WHAT TO BUY, WHAT TO BRING
Gear Guide
Everything a new student or leader needs to start - and not a thing more.
You can start with very little. A borrowed rod, a handful of flies, and a wading belt will get a student on the water. Stream School partners keep loaner gear on hand, so borrow before you buy. Nothing on this page is a barrier to your first session - it is a map for when you are ready to own your own kit.
START WITH THE RIGHT TOOL
Recommended Rods by Age Tier
A rod is a lever, not a whip. The right weight and length scale to the student's hands and the casts they are learning. These are the rods we put in students' hands at each tier.
New to it all? A 5-weight is the most versatile choice and the best all-around beginner rod. A 4-weight shines on small streams; a 6-weight handles wind and larger flies.
HOW IT ALL CONNECTS
The Fly Line System
Unlike spin fishing, the line is what carries the fly - its weight loads the rod. Everything runs in one tapered chain, thick to thin, from the reel out to the fly.
REEL → FLY LINE → LEADER BUTT → LEADER → TIPPET → FLY
REEL
Holds the line. In fly fishing the reel matters less than the line itself - it is mostly line storage and a brake for big fish.
FLY LINE 90 ft
The heavy, visible line. Its weight is what loads the rod and carries an almost weightless fly to the target.
LEADER BUTT 24-36 in
The thick first section of the leader, knotted to the fly line. It transfers energy smoothly from the heavy line into the thin leader.
LEADER 7-9 ft
A tapered length of mono that gets thinner as it goes, so the line lands softly and stays nearly invisible to the fish.
TIPPET 18-24 in
The final, thinnest section, tied to the fly. Sized by an X number - we fish 3X to 6X. Replace it as it shortens with each fly change.
FLY
Fur, feathers, thread, and foam tied to imitate an insect. No bait - the fly is the whole point of everything upstream of it.
WHAT TO BRING
Essential Gear Checklist
Six things every student and leader carries to the water. Not gadgets - the gear that keeps you safe and keeps fish healthy.
Wading Belt
NEVER wade without one. A snug belt over your waders keeps water from filling the legs if you slip. This is the single non-negotiable safety item on the list.
Rubber Landing Net
Rubber-mesh and knotless. It cradles the fish, keeps it wet, and protects its slime coat. Knotted nylon nets scrape that coat off and harm the fish.
Forceps or Pliers
For quick, clean hook removal. The faster the hook is out, the faster the fish goes back. Also handy for pinching down barbs before you fish.
Polarized Sunglasses
Cut the glare so you can see through the surface to spot fish and read the bottom. They double as eye protection from a stray hook - always worn.
Organized Fly Box
Keep it simple and easy to access. A handful of proven patterns you can find fast beats a hundred flies you cannot. See the starter box below.
Sunscreen & Hat
Stream sun is intense, reflected off the water from both sides. High-SPF sunscreen and a brimmed hat, reapplied often. A water bottle too.
FIVE FLIES, REAL FISH
The Starter Fly Box
You do not need a hundred flies to catch fish. Five proven patterns cover nearly every situation a new angler meets - a nymph for under the surface, a couple of dries for the top, an attractor, and a streamer for the big ones.
Start here, learn what each one imitates, and add patterns only when the water tells you to.
Tippet to match: carry 3X, 4X, 5X, and 6X spools. As a rule, smaller flies want finer tippet. We fish fluorocarbon at the school - it sinks well and is less visible underwater.
You Have the Gear. Now Get on the Water.
Every Stream School program is free, and partners keep loaner gear on hand - so you can start before you own a thing. Find a program near you, or pick the school that fits the student's age.