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In this episode, we crack open a practical primer on caddis flies—what they are, how to spot them, and simple ways to fish each stage. We recorded this one from our “satellite offices” in Florissant, Colorado, and it’s all about translating river observations into flies that work right now on Southeastern waters.

Highlights of the Episode

  • Caddis 101, quick and clear: life stages from egg → larva → pupa → adult—and why that sequence matters for your fly selection.
  • Reading the river: vegetation is your friend—it feeds caddis larvae and signals where to drift (and what snags to expect).
  • Soft-hackle smarts: think “legs forward” and a touch more bulk at the head when imitating the pupa rising to the film.
  • Skate the dry: flip the hackle, keep it riding high, and add motion—then trail a soft hackle to cover the pupa coming up behind it.
  • The evening show: look for bouncing egg-laying females in the last couple hours of light; they can trigger some of the most visual eats of the day.
  • Match what’s actually there: kick-net a riffle, turn a rock, photograph shucks and adults in scum lines, then tie (or buy) to size/shape/color.
  • Same river, different bugs: expect color and size shifts by section or tributary—one box won’t fit the whole tailwater.
  • Field tip: if you’re wading and find risers, park and run that skating-dry/soft-hackle combo until the light fades.

If you want us to go deeper on bugs or do a tying-focused follow-up, let us know—your ideas drive future episodes. While you’re here, tap to sign up for the newsletter for extra how-to content, and if you’re enjoying the show, please leave a positive review wherever you listen. Thanks for being part of Southeastern Fly!

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