SWTU, P.O. Box 45555, Madison, WI 53744-5555 president@swtu.org

Red Fur Ant

Some things turn out better when done in pairs. 

Honey Dun Flymph

Honey Dun Flymph

Some things turn out better when done in pairs. 

Waterhen Bloa

Whenever you venture astream, you carry the accu­mulated wisdom and technological advances of gen­erations of an­gling predecessors. 

Green Tail

Fountains of Youth – Classic trout flies that have withstood the test of time … flies that remain “forever young” by Rusty Dunn It is a glorious late April day in England in the early 1800s.  Daffodils trumpet… Read More

Little Red Sedge

little red sedge rusty dunn

The hopes and dreams of most dry fly anglers rest on the shoulders of but two groups of insects, the mayflies and the caddisflies. 

Greenwell’s Glory, Tweed Style

Greenwell's Glory, Tweed Style

A time-honored Scottish proverb states, “There are two things a Highlander likes naked, and one of them is malt whisky”.  If that Highlander be a fly fisher, the other naked delight is a trout fly. 

Fly Tying: Horner Deer Hair / Goofus Bug / Humpy

Horner Deer Hair / Goofus Bug / Humpy

Casting locally designed flies to wild native trout is hard to beat. 

Fly Tying: Orange Partridge

The technology of fly tying took a giant leap forward in 2,640 BC when, according to legend, a Chinese Em­press named Leizu discovered that the natural glue of silk­worm cocoons could be softened in hot water and a long thin filament of pure silk unwound from each cocoon.

Fly Tying Course Registration – 2018

Fly Tying

Learn about these free classes and how to register.

Fly Tying: Peeking Caddis

Today’s most popular cased caddis pattern is prob­a­bly that of George Anderson, owner of a well-known fly shop in Livingston, MT. He designed the ‘Peeking Cad­dis’ in the 1970s to imitate Mother’s Day cad­dis of the Yellowstone River.