Tag: fishing

15 words tagged "fishing"

undercut bank
A riverbank that has been eroded beneath the waterline, creating an overhang of earth, roots, and vegetation under which fish shelter. The current carves the bank from below while the root mat holds it in place from above. For trout, an undercut bank is a fortress — shade, cover, protection from above, and a front-row seat on the current.
structure
Any physical feature in or along a river that disrupts or redirects the current and creates holding water for fish — boulders, logs, ledges, root wads, bridge pilings, undercut banks. In fishing, "structure" is the word for everything the river builds or accumulates that makes a lie possible. A featureless channel holds no fish; structure is what makes a river habitable.
tailout
The shallow, accelerating water at the downstream end of a pool, where the river gathers speed as it transitions into the next riffle. Food funnels through the narrowing channel, making tailouts prime feeding stations. The water is often smooth and glassy here — good dry fly water.
tailwater
A river or stream immediately downstream of a dam, where water released from the bottom of the reservoir flows at a consistent, cold temperature year-round. Tailwaters are often extraordinary trout fisheries — the steady temperature and clean, silt-free flow create ideal conditions for aquatic insects and the fish that eat them.
seam
The visible boundary where fast current meets slow current — a line on the water's surface where two different speeds of flow run side by side. Fish position themselves on the slow side of a seam and dart into the fast side to intercept food. For anglers, seams are the most consistently productive water on any river.
rise
The moment a fish comes to the surface to take an insect. A rise can be a violent slash, a gentle sip, or barely a dimple — and the form tells the angler what the fish is eating and how to fish for it. A splashy rise suggests a large insect; a subtle ring suggests something tiny. Reading rises is reading the fish's menu.
reading water
The skill of looking at a river's surface and understanding what is happening beneath it — where the current is fastest, where the fish are holding, where the bottom drops or rises, where the food is traveling. Reading water is translation: the surface is the text, and the language is written in color, speed, texture, and light. It is the skill that separates someone who fishes from someone who catches fish.
redd
 A spawning nest built by a female salmon or trout in the gravel bed of a river. She turns on her side and beats her tail against the bottom, excavating a shallow depression into which she deposits her eggs. The male fertilizes them, and she covers the eggs with gravel swept from upstream. A single redd can be two to ten feet long and contain thousands of eggs. It is the architecture of a species' continuity, built and abandoned in the same day.
pocket water
A stretch of river broken by numerous boulders and obstructions, creating many small pockets of slower water — miniature lies — in front of, behind, and between the rocks. Each pocket may hold a fish. Fishing pocket water is methodical, close-range work: you move from pocket to pocket, covering each one before stepping upstream to the next.
lie
A place in a river where a fish holds — positioned out of the main current but close enough to intercept food carried by it, sheltered from predators, and expending the least energy possible. The lie is the fish's address: chosen for economy, safety, and access to the drift. Reading a river for lies is reading it from the fish's point of view.