Magazine Suggestions?

JMow

New member
Joined
May 18, 2023
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11
City
Lancaster County
Hello all,

I am hoping to get some recommendations on some fly fishing-oriented publications that can help further my knowledge alongside the resources on this forum. I already receive/am subscribed to the following ones:

Dark Skies Magazine: Free resource, love the format and website, no complaints here at all with it.

TROUT (w/ TU membership): a little ad heavy but content is good and varied, sometimes a little skewed to fishing in the west.

PA Outdoor News: PA-focused publication that covers trapping, hunting and fishing. I use this to keep up with general news, I really enjoy the coverage of a public piece of land in each publication that covers what can be done in each park, game land, etc.

I am also looking to subscribe to Fly Fisherman Magazine ($15 for 1 year digital subscription) but I stopped reading In-Fisherman, which is also published by the same company, due to the amount of ads in it. I know they are a necessary evil but it became crazy recently.

Any suggestions on other free or paid resources from everyone?
 
If you’re into tying Fly Tyer magazine is excellent. Step by step instructions and some excellent articles to boot.
 
There is so much more, and often better, information available online these days that many magazine publications are not worth subscribing to/paying for.

I’m not going to name them, but there are quite a few Internet forums, similar to this, pertaining to fly fishing, fly tying, etc. that pretty much cover the world of fly fishing, many of which have more information in their archives than you could ever read in your lifetime - all you have to do is search them.

Here is one free online flyfishing magazine pertaining to Montana that you might be interested in, even if you never plan go there. https://mtflyfishmag.com/
 
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There is so much more, and often better, information available online these days that many magazine publications are not worth subscribing to/ paying for.

I’m not going to name them, but there are quite a few Internet forums, similar to this, pertaining to fly fishing, fly tying, etc. that pretty much cover the world of fly fishing, many of which have more information in their archives than you could ever read in your lifetime - all you have to do is search them.

https://mtflyfishmag.com/

This is obviously the case, but I too have recently been feeling it would be nice to get some print magazines. I stare at my phone or a computer too much already; it would be a good change to have some hard copies of magazines laying around for when I'm... um... doing important things.

I've only really read Trout and Fly Tyer, and neither commanded my attention to keep up a subscription, unfortunately.
 
Pennsylvania Angler is a pretty good magazine. It is only bi-monthly but it usually has at least 2 articles (often more) pertaining to fly angling in our state. You can subscribe to it on the same website as you get your license online.

Fly tyer is the only other one I get anymore.
 
Obviously not fly fishing, but I thought I'd re-subscribe to North American Whitetail magazine to bring back old times/memories. I bought their very first issue waaay back in the 70's. It WAS an awesome deer hunting magazine for a lot of years. Boy, what a letdown that was. I couldn't believe how much it had changed, and for the worse! In fact, it was so bad that I discontinued my subscription. I'll never try that again with any magazine.

As mentioned, there are just too many other options via the internet where you can read/learn about pretty much anything, at zero cost.
 
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American Fly Fishing. It's more of a destination magazine, but the articles on flies and tying are good. You'll get plenty of hints and hatch charts for these destinations. The other way to go is to type in a stream in your Google search and behind it, Hatch Charts. You really need to know three things- how to cast, what to put on the end of the line, and what size tippet needs to connect to the fly. Get those right and you'll be off to a good start. You'll refine your education more later when you get skunked. Your best success will be fishing in streams that contain a decent number of fish. It ups your odds. Also, get off the beaten path. The fewer flies that fish see, the better your odds. Lastly, the best spot to catch fish is where the fast water meets the slow water. You're welcome.
 
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