Moving water sorts fish into predictable lies - learn to read current, and you can walk up to a strange river and know where to cast.
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Pools
Why fish hold here: The deep, slow water where fish rest and shelter between feeding - the single most reliable holding water on any river or stream.
How to fish it: Fish the head of the pool where food washes in, and the tail where fish sit waiting for it. In hot or bright weather the deepest part holds fish through the day; work bait or lures slowly and let them sink into the deeper water.
Tip: The head and tail of a pool usually out-fish the flat middle - that is where fish feed rather than just rest.
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Riffles & runs
Why fish hold here: Shallow, broken, well-oxygenated water full of insect life - a natural feeding lane, especially early and late in the day.
How to fish it: Cast up and across and let the current carry your bait or fly naturally down through the broken water. Fish sit facing upstream waiting for food to tumble to them, so a drag-free drift is everything.
Tip: Broken water hides you from the fish - you can get much closer in a riffle than in a flat, clear pool.
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Current seams
Why fish hold here: The line where fast and slow water meet - fish hold in the easy water and dart into the fast lane to grab food as it passes.
How to fish it: Present your bait or lure right along the seam, letting it track the edge between the two speeds. Cast so the drift follows the line rather than cutting across it.
Tip: Seams form below rocks, on the inside of bends and where a tributary enters - learn to spot the change in surface texture.
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Undercut banks
Why fish hold here: Overhanging, hollowed-out banks that give big, wary fish overhead cover and a current break - prime lies for the largest fish in the stretch.
How to fish it: Approach from downstream and low, and drift a bait or lure tight to the bank so it swings in under the cut. Keep off the skyline, because the fish here spook easily.
Tip: The bigger the fish, the more it values overhead cover - do not walk the bank heavily, as they feel your footfall.
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Behind boulders
Why fish hold here: The calm pocket of slack water behind and in front of a midstream rock, where fish rest out of the flow while food sweeps past on both sides.
How to fish it: Drop a bait or lure into the cushion just in front of the rock and the pocket behind it. Both hold fish; the front cushion is often overlooked.
Tip: Any current break - a boulder, a log, a bridge pier - is worth a cast. Fish line up behind structure to save energy.
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Confluences
Why fish hold here: Where two flows meet, food and oxygen funnel together and fish gather to intercept it - one of the richest spots on any river.
How to fish it: Work the seam that forms below the junction and the slower water to either side. A tributary mouth after rain, pushing in food and colour, can be outstanding.
Tip: After heavy rain, fish stack at the edge of an incoming coloured flow, feeding on what it washes down.