The Best Flies for Fly Fishing for Trout This Fall

By
No items found.
October 21, 2024
7 min read
Fishing
Tips

The Best Flies for Fly Fishing for Trout This Fall

By
onWater Team
October 21, 2024
7 min read
Share this post

A variety of great places to fly fish near you are a lot closer than you think. You can use onWater Fish to help you find places to fish near you, but, once you get there, be sure you are armed with the best flies to get the best results. Fly fishing for trout in the fall can be a rewarding experience. As temperatures drop, trout become more active, feeding in preparation for winter. The next few weeks are some of our favorite weeks of the year because hatches of fall Mayflies occur regularly and large trout are on the prowl for big morsels. Here are some of our favorite flies for fly fishing for trout this fall.

Parachute Purple Haze

BWOs can hatch on any given day over the next two months. A regular Parachute Adams will work fine but watching thousands of fish eat dry flies on various Parachute dries has taught us that the purple body makes a difference. Whether you’re a seasoned small-fly dry-fly angler, the Purple Haze will put a spell on you.

Beadhead Zebra midge

At its heart, it’s a fly tied to imitate a midge pupa or emerging midge. However, the Zebra Midge is not just for imitating midges. It works very well for a mayfly nymph. BWOs are most active on cool, cloudy days—which we often get in fall. The low and clear water conditions can make trout more selective, therefore the sleeker Zebra midge is quite effective.

Sprout Beatis Emerger

This fly is tied to imitate an emerging mayfly. It sits just below the surface film, where the hatching insects are easy pickings for trout. Incorporated into the fly is a piece of white foam. The foam holds the body of the fly in the surface film and allows the angler to see the fly. The most common hatch the next two months are Blue Winged Olives (BWOs). The Sprout Beatis Emerger imitates an emerging BWO or an adult.

Sparkle Minnow

The beauty of this fly is how simple it fishes—there are no articulated hooks to get tangled and its conehead makes casting easy. The ice dubbing pulses when stripped or puffs when dead-drifted. If you have not yet discovered the Sparkle Minnow, well, that’s less fish you’ll discover too.

Tie: Zuddler and Sculpzilla

Both of these patterns are intended to imitate baitfish and larger food sources, such as crayfish. They can be fished with action or dead-drifted under an indicator. As brown trout grow more aggressive and become territorial before spawning, large flies imitating a threat or big meal should be fished. When choosing a color, a widely accepted rule is to choose a light-colored fly on a sunny day and a dark-colored fly on a cloudy day.

Chubby Chernobyl

A fly more frequently associated with stoneflies and terrestrials is also an ideal fall pattern. October caddis can hatch in small numbers on several trout rivers. The natural insects are large—often an inch or 2 wide—so trout do not ignore them. You will not see October caddis blanketing the water but fish a Chubby Chernobyl as the surface fly and a smaller beadhead (perhaps a Zebra midge) as the dropper and you’ll find some success.

Choosing which fly to use is personal but should be grounded in knowledge and faith—faith in what you are using. For fall fishing for trout, stick to using the patterns above and you will enjoy some success along with some well-earned solitude.

Be sure to read onWater fishing blog posts to plan better and fish smarter and help you find places to fish near you.

Thousands of Place to Fish with Offline Maps

Three Ways Topo Maps Help You Find More Fishing Spots

Five Ways Satellite Imagery Helps You Find More Fish

Use Our Hydrology Layer to Find More Places to Fish