

Troutbitten
Domenick Swentosky
Life on the water. Troutbitten is a deep dive into fly fishing for wild trout in wild places. Author and guide, Domenick Swentosky, shares stories, tips, tactics and conversations with friends about fly fishing through the woods and water. Explore more. Fish hard. And discover fly fishing at Troutbitten.com — an extensive resource with 1500+ articles about trout, friends, family and the river.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Apr 2, 2022 • 1h 5min
The Inefficiencies That Waste Your Fishing Time
Casting, drifting, swinging and stripping -- everything else is downtime. As Paul said, “Brother, there are no flying fish in Montana” — or anywhere else, for that matter.Flies in the water — that’s where we want them. A trout at the end of the line. That’s what we’re aiming for. But there are seemingly endless tasks required for a fishing trip. And how we approach those chores really defines the way our day will go — simply because our fly is either in the water . . . or it’s not.How we prepare the night before, our system for carrying tippet, our strategy for choosing the next fly, and even what we do with the net after releasing a trout — what we do with our time on the water . . . matters. And all of us experience that nagging feeling that something is amiss, that so much more is possible, on those days when we know that we are inefficient.Fly fishing is for the pragmatist. Successful anglers see failure and make the changes to turn it around. And no matter what our natural tendencies — whether we’re a neat freak or a slob at home and at work, the river quickly teaches us that the only way forward is through efficiency. So every long term angler that I know becomes efficient, even if they weren’t born that way.In this episode, I’m joined tonight by my fishing friends, Trevor Smith, Bill Dell, Austin Dando and Matt Grobe.We Cover the FollowingFinding a system. Finding routines for everything.Vest/ Pack strategiesOrganizing gearPre-trip preparationLeader changesKnot tyingWading staffTraveling strategyDon't be late!Rod storageResourcesREAD: Troutbitten | Find Your SystemREAD: Troutbitten | The Inefficiency of InexperienceREAD: Troutbitten | Look for the Changeout SpotsREAD: Troutbitten | What About the Wading Staff?READ: Troutbitten | Find Your RhythmVisit:Troutbitten WebsiteTroutbitten InstagramTroutbitten YouTubeTroutbitten FacebookThanks to TroutRoutes:Use the code TROUTBITTEN for 20% off your membership athttps://maps.troutroutes.com Thanks to SkwalaUse the code, TROUTBITTEN10 for 10% off your order athttps://skwalafishing.com/

Mar 27, 2022 • 1h 6min
Secrets and Spot Burning
Season Three begins with a round-table discussion about fishermen's secrets and what happens when we give up the most sensitive of them -- spot burning.My full panel of fishing buddies is back for this third season: Austin Dando, Trevor Smith, Josh Darling, Bill Dell and now Matt Grobe. We kick off season three with one of the most contentious topics in fly fishing. Holding secrets is human nature. And some of us keep confidential our favorite flies, tactics and more. But when it comes to spots -- locations and where we fish -- discretion is a kindness that we lend to other anglers.Secrets are part of the legacy of fishing. Exploring and locating places that are special to each of us is part of what keeps us coming back. We like to think that we’ve discovered something that is uncommon or unknown. And we learn that sharing information with the wrong people or in the wrong way can easily destroy a secret by making the uncommon, common.As for spot burning, it’s bad because of what it does to other anglers.. Every piece of water is someone else’s sweetheart spot. So we refrain from naming names and locations out of respect for everyone else. And if you hear yourself saying, “It’s okay because everybody knows about that spot,” think again.That’s our take on it.We Cover the FollowingQuestion from a listener regarding knot tying tipsQuestion from a listener regarding the toughest skill in fly tyingTypes of secretsSecret fliesSecret tacticsWhat is spot burningThe negative impact of spot burningNuances of spot burningSharing without sharing too muchThe hypocrisy of secretsRemember, each of these podcasts is always supported by a companion article of the same topic.READ: Troutbitten | Podcast: Secrets and Spot Burning -- S3 Ep1ResourcesREAD: Troutbitten | The SecretREAD: Troutbitten | Respect the Spots! A Fisherman's Thoughts on Secrets and Spot BurningREAD: Troutbitten | Coffee and SecretsREAD: Troutbitten | Super Fly -- The Story of a Squirmie WormieSeason Three of the Troutbitten podcast continues with Episode 2 -- Inefficiencies That Waste Your Fishing Time. So look for that one in your Troutbitten podcast feed.Fish hard, friends.Visit:Troutbitten WebsiteTroutbitten InstagramTroutbitten YouTubeTroutbitten FacebookThanks to TroutRoutes:Use the code TROUTBITTEN for 20% off your membership athttps://maps.troutroutes.com Thanks to SkwalaUse the code, TROUTBITTEN10 for 10% off your order athttps://skwalafishing.com/

