[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"learn-card-reading-rises":3},{"id":4,"title":5,"applyCta":6,"authorId":10,"body":11,"cardType":44,"description":17,"difficulty":45,"discipline":46,"editorId":10,"extension":48,"glossaryRefs":49,"hook":56,"meta":57,"navigation":58,"path":59,"publishedAt":60,"readingSeconds":61,"regionTags":62,"relatedCards":63,"safetyDisclaimerRequired":66,"seo":67,"status":68,"stem":69,"track":70,"updatedAt":60,"version":71,"__hash__":72},"learn_cards\u002Flearn\u002Fcards\u002Freading-rises.md","Reading Rises",{"label":7,"action":8,"target":9},"Watch for rises on the Provo","open_water","provo-river",null,{"type":12,"value":13,"toc":40},"minimark",[14,18,25,31,37],[15,16,17],"p",{},"A trout rising at the surface is the most rewarding sight in fly fishing — and the most informative. The shape of the rise tells you what's actually being eaten and gives you the next thirty seconds of strategy.",[15,19,20,24],{},[21,22,23],"strong",{},"Splashy rise."," Water explodes; you see a tail or even the whole fish. Usually a chase — caddis or a stonefly skating across the surface, or terrestrials being swept by. Match with a high-floating, motion-friendly pattern: Elk Hair Caddis, a hopper, a stimulator.",[15,26,27,30],{},[21,28,29],{},"Head-and-tail rise."," A slow porpoising motion — head up, then a humped back, then a tail. The fish is suspended just below the film, eating emergers. Adult dry-fly patterns get refused here; tie on a CDC emerger or a trailing-shuck and fish it in the surface film.",[15,32,33,36],{},[21,34,35],{},"Sip rise or dimple."," A subtle swirl that barely breaks the surface, often soundless. Small adult mayfly duns or spinners. Match the size and silhouette as closely as you can — these fish are the pickiest.",[15,38,39],{},"Watch a rising fish for thirty seconds before casting. The cadence tells you the rhythm; the form tells you the fly. One sharp guess saves you cycling through three flies.",{"title":41,"searchDepth":42,"depth":42,"links":43},"",2,[],"concept","2",[47],"fly","md",[50,51,52,53,54,55],"rise","dry-fly","dun","emerger","hatch","mayfly","Splash, sip, or dimple — what the rise form tells you about which fly the fish actually wants.",{},true,"\u002Flearn\u002Fcards\u002Freading-rises","2026-05-08","110",[],[64,65],"the-dead-drift","tying-on-a-dropper-rig",false,{"title":5,"description":17},"published","learn\u002Fcards\u002Freading-rises","building","1","TnD96XUottvF5Rq3Pt5AJBO0MMOBZE5xzNbEkPFL7hM"]