Summer Walk Trip on Small Water.
Blue Ribbon Flies walk trip. Terrestrial fishing on small water.
Blue Ribbon Flies walk trip. Terrestrial fishing on small water.
Yellowstone media group video Phil Takatsuno
Phil Takatsuno heads out with his dogs for a day of fishing.
Craig talks about winter Midge fishing gear.
Patrick Daigle put together this slide show of his trip to Slough Creek last year.
Craig and Phil Takatsuno do a little fishing on the Madison River.
Here's video clip from a recent guide trip.
John Juracek talks about how to evaluate a fly rod
A close look at what the riseform can reveal
John Juracek talks about one of his favorite tools the Echo Micro Practice Rod.
Watch as Craig does a little midge Fishing in February on the Madison.
Craig talks about some of his favorite products for dry fly fishing.
Watch Craig fish the Tenkara rod Mid winter on the Madison. You'll get a kick out of watching him dodge the ice bergs coming down the river.
This is the question we’re asked more than any other during the summer fishing season.
One of the most valuable but least practiced aspects of fly fishing is observation. Observation as in simply taking a few minutes to study the water you’re about to fish in an effort to learn what’s happening.
Exciting things happen in Yellowstone country when the sun slowly slides down below the Western horizon. Alpenglow lights the surrounding mountains with brilliant color, the heat of the day abruptly subsides, and all but a few die-hard anglers with funny looking headlamps remain.
Too often we hear that the fishing was good but the catching was not. While this is the right spirit, because we all know a bad day of fishing is better than a good day at work, there are several things every angler could do to increase the catching part of the fishing experience.