Mar 21, 2022 • 1h 21min
Feed Drop -- Troutbitten on the Wet Fly Swing Podcast
Hello, friends.Season two of the Troutbitten podcast is finished, and season three begins soon. So in this off week, I have something a little special for you.Recently, I was a guest on the Wet Fly Swing podcast with Dave Stewart. So this is a feed drop of that episode in full. Dave runs a great show, and he’s been at it for a long time. I was happy to be a guest for the second time with Dave. And in this episode, we dig into a lot of streamer tactics, some nymphing techniques, and we have a good talk about what happens during the transition from winter into spring fishing.I hope you enjoy it. And if you do, go check out more at wetflyswing.com. With over 300 episodes in the bank, Dave talks with some of the most knowledgeable and entertaining fly fishers in the game. I’ve learned a lot from Dave’s podcast over the years.I hope you enjoy listening to my talk with Dave Stewart.So until next week . . . fish hard, friends. ** NOTE ** Season Three begins next week. We return to the Season One format of full-panel discussions covering all things fly fishing for trout. And we're looking forward to it.

Mar 13, 2022 • 54min
Bonus Round Q&A with Full Panel -- Tight Line and Euro Nymphing Skills, #10
Season Two concludes with a round table discussion for answering the most common questions about tight line and euro nymphing skills. My full panel of friends, Austin, Bill, Trevor and Josh join me to get deep in the weeds of the tactics, to clear up misconceptions, and offer their own ideas.As Episode nine published, I realized there were many questions left to be answered. Daily, I received messages about a variety of techniques discussed in these nine essential skills. And the same themes cropped up. Anglers struggled with the same concepts. And those misunderstandings made their way to my inbox. It made sense to do one more podcast and answer these most popular, important questions.So here's your bonus round . . .We Cover the FollowingTuck casting in cover and using sidearm anglesTuck casting doesn't need to be verticalReading sighter for contact vs reading sighter for the strike zoneMore tips on finding the strike zoneForcing contact and using the extremesTippet length variabilityDeveloping accuracy with more speedRefining the castLeader diameter vs leader powerTips for fishing around structureRemember, each of these podcasts is supported by a companion article of the same topic. And you can find the full overview of the Nine Essential Skills for Tight line and Euro Nymphing here:READ: Troubitten | Bonus Round Q&A with Full Panel -- Tight Line Skills Series, #10RESOURCESREAD: Troutbitten | The Nine Essential Skills for Tight Line and Euro NymphingREAD: Troutbitten | Category | The Mono RigREAD: Troutbitten | Full the Mono Rig System -- All the Variations, with Leader Formulas and AdjustmentsREAD: Troutbitten | Fly Fishing Strategies -- Tuck CastREAD: Troutbitten | Put More Juice in the CastREAD: Troutbitten | The Top Down ApproachREAD: Troutbitten | Over or Under -- Your Best Bet on Weight** NOTE ** Season Three begins in a coupe weeks. We return to the Season One format of full-panel discussion covering all things fly fishing for trout. And we're looking forward to it.Visit:Troutbitten WebsiteTroutbitten InstagramTroutbitten YouTubeTroutbitten FacebookThanks to TroutRoutes:Use the code TROUTBITTEN for 20% off your membership athttps://maps.troutroutes.com Thanks to SkwalaUse the code, TROUTBITTEN10 for 10% off your order athttps://skwalafishing.com/

