I'm putting together and introduction to fly fishing presentation and I want to start it out with a list of fly fishing axioms. This is what I've come up with so far:- Trout don?t live in ugly places(thanks Betty)
- Trout will always be feeding 5 feet farther than you can cast
- 90% of what a trout eats is 3/8 th's of an inch long and brown
- Just before your fly arrives in front of a large, feeding trout, a small fish will run out and grab your fly
- No matter how many flies you have in your box, you won't have the one that looks like what the trout are eating
- When you finally hook that big fish; (1) your fly will break-off before you can land it, or (2) your nets not big enough
- When you hook yourself with your fly it will be the one fly in your box you forgot to debarb
- When you finally find the fly that's catching fish that day, you only have one and you lose it
- The biggest fish is in a place where you can't get your fly to him
- You will overpower your last false cast and your line will fall in a puddle in front of you
- You will always hook more bushes and trees than trout
- When you step in the water, the biggest trout you?ve seen all day will shoot out from under your foot
- When you hook that large fish, your tippet will fail at the wind knot you just put in it
Please feel free to add to the list as I'm sure you've got your own favorites