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Bumblebee Fly Pattern | A Deadly Terrestrial | Fly Tying Tutorial

Bumblebee Fly Pattern | A Deadly Terrestrial | Fly Tying Tutorial

Watch this video to learn about terrestrials. Bumblebee Fly Pattern | A Deadly Terrestrial | Fly Tying Tutorial - get expert insights on fly fishin...

Terrestrial flies imitate land-based insects like hoppers, ants, beetles, and cicadas that trout feed on aggressively during summer months. When hatches are sparse and fish are looking up at the banks, these buoyant patterns can trigger explosive surface eats. Stock a range of sizes for everything from small foam ants to big foam hoppers, and fish them tight to the banks.
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Umpqua Chubby Chernobyl FlyUmpqua Chubby Chernobyl Fly
Umpqua Umpqua Chubby Chernobyl Fly
Sale priceFrom $2.49 Regular price$2.99
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Stimulator Dry Fly
Umpqua Stimulator Dry Fly
Sale price$2.99
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Morrish Hopper foam fishing fly with tan and cream foam body, bright orange foam wings, white rubber legs and gold hookUmpqua Morrish Hopper foam fly with bright orange foam wings, tan foam body, yellow underbelly and gray striped rubber legs
Umpqua Morrish Hopper Fly
Sale price$3.99
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Umpqua Big Fat Angie fly with black foam body, orange chenille abdomen, gray parachute hackle and black rubber legsUmpqua Big Fat Angie fishing fly with tan foam body, pale synthetic wing, yellow rubber legs and brown hackle on hook
Umpqua Big Fat Angie Fly
Sale priceFrom $3.49 Regular price$3.99
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Umpqua Amys Ant dry fly with tan foam body, olive sparkle dubbing, brown rubber legs and tan deer-hair wingUmpqua Amys Ant dry fly with black foam body, red dubbed thorax, tan deer-hair wing, black rubber legs
Umpqua Amys Ant Dry Fly
Sale price$3.49
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Royal Wulff Dry FlyProduct video from Trident Fly Fishing
Umpqua Royal Wulff Dry Fly
Sale price$2.99
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Umpqua Humpy dry fly: red silk body, dense brown hackle, white deer-hair wing and gray feather tail on hookUmpqua Humpy dry fly with tan deer-hair wing, dense brown hackle, yellow foam body and bronze hook
Umpqua Humpy Dry Fly
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PMX Dry FlyProduct video from Trident Fly Fishing
Umpqua PMX Dry Fly
Sale priceFrom $2.49 Regular price$2.99
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Umpqua Hippie Stomper fly with black foam body, white tufted wing, barred rubber legs, brown tail and gold hookProduct video from Trident Fly Fishing
Umpqua Hippie Stomper Fly
Sale price$3.49
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Umpqua Dave's Hopper fly with gray foam head, brown deer-hair wing, yellow dubbing body and red tail accent on bronze hook
Umpqua Dave's Hopper Fly
Sale price$2.99
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Hi-Vis foam beetle fly: black foam oval body, bright orange foam wing, brown underbody and orange legs on hook
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Royal Coachman Dry Fly
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Parachute Ant Dry Fly
Umpqua Parachute Ant Dry Fly
Sale price$2.99
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Umpqua Bionic Ant fly with black foam body, white foam head, copper hackle fibers and gold hook for fly fishing
Umpqua Bionic Ant Fly
Sale price$2.99
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Parachute Hopper Fly
Umpqua Parachute Hopper Fly
Sale price$3.49
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Umpqua Flying Ant fishing fly with black dubbing segmented body, brown hackle collar, gray feather wings, bronze hook
Umpqua Flying Ant Fly
Sale price$2.99
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Black deer hair ant fly with segmented fuzzy body, dense black hackle, pale deer-hair wing tuft and gold hook
Umpqua Deer Hair Ant Fly
Sale price$2.99
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Tan and olive Fat Head Moth fly with dense tan feather wing, bulbous deer-hair head and gold hook
Umpqua Fat Head Moth Fly
Sale price$2.99
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Tan foam Baby Boy Hopper fly with tufted tan deer-hair wing, brown rubber legs, black eye spots and gold hook for fly fishing
Umpqua Baby Boy Hopper Fly
Sale price$3.99
Bright yellow Chubby Sally dry fly with foam body, white wing, striped rubber legs and red tail on hook
Umpqua Chubby Sally Dry Fly
Sale price$2.99
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Terrestrials Quick Picks

  • Best All-Around: Umpqua Chubby Chernobyl Fly - For anglers who want one foam terrestrial that can cover a lot of water. It floats high and is a common choice when you want to run a dry dropper.

