Southern Trout Magazine Issue 23

Page 183

featured guide

want to get in anyone’s face, so to speak, so we temper our approach to instruction with ment of the flies/lures, the retrieve or drift, and in the case of fly-fishing, the maintenance he science of fishing, from fish habits – how they feed, where they live, why they strike – to mes vulnerable to a feeding fish.

clients. All our fishing is done with flies and lures of the best quality and best selection. We bait is going to swallow that bait, leaving in question their safe release to swim another day.

n we were youngsters. I think I was about 6 years old when she helped me catch my first d freshwater. We’re each about five years apart in age, so it wasn’t until we were 20 or almost 20 years, I focused on bass fishing. My job as senior editor for Game & Fish 90. I still had bass on my mind, but I quickly found my passion in fly-fishing for trout after acobs (former editor for Georgia Sportsman magazine) and the staff photographer. It was a ing than taking pictures. But that was the turning point. I still bass fish, but there’s a lot more worms.

www.SouthernTrout.com l Southern Trout l March 2016 l 183


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.