Mar 6, 2022 • 30min
Putting It All Together -- Tight Line and Euro Nymphing Skills, #9
Here we are at the finish line. In this ninth installment of this Troutbitten Skills Series, my friend, Austin Dando, and I walk through some of the best tips for putting it all together. Because this set of skills, performed in order and flowing from one to the next, results in a great drift that starts and finishes in a convincing, trout-catching presentation.Here are those nine skills:Angle and ApproachTurnover and Tuck CastSticking the LandingRecovering SlackFinding ContactLocating the Strike ZoneGuiding the FliesThe StrikePutting it all TogetherEach of them now has its own podcast and its own article that lays out the tactics in detail.Tight line tactics are infinitely refinable. There is no end to how much better you can make the next drift. And if you get it perfect, then the next seam challenges you all over again. Contact and true control over the flies is a responsibility, and I’ve seen it overwhelm people at times. So, putting a number on the most basic skills and putting them in order makes things manageable. That is the purpose of this system -- this series -- of nine essential skills.We Cover the FollowingPractice by imaginingDon't be intimidatedTrusting the transitionsFinding the failuresFocusing on just oneSeeing successHow fast the middle steps happenWatching the entrance and the exit of the fliesJudging successResourcesREAD: Troutbitten | The Nine Essential Skills for Tight Line and Euro NymphingREAD: Troutbitten | Category | The Mono RigREAD: Troutbitten | Get a Good Drift, Then Move OnREAD: Troutbitten | What To TrustREAD: Troutbitten | Trout Like to Do What Their Friends Are DoingREAD: Troutbitten |Asking the Best Questions to Catch More TroutVisit:Troutbitten WebsiteTroutbitten InstagramTroutbitten YouTubeTroutbitten FacebookThanks to TroutRoutes:Use the code TROUTBITTEN for 20% off your membership athttps://maps.troutroutes.com Thanks to SkwalaUse the code, TROUTBITTEN10 for 10% off your order athttps://skwalafishing.com/

Feb 28, 2022 • 35min
The Strike -- Tight Line and Euro Nymphing Skills, #8
The strike is the best part of fishing. It’s what we’re all out there waiting for, or rather, what we’re trying to make happen all day long. And the trout eats because we get so many things right. When the fish strikes, we strike back. Short, swift and effective, the hook finds flesh. Then we try to keep the trout buttoned up, and get it to the net.In this podcast episode, there are two types of strikes that my friend, Austin Dando, and I focus on.First, there’s the strike from a trout — the take, the hit, the “gimme that I wanna eat it,” from a fish. So we need to recognize and sense that strike.Second, there's our strike — the hook set, the swift rod tip motion that drives the hook point home and attaches us to the trout. So it helps to have a plan and give some thought to how that’s done too.Remember, fooling trout is the hard part. The rest of this — hooking and landing a fish, comes much easier.We Cover the FollowingAre hook sets really free?Set on anything?Set on anything unusual or unexpectedDifference of over or under weightingIs there a sixth sense?Direction of the hook setHow far? How fast?Fly rod types and hook setsThe Check SetCan you ever set too fast?Slack and hook setsRemember, each of these podcasts is supported by a companion article of the same topic. And you can find the full overview of the Nine Essential Skills for Tight line and Euro Nymphing here:READ: Troutbitten | The Nine Essential Skills for Tight Line and Euro NymphingREAD: Troutbitten | #8 The Strike -- Nine Essential Skill for Tight Line and Euro NymphingREAD: Troutbitten | Category | The Mono RigREAD: Troutbitten | Fly Fishing Strategies -- Plan for the HooksetREAD: Troutbitten | Don't Guess -- Set the Hook and Set HardREAD: Troutbitten | Hook Set at the End of Every DriftREAD: Troutbitten Tight Line Nymphing Skills -- The Check SetVisit:Troutbitten WebsiteTroutbitten InstagramTroutbitten YouTubeTroutbitten FacebookThanks to TroutRoutes:Use the code TROUTBITTEN for 20% off your membership athttps://maps.troutroutes.com Thanks to SkwalaUse the code, TROUTBITTEN10 for 10% off your order athttps://skwalafishing.com/