  • Best Value: Stimulator Dry Fly - For beginners and pack trips when you want a simple searching dry that is easy to see. It has a buggy profile that works well in pocket water and riffles.

  • Best for Big Water: Thunder Thighs Hopper Fly - For late-summer hopper days when you need a bigger meal that shows up from a distance. The foam build helps it stay up in faster currents and with heavier droppers.

  • Best for Technical Water: Flying Ant Fly - For clear water and wary trout that slide out for smaller terrestrials. The slimmer profile is a good change-up when big foam dries get refused.

  • Best for Stonefly Water: Rogue Foam Stone Fly - For freestones and pocket water where a stonefly silhouette draws looks all season. The foam body helps it ride high so you can drift it tight to banks, seams, and structure.

How to Choose Terrestrials

Match the bug, not the calendar

Action: Start with hoppers and big foam attractors when you are fishing grassy banks, windy afternoons, and fast water. Switch to ants and beetles when the river is low, clear, or the fish are tracking small bugs near the edge.

Best for: Hoppers on meadow streams and freestones, ants under trees and brush, beetles on calm edges and foam lines. If fish are eating mayflies or caddis, also check our Dry Flies and Spinners collection for closer matches.

Pick a float style you can see and control

Action: In rough water, pick higher-floating foam or hackly patterns that stay on top and stay visible. In slow or glassy water, pick slimmer patterns that land lighter and drift clean.

Avoid if: You are getting short strikes, blown-up foam bodies, or lots of drag, it is usually a sign to go smaller, go darker, or lengthen your leader and tippet.

Plan your rig around where fish are holding

Action: Fish terrestrials tight to banks, under cut grass, and along overhanging limbs. On deeper runs, add a nymph as a dropper to cover both surface and subsurface eats.

Best for: A single terrestrial when fish are clearly looking up, and a dry dropper when you need to probe ledges, pockets, and deeper seams.

Materials & Durability

  • Dry them out: Let flies air-dry after the trip so foam, hackle, and dubbing do not stay waterlogged in your box.

  • Rotate patterns: If a fly starts sinking, swap it out and dry it, or switch to a fresh one.

  • Check the hook point: Foam flies get chewed and dragged on rocks, touch up or replace dull hooks.

  • Watch the foam: Torn foam bodies and missing legs can still catch fish, but they usually lose buoyancy faster.

Complete Your Setup

Related Gear

  • Nymphs - Great for building a dry dropper rig under a hopper, beetle, or ant.

  • Tippet - Helps you fine-tune drift and turnover, especially when you size down to ants and beetles.

  • Weights, Indicators & Floatants - Floatant keeps dries riding higher, and small weights help droppers reach the right lane.

  • Fly Boxes - Keeps foam bugs from getting crushed and makes quick pattern changes easier.

Related Guides

Terrestrials FAQs

Q: What are terrestrial flies in fly fishing?

A: Terrestrial flies imitate land insects like hoppers, ants, beetles, and moths. They end up in the river from wind, bankside grass, and overhanging trees.

Q: When should I fish terrestrial flies for trout?

A: Many anglers lean on terrestrials from mid-summer into fall. They can also work in late spring, especially on warm, windy days near grassy banks.

Q: What size terrestrial fly should I start with?

A: Start larger in rough water or when you need a fly you can track. Go smaller when the water is clear, the fish are selective, or you are fishing calm edges.

Q: Are foam terrestrials better than deer hair or hackle dries?

A: Foam usually floats longer and carries a dropper more easily. Hair and hackle patterns can land lighter and can look more natural in slow water.

Q: How do I fish a terrestrial fly, dead drift or twitch?

A: Most of the time, start with a clean dead drift. Add an occasional small twitch near banks or under branches if fish are not committing.

Q: Can I run a nymph under a terrestrial fly?

A: Yes, terrestrials are a common top fly for a dry dropper setup. Use it to suspend a nymph through seams and pockets while still covering surface eats.

Q: What tippet should I use for terrestrials?

A: Bigger foam patterns often turn over fine on stronger tippet, while ants and beetles usually drift better on finer tippet. If your fly is dragging, longer and thinner often helps.

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