Tackle

Saltwater 9-Weight Fly Setup

If you own one saltwater fly rod, make it a 9-weight. It throws the flies, handles the wind, and beats striped bass, albies and blues, the whole inshore fly game in one outfit.

The 9-weight is the do-everything saltwater fly rod for the Northeast. It has the backbone to punch a Deceiver into the wind and to fight a good striped bass or a screaming albie, yet it is light enough to cast all day. If you build one saltwater fly outfit, build this one.

The rod

A fast-action 9-weight is the sweet spot. We favor a premium Scott saltwater rod, it recovers quickly, generates line speed, and turns over big flies in wind, which is most of the battle in the salt. A crisp, fast blank makes long, accurate casts far easier when fish are moving.

The reel

Saltwater demands a real reel: a large-arbor reel with a fully sealed drag that shrugs off salt and stops a running fish. A Hatch is the standard here, smooth, strong and built to survive the salt for years. Back it with plenty of backing; an albie will show you all of it.

Line and leader

An intermediate line covers most inshore fly fishing, it stays just under the surface chop and swims flies at the right depth. Keep a floating spool for topwater and flats work. Run a nine-foot leader of 20 to 30 lb fluorocarbon, and add a short heavier bite guard when blues are around.

Tip Match the line to the water, not the fish. An intermediate is the workhorse, but a floating line for shallow flats and poppers, and a sinking tip for deep rips, will each out-fish the wrong line by a mile. Carry spare spools.

Flies to carry

Cover the bases: Clousers and Deceivers for baitfish, a Surf Candy or sand eel fly for slim bait, an EP peanut bunker for the fall, and a Gurgler or Crease Fly for topwater.

Knots for it

Build the fly-line connections with a nail knot (leader butt and backing to the fly line), and tie flies on with a non-slip loop knot for lively action.

From the page to the water

Learn it here, land it out there

Reading is a great start. The fastest way to get good is a day on the water with someone who does it every day.

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Note: fishing regulations (size limits, bag limits, seasons, permits) change often. Always confirm current rules with the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries (saltwater), MassWildlife (freshwater), or NOAA Fisheries (offshore/HMS) before you keep a fish.