Join host Marvin Cash on The Articulate Fly for another engaging East Tennessee Fishing Report with Ellis Ward. In this episode, Ellis talks about the challenges of fishing in the summer heat, sharing his experiences and insights on how to adapt to the conditions. Despite the high temperatures, Ellis discusses the benefits of having 60-degree water and the importance of taking advantage of cooler days with rain and cloud cover.
Ellis also dives into the technical aspects of dry fly fishing, offering valuable tips on leader setups and the importance of using the right tippet size for small flies. He explains how to adjust your approach based on water clarity and flow, ensuring a successful fishing experience. Additionally, Ellis touches on streamer fishing, discussing the variations in leader setups and the importance of adapting to different conditions.
Whether you're an avid angler or new to the sport, this episode is packed with practical advice and inspiration to enhance your fishing adventures. Tight lines!
To learn more about Ellis, check out our interview!
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Marvin: Hey folks, it's Marvin Cash, the host of the Articulate Fly,
Marvin: and we're back with another East Tennessee fishing report with Ellis Ward. Ellis, how are you?
Ellis: I'm a little hot right now, but I'm doing well. How are you?
Marvin: I'm just trying to stay out of trouble. Yeah, it was funny. We were talking
Marvin: before we started recording, and I was in your neck of the woods last week,
Marvin: and you were telling me I'm kind of unlucky with the weather because I seem
Marvin: to show up when it's boiling hot.
Ellis: Yeah, I think you were here last year during, it didn't, you know,
Ellis: we're sitting on top of a little bit of an air conditioner when we're on the river,
Ellis: but when it's in the upper 90s, it really doesn't matter if,
Ellis: the fortunate part for fishing is that we still have 60 degree water, but man,
Ellis: being under that full sun and just out exposed when it's 90 something, He's up for nineties.
Ellis: It taxes you a little bit.
Marvin: Yeah. And I don't buy any of that malarkey that Matt Riley's peddling that,
Marvin: you know, it's a little bit cooler and drier where he is. I think that's a lie.
Ellis: Well, he's full of it and has been for years.
Marvin: So the silver lining of all of this is ironically, while I get on a plane to
Marvin: go to Orlando to see what it's like to visit the tropics for ICAST,
Marvin: you're actually going to get a pretty decent break in the heat around Johnson city.
Marvin: And you're going to get, you know, I was looking at your weather,
Marvin: like after maybe tomorrow, you're going to get a spate of days in the eighties
Marvin: with some rain and cloud cover. So you should be happy as a clam.
Ellis: Yeah, it it's, it's a mix of happy and I'm sort of backloaded this month.
Ellis: So, um, uh, early plug book your trips.
Ellis: It's, it's nice to have these days for my own fishing when I don't have trips, but, um, yeah, last.
Ellis: I had last week a good couple trips, and yeah, this week it just coincides with
Ellis: a break in trips and also a break in weather.
Ellis: I'm always pretty good at taking advantage of that, but the happy as a clam
Ellis: part turns into, oh man, I need that.
Ellis: I need the one who wants to be out here and when it's quote unquote bad weather out um,
Ellis: but we end up getting plenty of those so definitely feeling
Ellis: positive about the the rainfall because it's been you know on the retirement
Ellis: we get those the five hour pushes every afternoon for six days a week so it's
Ellis: not like we're hurting for good streamer conditions dry fly conditions conditions, um,
Ellis: big water, cool temps, happy trout, all that stuff is here, but having the tributaries
Ellis: full and having that water table bump up a little bit makes everything a little happier.
Ellis: And, um, you know, for the small mouth and musky water around here, we need it.
Ellis: Um, we're, we're certainly not as dry as some areas talking with Richie back
Ellis: in DC. He was saying that the Potomac up by Harper's Ferry in Maryland was up to 91 degrees.
Ellis: So I think this, the whole region, southeast, mid-Atlantic, needs a good shot of rain.
Ellis: And at least for this little zone we have, I think we might get dumped on tomorrow, but we'll see.
Marvin: Yeah, which is great, right? Because then you can pull streamers on the mud
Marvin: line where the Doe River comes into the Watauga.
Ellis: Yeah man you know it and that that whole lower section and i can reserve,
Ellis: some of those thoughts for um a conversation around low water fishing but but
Ellis: that was we've had a couple of those i think we were talking,
Ellis: before recording that um yeah you did here and then you know we had a shot of rain or two and,
Ellis: i had a guy a day after one of those and it was just these these bumps and everyone
Ellis: who fishes freestones knows this the bumps that happen during the summer are and i've i've seen some,
Ellis: memes that joke about this where it's it's lower here or blown out of money
Ellis: and you get like one day or maybe a half a day where it's not that.
Ellis: And the nice part about the Watauga, the South Holston to a certain extent,
Ellis: it's not as influenced by tributaries, but.
