Morrish Hopper
For those that believe the bottom profile of a hopper pattern trumps all other attributes. A realistic, durable, high floating Hopper pattern. Use this pattern from around the end of July to late September. When fishing this fly, make 3 or 4 quick short strips, then let it sit for about 10 seconds and repeat. You can catch some real lunkers with this fly during Hopper season. Great for all game fish, including trout and bass.
FAQs
What does the Morrish Hopper imitate?
The Morrish Hopper imitates a grasshopper that has blundered into the water and is now having a very bad afternoon. Grasshoppers are terrestrial insects, meaning they live on land, not in the stream, but trout are happy to eat them when wind, sloppy jumping, or streamside grass puts them on the menu. This fly gives trout that big, buggy, floating meal they recognize during warm-weather hopper season.
When should I fish a Morrish Hopper?
Fish a Morrish Hopper from late spring through summer and into early fall, especially on warm, windy afternoons when grasshoppers are active along the banks. Hopper fishing is especially famous in the West, where open valleys and wind can push real hoppers into big trout rivers, but it can work anywhere trout live near grassy edges. A good hopper day usually feels like summer is leaning over the river and dumping snacks in
Where does the Morrish Hopper work best?
The Morrish Hopper works best along grassy banks, undercut edges, meadow streams, riffle margins, foam lines, and slow seams near shore. Cast it close to the bank with a natural little plop, then let it drift like a real hopper that just made a poor life choice. Trout often use shade, bankside cover, and broken current for safety, so those edges are prime places to show them a big terrestrial meal.
How should I fish the Morrish Hopper?
Fish the Morrish Hopper as a dry fly with a dead-drift first. Make a bank shot, let it land with a soft plop, and follow with mends so it rides naturally. You can twitch it occasionally in softer water, but do not turn it into a bass popper unless the fish ask for drama. It also makes a great dry in a hopper-dropper rig because it is visible and buoyant enough to suspend a small nymph, ant, beetle, or sunken terrestrial underneath.
Why carry a Morrish Hopper instead of a smaller dry fly?
Carry a Morrish Hopper when trout are willing to look up for a bigger bite. During terrestrial season, a hopper offers a high-calorie meal compared with tiny midges or small mayflies, and its foam body, legs, and bold silhouette make it easy for both trout and anglers to see. It is not always the subtle choice—but when bankside fish are hunting groceries, subtle can sit down and let the Morrish Hopper cook.