Feb 20, 2022 • 34min
Guiding the Flies -- Tight Line and Euro Nymphing Skills, #7
Part Seven of this Troutbitten Skills Series focuses on guiding the flies. Once the nymphs are cast and settled into the target seam, it's time to take them to the trout. Guiding the flies is a blend of two skills that I call leading and tracking. At the core, this skill of guiding the flies is fishing the flies. And this is what anglers tend to focus on most — for good reason. It’s the longest in duration. It’s the most active, and has the most room for variation.In truth, there are number of ways to dead drift nymphs through one seam. And the choices we make are about how much influence we want to have on the flies. A leading approach puts the angler in charge, and a tracking approach let's the river dictate the course of the flies. Guiding the flies is an effort to mix the two.We Cover the FollowingThe advantages of leadingControl, contact and the dead driftOver weightingThe advantages of trackingLess control with fewer options, but a truer drift?Under weightingIs pure tracking possible?Guiding as a mix of the twoSlipping contactFind the perfect weightWhy use both?Why guiding works.Remember, each of these podcasts is supported by a companion article of the same topic. And you can find the full overview of the Nine Essential Skills for Tight line and Euro Nymphing here:READ: Troutbitten | The Nine Essential Skills for Tight Line and Euro NymphingREAD: Troutbitten | #7 Guiding the Flies -- Nine Essential Skill for Tight Line and Euro NymphingREAD: Troutbitten | Category | The Mono RigREAD: Troutbitten | Leading vs Tracking vs Guiding the FliesREAD: Troutbitten | Tracking the FliesREAD: Troutbitten | How to Lead the FliesVisit:Troutbitten WebsiteTroutbitten InstagramTroutbitten YouTubeTroutbitten FacebookThanks to TroutRoutes:Use the code TROUTBITTEN for 20% off your membership athttps://maps.troutroutes.com Thanks to SkwalaUse the code, TROUTBITTEN10 for 10% off your order athttps://skwalafishing.com/

Feb 13, 2022 • 39min
Locating the Strike Zone -- Tight Line and Euro Nymphing Skills, #6
Part six of this Troutbitten Skills Series is about locating the strike zone. This zone of water -- this cushion near the bottom of the river -- is the default target and the baseline location for our flies.Most of what happens in a river occurs in the strike zone. It's where the trout spend most of their time. It's where the bugs and baitfish live. Understanding everything about the strike zone allows us to know exactly how and where we want to present the nymph.My friend, Austin Dando, joins me to help break down and understand this crucial concept.Unlocking this knowledge — understanding the strike zone -- then finding it and drifting your flies there, is perhaps the most pivotal moment in your nymphing skills progression. It changes everything.We Cover the FollowingWhat is the strike zone?Why is the strike zone important?Why gliding the strike zone outperforms touching the bottomTouching bottom to find the strike zoneWatching the sighter speed to find the strike zoneGliding through the strike zoneDeviating our drifts in and out of the strike zoneThe downshiftDepth and speed of the strike zoneMore on reading the sighterRemember, each of these podcasts is supported by a companion article of the same topic. And you can find the full overview of the Nine Essential Skills for Tight line and Euro Nymphing here:READ: Troutbitten | The Nine Essential Skills for Tight Line and Euro NymphingREAD: Troutbitten | #6 Locating the Strike Zone -- Nine Essential Skill for Tight Line and Euro NymphingVisit:Troutbitten WebsiteTroutbitten InstagramTroutbitten YouTubeTroutbitten FacebookThanks to TroutRoutes:Use the code TROUTBITTEN for 20% off your membership athttps://maps.troutroutes.com Thanks to SkwalaUse the code, TROUTBITTEN10 for 10% off your order athttps://skwalafishing.com/