Ellis: When it's low and clear above the dough,
Ellis: but below the dough, because that's a freestone coming in that's chocolate milk,
Ellis: it can provide for are some pretty
Ellis: cool opportunities if if you know where the fish are
Ellis: and and you know where the rocks are
Ellis: because you can't really see them on your own over them so we
Ellis: had a couple couple big eats that eats to kick things off and um we we learned
Ellis: quickly that rod setting with a one-odd hook is a good way to feel the inside
Ellis: of a brown trout's mouth but but not see the fish.
Marvin: Yeah well there you go so it's interesting right so you're going to cool off
Marvin: you're going to have cloud cover which i would imagine for your streamer by
Marvin: it's going to make the fish a little bit chasier right.
Ellis: Yeah every i mean dry fly fishing everything the birds the bugs everything,
Ellis: I won't get too spooky, but maybe even the plants. It just, you can feel it
Ellis: when you're out there, the spook with everything drops.
Marvin: Yeah. And then I would say too, right? I mean, you should see a little bit more
Marvin: predictability around your hatches in that situation because you're going to
Marvin: have a little bit better predictability on cloud cover and temperature.
Ellis: Yeah. Yeah, the hatches and where we're fishing for risers and what that looks
Ellis: like can change a little bit with the clear water and more stable flows or low flows.
Ellis: The fishing can be tough, but it can be a little more predictable in the sense
Ellis: that I know where the fish are going to be and at what times.
Ellis: In which sections and to a certain extent
Ellis: what they're going to be eating and when the
Ellis: water is bigger those dry fly
Ellis: places move around a little bit uh
Ellis: but they're still very much there the the high water
Ellis: does absolutely nothing to turn
Ellis: them off it just sort of switches things a little bit and then
Ellis: when you throw a cloud cover in you start to
Ellis: get it's not just the last two hours of daylight um you
Ellis: know it's not just the the 9 a.m to 11 a.m it's it can sort of fluctuate throughout
Ellis: the day and where they're eating and what they're eating can change and and
Ellis: it just it opens things up a little bit.
Marvin: Yeah very very cool and we've got a question for you uh from brenner and you
Marvin: know since we've been doing uh low clear uh shallow water in the summer he wanted
Marvin: to get your thoughts on dry fly and leader setup?
Ellis: Yeah.
Ellis: So with the tailwaters.
Ellis: I've been fishing, I've said this enough times to where I'm not sure if it's
Ellis: redundant at this point, but I don't like to drink my own Kool-Aid.
Ellis: I think I do a little bit with the dry fly setups.
Ellis: I am, at this point, if it's a nine foot leader, that doesn't feel right to me. And...
Ellis: It has less to do with spook from the leader.
Ellis: Like a, and I think this is somewhat universal.
Ellis: It's, we're not talking about just the tailwaters, but it is relative to fly size.
Ellis: And so when you're fishing flies that are in the 20, 22,
Ellis: 24, which is not uncommon at all,
Ellis: you know even when you're seeing 16s
Ellis: 18s if you look
Ellis: into the water if you look with the fish reading um just kind of look around
Ellis: at the i refer to it as the fuzz in the air and right above the water there's
Ellis: a huge biomass that is made up of way smaller than the 18s and And, you know,
Ellis: sometimes some of these 20s even look big.
Ellis: So when you're getting down that small, it has to do more with,
Ellis: I compare it to fishing a Clouser minnow on 50-pound full carbon with a clench knot.
Ellis: It's going to look like it's being moved through the water by a stick.
Ellis: And so fishing 15-pound fluoro loop knot, it's nice and wiggly.
Ellis: Um you do that with dry fly fishing and
Ellis: you know you everything starts to get all these little changes get magnified
Ellis: so finishing a size 22 with a 5x tippet i mean you just look at the knot you're
Ellis: tying it's a quarter size of the bug and so the way that is.
Ellis: Not necessarily they're seeing the knot or seeing
Ellis: the tippet it's it's that that there's not much
Ellis: freedom of movement the biggest
Ellis: piece of mass at that terminal end is
Ellis: the tippet and maybe the knot
Ellis: versus the fly being delivered
Ellis: by that tippet so going down to six six point five which at this point i also
Ellis: feel a little spoiled because the you know six x is 3.2 pounds i think if you
Ellis: get at the fancy furrow it's it's up to three and a half it's a big trout and at the end of the day,
Ellis: outside of too many horsepower on your first the initial hook set which is a
Ellis: good way to to snap big fish off um fishing bugs that small you don't have to
Ellis: put a lot of pressure onto it so So you can afford to do a,
Ellis: you know, take that non-foot 5X leader and just add an extra foot and a half, I would say,
Ellis: of 6X, maybe cut some 5X back and add 6X onto that.
Ellis: And it's really hard to put.
