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Glossary
reading-water

Seam

The boundary between fast and slow water — often where a riffle dumps into a flat. Fish hold on seams to eat without fighting current.

Also calledseams

Picture a clear edge between turbulent water and smooth water. That edge is a seam, and fish stack on the slow side, picking off food washed down by the fast side.

Seams form below riffles, behind boulders, along undercut banks, and where tributaries enter. Casting parallel to a seam — with the fly drifting just on the slow side — is one of the highest-percentage shots in fly fishing.