Feb 6, 2022 • 36min
Finding Contact -- Tight Line and Euro Nymphing Skills, #5
Part five of this Troutbitten Skills Series is about finding contact. Because after the tuck cast, after we stick the landing and begin to recover slack, we need to find contact on sighter.Contact is visual. It's about reading the sighter to know that we are in touch with the flies from rod tip to the nymph or split shot. It's not about touching or ticking the riverbed. Instead, the contact we're looking for is seen on the sighter.With contact, we know everything about the depth and speed of our flies. We know where they are, and we determine where they are going. That's the advantage of a tight line (contact) nymphing system.Importantly, this does not mean we are directly in touch at all times with the fly, because we often get better drifts without such direct influence over the nymphs. But without contact at points through the drift (and sometimes the whole way) we are simply guessing about the location of the flies. To take advantage of the ultimate control that tight line and euro nymphing rigs offer, we must learn to read contact on the sighter -- to know we are in touch and know where the flies are.Reading the sighter and finding contact is critical.My friend, Austin Dando, joins me on episode five for an in-depth discussion of this technique.We Cover the FollowingContact is seen, not feltReading the sighterSighter material and constructionThe Backing BarrelThe bow in the sighterNervous sighterSeeing beyond the sighterContact let's us trust the sighterForcing contactRemember, each of these podcasts is supported by a companion article of the same topic. And you can find the full overview of the Nine Essential Skills for Tight line and Euro Nymphing here:ResourcesREAD: Troutbitten | The Nine Essential Skills for Tight Line and Euro NymphingREAD; Troutbitten | #5 Finding Contact -- Nine Essential Skill for Tight Line and Euro NymphingREAD: Troutbitten | Category | The Mono RigREAD: Troutbitten | Contact is VisualREAD: Troutbitten | The Backing Barrel might be the best sighter everREAD: Troutbitten | Design and Function of the Standard Troutbitten Mono RigVisit:Troutbitten WebsiteTroutbitten InstagramTroutbitten YouTubeTroutbitten FacebookThanks to TroutRoutes:Use the code TROUTBITTEN for 20% off your membership athttps://maps.troutroutes.com Thanks to SkwalaUse the code, TROUTBITTEN10 for 10% off your order athttps://skwalafishing.com/

Feb 1, 2022 • 29min
Recovering Slack -- Tight Line and Euro Nymphing Skills, #4
Part four of this Troutbitten Skills Series focuses on recovering slack. To dead drift a nymph, we cast it upstream. And as the river flows downstream, it sends the fly back toward us, creating slack. Usually, we simply pick up that slack and maintain contact with the fly (sometimes directly, sometimes slightly).Slack maintenance is a critical skill. It’s line management. And if the goal is to be in contact with the nymphs and know where they are -- if this is a tight line rig -- then allowing too much slack in the system destroys everything that we’re working toward.Managed slack is part of an advanced skill set. And that’s very much what we do by starting with a tuck cast. Then, after sticking the landing, we’re in a great position to continue those advanced skills.We recover the slack in three ways: by lifting the rod tip, by leading the rod tip, and with the line hand.My friend, Austin Dando, joins me on Episode Four for an in-depth discussion of these techniques.(Season three will return to my full panel of friends, with longer form discussion about all things fly fishing.)We Cover the FollowingMaintaining contactSlipping contactLetting the river decideManaged slackThe Lift and LeadLine hand recoveryThe Pulley RetrieveTrimming the sighterDealing with windRemember, each of these podcasts is supported by a companion article of the same topic. And you can find the full overview of the Nine Essential Skills for Tight line and Euro Nymphing here:READ: Troutbitten | The Nine Essential Skills for Tight Line and Euro NymphingREAD; Troutbitten | #4 Recovering Slack -- Nine Essential Skill for Tight Line and Euro Nymphing ResourcesREAD: Troutbitten | The Nine Essential Skills for Tight Line and Euro NymphingREAD: Troutbitten | Category | The Mono RigREAD: Troutbitten | The Pulley Retrieve (with VIDEO)READ: Troutbitten | The Lift and LeadREAD: Troutbitten | Leading vs Tracking vs Guiding Visit:Troutbitten WebsiteTroutbitten InstagramTroutbitten YouTubeTroutbitten FacebookThanks to TroutRoutes:Use the code TROUTBITTEN for 20% off your membership athttps://maps.troutroutes.com Thanks to SkwalaUse the code, TROUTBITTEN10 for 10% off your order athttps://skwalafishing.com/