[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"learn-glossary-strip":3},{"id":4,"title":5,"aliases":6,"body":10,"category":56,"definitionShort":57,"description":16,"disciplineTags":58,"extension":60,"meta":61,"navigation":62,"path":63,"relatedCards":64,"relatedTerms":65,"seo":69,"sourceRef":70,"stem":71,"term":5,"__hash__":72},"learn_glossary\u002Flearn\u002Fglossary\u002Fstrip.md","Strip",[7,8,9],"stripping","stripped","strip-set",{"type":11,"value":12,"toc":52},"minimark",[13,17,20,49],[14,15,16],"p",{},"Stripping is how fly anglers retrieve flies that aren't drifting — streamers, wet flies, saltwater patterns. The off-hand pulls line back through the rod hand's index finger; the fly jumps forward, then pauses (or doesn't) before the next pull.",[14,18,19],{},"Common cadences:",[21,22,23,31,37,43],"ul",{},[24,25,26,30],"li",{},[27,28,29],"strong",{},"Short strip"," — 4–8 inches at a time. Wounded baitfish, dazed prey.",[24,32,33,36],{},[27,34,35],{},"Long strip"," — 12–18 inches. Active baitfish, panicked retreat.",[24,38,39,42],{},[27,40,41],{},"Strip-strip-pause"," — two pulls, beat of stillness. Most takes happen on the pause.",[24,44,45,48],{},[27,46,47],{},"Figure-eight"," — small twitches near the rod tip. For close-in pickups when a fish has tracked the fly.",[14,50,51],{},"The cadence matters as much as the fly profile. Predatory fish key on rhythm.",{"title":53,"searchDepth":54,"depth":54,"links":55},"",2,[],"technique","To pull line in by hand with the off-hand, retrieving the fly. Strip cadence (speed plus pause) controls how the fly behaves underwater.",[59],"fly","md",{},true,"\u002Flearn\u002Fglossary\u002Fstrip",[],[66,67,68],"streamer","swing","presentation",{"description":16},null,"learn\u002Fglossary\u002Fstrip","ZegXKdFxP0A86b0T1F1FFqBLVeUWQIWWTMUQVKI71_s"]