions, as well as the strength to pull a big trout away from any obstacles, such as downed trees or rock gardens. To the end of your floating line, attach a stubby 5-foot monofilament leader. The fish are generally not leader shy in fall, especially when there are two giant streamers swimming by their faces, so you can get by with 0X or 1X material. Streb saves the butt sections of the 5X tapered leaders he uses during the summer to serve as heavy streamer leaders in the fall.
For the dropper, use 1X monofilament because, since the fish don’t care about the leader, you might as well use something strong enough that you can simply pull the streamside bushes down if you get snagged. And since you want to cast as close to the bank as possible, you will get snagged. The motion of the front fly will be somewhat restricted by the pull of the dropper fly, so it’s not really worth the extra effort to tie a loop knot up front. A simple clinch or any other direct-connection knot will do. The dropper fly, however, will dance and swim and “die” better if you attach it with a loop knot, such as the nonslip mono loop.
The nonslip mono loop will give the rear fly more freedom to move in a lifelike way. Photo via Orvis Animated Knots
Bob Streb’s Sam’s Sock pattern is an example of the big, ugly streamers that can get fall brown trout excited.
Pair it with a second streamer when you go “Bubba” hunting. Photo courtesy Bob Streb
