The Easy-Nymph Rig

Nymphing can be a mystifying game at times. How far should your indicator be from your flies? How far from your weight? How much weight should you use? When fishing nymphs and indicators on a traditional tapered leader style setup, commonly called a "Bighorn Rig", there's a lot of variables that can be left up in the air. We've been fishing and guiding with a much simpler setup that's incredibly effective - here's a breakdown of what we've been throwing!
The Easy Nymph Rig The Easy Nymph Rig
As I alluded to before, the Easy Nymph Rig doesn't use a tapered leader, so you can take that off your line first. Tie a perfection loop in a piece of heavy mono, loop it onto your fly line, and make it 18"-24" long. We prefer stiff mono like Maxima in 12-20 pound because it helps turn the rig over without the use of a tapered leader. Then, tie on a Strike Foundry Lil' Nugget or full size Nugget on the fluorescent end with a clinch knot. These indicators rock, and they're the key to this whole system. They have a metal loop in both ends which is used for attaching your butt section and tippet, respectively, and are an easy-to-see fluorescent color on one half and a neutral gray color on the other. We generally use the Lil' Nugget for fishing the Hills, but the standard size is awesome for fishing the Bighorn or the North Platte. After attaching the butt section from your fly line to the fluorescent half of the indicator, you tie your tippet onto the loop on the loop on the gray half. We generally make this length 20"-48" for fishing our Black Hills streams, but it can be adjusted as necessary for the depth and speed of water you're fishing. After tying on the proper length of tippet, you simply attach your fly to the end. If you want to use a dropper, that's cool too! What's the advantage of a rig like this as opposed to a traditional nymph rig on a tapered leader? Sink rate and strike detection are the two biggest advantages. With the level tippet from the indicator to a tungsten fly, it sinks like a rock and gets to full depth in a matter of a couple seconds. With a traditional setup, half of your drift is often wasted waiting for your fly to get down - this equates to wasted fishing time and less fish in your net! Strike detection is the other big advantage. With the easy nymph rig, you have a straight, fairly taut connection to your fly or flies. This translates to seeing the strike almost the instant the fish takes the fly, rather than having to straighten out a tapered leader. This doesn't seem like a huge deal, but in nymph fishing seeing the strike a half-second sooner can mean the difference between a couple fish and a spectacular day. How do you fish the easy nymph rig? Our favorite way to toss this rig is with a long Czech nymph-style rod. We often keep almost all of our line off the water, just keeping the butt section and the indicator on the surface of the stream. You follow the indicator with your rod, and you almost get a pendulum-like drift. This keeps you at a great angle to set the hook, and you're already pretty taut to the flies which allows you to set the hook very quickly.
Jay with a big Black Hills Brown caught on the Easy-Nymph Rig! Jay with a big Black Hills Brown caught on the Easy-Nymph Rig!
All of this means that you get your flies down to the fish quicker, get a significantly better drift, and see your strikes sooner. These things combined equal more fish in your net! This is an incredibly effective setup to fish with, and it's very easy to learn how to do. We've been having spectacular luck on guided trips with this setup, and many of our customers have been really excited about how well it works. Stop by and we can show you how to rig it up and show you the Strike Foundry Nugget In-Line Indicators - you'll be surprised with how deadly this system can be! Thanks for reading! Ryan