Ellis: Three plus pounds of pressure onto a fish with a bend in a four or five weight
Ellis: so it becomes less about breaking them off um you know during the fight it's
Ellis: really that last lifting into the net,
Ellis: or getting them to your feet if you're waiting and um in the initial hook set the stuff in between
Ellis: is is playing fish i think if the you know if you get good fish on on 6x and
Ellis: it turns and runs on you and you hold on to it you're probably gonna break it off on 5x anyway so,
Ellis: um yeah i'd certainly say going down to six six point five um that was kind
Ellis: of limited to one or two of the manufacturers but most of the um companies that
Ellis: are making tippet are making
Ellis: them in 0.5s, and that 6.5 is kind of a good range to be in.
Ellis: And unless you have, I am a bit of a diva when it comes to the dry fly presentations.
Ellis: And there's different leader setups you can get.
Ellis: When you are going down that small, there's different options you can get,
Ellis: But Rio and Scientific Anglers both make some of these finesse presentations
Ellis: that they don't start super fat.
Ellis: And so you can afford to be fishing them and they unroll nicely on lighter weight line.
Ellis: And just things that deliver flies that are a little smaller,
Ellis: especially at both close and long ranges, it's important to consider all of that.
Ellis: And once you get your system in place, it can be a little clunky to get there.
Ellis: It becomes copy and paste to a certain extent because you know it works,
Ellis: so you don't have to reinvent the wheel there a little bit to get to that happy
Ellis: place, but once you're there,
Ellis: it's certainly worth it.
Marvin: Yeah, and I would imagine on the streamer front, You know, probably,
Marvin: you know, you're probably pretty much running the same rig all the time anyway, right?
Marvin: I mean, it's just a question of you maybe get to step up a little bit if the water's stained.
Marvin: But, I mean, they're not liter shy, so it's not like you're fishing 6X with a D&D, right? Right.
Ellis: Yeah, and also, no, to a degree,
Ellis: the leader setup with streamers kind of varies the butt and the,
Ellis: we'll say, the midsection of
Ellis: the quote-unquote leaders, not necessarily taper, but I go from 25 to 20.
Ellis: And, and, you know, in bigger water or fishing just big flies where we're,
Ellis: you know, fishing a game changer and moving it fast and I'm, I'm worried less about.
Ellis: Um, how things are turning over and moving in between strips and more about
Ellis: getting this big fly there.
Ellis: And, uh, there's so much mass relative to the leader and line system on bigger
Ellis: flies that you can afford to, to stay at 20 pounds.
Ellis: And when, when you're fishing long clear,
Ellis: it's, it's the same principle with the dry fly where, you know, um,
Ellis: fishing the drunk or even fishing the, the simpler strip flies with weight on
Ellis: them, like the peanuts, you going down to 15,
Ellis: I tend to revert 12 from in
Ellis: the boat because we're fishing water and really
Ellis: when it it compiles because
Ellis: when we're when we are fishing 12 or when there is that need to drop down below
Ellis: 15 or below 20 it's probably because we're getting really sneaky with our casting
Ellis: and i like to do that all the time but but it becomes required when the fishing is harder.
Ellis: And we're doing that in areas that have fast-moving water adjacent to them.
Ellis: And normally, we're in the boat water, and so it's pretty easy to snap.
Ellis: 12-pound mono or fluoro, and so I kind of like to stay in that 15 and do a loop
Ellis: knot, and most of the flies,
Ellis: most of the streamers outside of the real small ones or the real big ones,
Ellis: they can be happily delivered with a 15-pound fluoro and a loop knot.
Marvin: Oh, well, there you go, and you know we love questions at the Articulate Fly folks.
Marvin: You can email them to us or DM us on social media, whatever is easiest for you,
Marvin: And if we use your question, I will send you some articulate fly swag and we're
Marvin: going to enter a drawing for some cool stuff from Ellis at the end of the season.
Marvin: And Ellis, before I let you go and, uh, plan what you're going to do with all
Marvin: this awesome weather that you have, you want to let folks, uh,
Marvin: know where they can find you so they can book in fish with you.
Ellis: Yeah. Website is elliswardflies.com and you can follow me on Instagram at elliswardguides.
Ellis: Best way to contact me about trips or asking any questions is to text or call at 513-543-0019.
Marvin: There you go. And don't forget, folks, you know, we've got a great community
Marvin: here at the Articulate Fly. We host it on Patreon.
Marvin: And two of the benefits, you know, if you have a bucktail addiction,
Marvin: there's a level of membership that will help you out with some of Ellis's roadkill.
Marvin: And then also if you want to go out and fish with Ellis we've got another tier
Marvin: where you actually get a guide credit every year so you might want to check
Marvin: those out and you know weather's improving and as I always say you owe it to
Marvin: yourself to get out there and catch a few tight lines everybody,
Marvin: tight lines Ellis appreciate it Mars.
Guide | Fly Tier
I am a full time, year round fishing guide in East Tennessee, based out of Johnson City. I also design and tie flies from midges to musky, process a thousand or so bucktails every season, teach at East Tennessee State University, and raise my daughter.