[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"learn-card-sight-fishing-basics":3},{"id":4,"title":5,"applyCta":6,"authorId":10,"body":11,"cardType":80,"description":81,"difficulty":82,"discipline":83,"editorId":10,"extension":85,"glossaryRefs":86,"hook":93,"meta":94,"navigation":95,"path":96,"publishedAt":97,"readingSeconds":98,"regionTags":99,"relatedCards":100,"safetyDisclaimerRequired":103,"seo":104,"status":105,"stem":106,"track":107,"updatedAt":97,"version":108,"__hash__":109},"learn_cards\u002Flearn\u002Fcards\u002Fsight-fishing-basics.md","Sight-Fishing Basics",{"label":7,"action":8,"target":9},"Try sight-fishing the Provo","open_water","provo-river",null,{"type":12,"value":13,"toc":76},"minimark",[14,23,26,53,56,70,73],[15,16,17,18,22],"p",{},"Sight fishing flips the equation. Instead of casting blind to where you ",[19,20,21],"em",{},"think"," fish are, you spot the fish first, watch how it's behaving, then make a single targeted cast. Catch rate goes up; pressure-per-fish goes down; the day becomes a hunt instead of a guess.",[15,24,25],{},"What you need:",[27,28,29,37,47],"ul",{},[30,31,32,36],"li",{},[33,34,35],"strong",{},"Polarized sunglasses."," Without them, you're looking at glare; with them, you see the bottom. Amber lenses for shaded water, copper for mixed light, gray for bright sun.",[30,38,39,42,43,46],{},[33,40,41],{},"A high vantage."," Walk ",[19,44,45],{},"above"," the water. Stand on a bank or a boulder. Look down through the surface, not across it.",[30,48,49,52],{},[33,50,51],{},"Patience."," A single fish takes 5 minutes to spot, 5 more to read its behavior. Rushing means you'll miss every fish you could have caught.",[15,54,55],{},"What to look for:",[27,57,58,61,64,67],{},[30,59,60],{},"The dark slash of a fish's silhouette against gravel.",[30,62,63],{},"The white flash of a turning trout's belly.",[30,65,66],{},"Nervous water — a small wake or surface bulge from a fish moving below.",[30,68,69],{},"Shadows that don't match what's casting them.",[15,71,72],{},"Once you've spotted a fish, watch it. Actively feeding (small movements toward drifting food)? Holding still (resting)? Cruising slowly? Each tells you whether to cast and what to throw.",[15,74,75],{},"The cast: from a position where the leader lands ahead of the fish, not on top of it. Match the fly to whatever it's eating. One drift through the feeding lane is usually enough.",{"title":77,"searchDepth":78,"depth":78,"links":79},"",2,[],"concept","Sight fishing flips the equation. Instead of casting blind to where you think fish are, you spot the fish first, watch how it's behaving, then make a single targeted cast. Catch rate goes up; pressure-per-fish goes down; the day becomes a hunt instead of a guess.","3",[84],"fly","md",[87,88,89,90,91,92],"presentation","dead-drift","lie","structure","current","feeding-lane","Spotting fish before you cast. The visual half of fly fishing — and the most rewarding way to fish on a clear sunny day.",{},true,"\u002Flearn\u002Fcards\u002Fsight-fishing-basics","2026-05-08","140",[],[101,102],"reading-rises","eddies-and-soft-spots",false,{"title":5,"description":81},"published","learn\u002Fcards\u002Fsight-fishing-basics","advanced","1","EA_ZkIO1KhHMc9d4anDqLp_7Ef8GCzXZXWfts_r__dc"]