Fly fishing represents one of the oldest types of fishing ever to be employed by man in order to earn his meal. At first it applied especially to trout and salmon but nowadays it is also a basic way of catching bass, pike, carp and other fish that live in the oceans. The term was generated in relation to the fisherman’s lure consisting of a hook decorated to look like an insect for the purpose of getting fish to bite.
The instruments necessary for fly fishing are referred to as tackle, only that, when you want to be as specific as possible about the type of tools the addition of the word fly helps; so there you have fly tackle. The structure includes the artificial flies, the fly rod which throws the flies and the fly line. For an improved cast, the line should be a little heavier than other line varieties. Moreover, the artificial flies come in all sorts of shapes, sizes and colors depending on the type of fish intended to be caught.
In general terms the materials the lures are made of include hair, feathers, fur and other fabrics that render the insect look necessary for the fly to pass as bait. Each fishing location requires that you choose a certain kind of artificial fly that will look like insects living in the area where your desired types of fish inhabit. Hence, the fly fishing methods used in one region may not work in another.
According to another fly classification, they can be attractive or imitative. The imitative artificial lures look like real insects while the attractive ones simply resort to color or reflection of light in order to attract fish without necessarily imitating the food fish are after. And yet another form of category splitting separates the artificial lures into dry models (imitating grasshoppers, dragonflies, etc. which float on-water), sub-surface designs that are just like pupae or larvae and wet kinds (imitating leeches and minnows).
The distinction between fly fishing and non-fly fishing is that the former depends a great deal on the weight of the line which is cast in order to get the artificial lure to that part of the water where your fish are located, probably at a farther distance from the shore or bank. On the other hand the non-fly fishing type, rather uses the lure weight rather than the line; as this variable makes it possible for the fly to get into deeper waters when the line is pulled down from the reel.
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