The Time is Now to Learn to Fly Fish
Use our gear. Let our guides take you to trout, bass, pike, and panfish on the Connecticut and West Rivers — and show you how to cast to them.
Join one of our expert guides will take you boating to the holding spots of local fish while you learn the basics of fly casting and presentation.
Whether it’s a 2-hour session or half-day, you can be fishing the same day and will be able to fish on your own afterward.
Half-Day Drift on the Connecticut
In partnership with Trico Unlimited, BrattleFly offers guided trout fishing on the Battenkill River — one of the most storied wild trout streams in the northeastern United States. The Vermont Battenkill holds wild brown trout and native brook trout in cold, clear water from Arlington to Manchester.
Trico Unlimited guides bring over 75 years of combined experience on these waters. Lead guide Brew Moscarello is a 2024 Orvis Guide of the Year finalist, Vermont Fish & Wildlife Certified Instructor, and New York State Licensed Guide with over 40 years on the Battenkill.
Trout Fishing on the Battenkill
In partnership with Trico Unlimited, BrattleFly offers guided trout fishing on the Battenkill River — one of the most storied wild trout streams in the northeastern United States. The Vermont Battenkill holds wild brown trout and native brook trout in cold, clear water from Arlington to Manchester.
Trico Unlimited guides bring over 75 years of combined experience on these waters. Lead guide Brew Moscarello is a 2024 Orvis Guide of the Year finalist, Vermont Fish & Wildlife Certified Instructor, and New York State Licensed Guide with over 40 years on the Battenkill.
Morning Guided Fly Fishing Session
Afternoon Guided Fly Fishing Session
Full-Day Guided Fly Fishing Session
Bass & Pike on the Connecticut (coming soon)
Southern Vermont holds more fishable water than most anglers realize. BrattleFly guides trips across three distinct fisheries, seasonally matched to when each species is at its best.
Warm-water fly fishing — Connecticut River and West River
Smallmouth bass, northern pike, and common carp on moving water through and around Brattleboro. The Connecticut River corridor offers some of the most accessible and underutilized warm-water fly fishing in New England — technical enough for experienced anglers, approachable enough for beginners.
Smallmouth bass on the Connecticut are aggressive surface feeders holding in current seams behind mid-river structure. Early morning topwater produces some of the most visually exciting fly fishing available anywhere in the state. The West River adds moving-water variety closer to downtown, with tighter pocket water and its own healthy smallmouth population.
Northern pike occupy the slower backwater and oxbow sections of the Connecticut. Pike on the fly is reaction-strike fishing — large articulated streamers, efficient coverage of structure, and an entirely different discipline than trout or bass.
Common carp on the Connecticut River flats are available late May through September. Sight-fishing to tailing carp in clear, shallow water is among the most technically demanding fly fishing available in freshwater — closer in character to permit fishing on a saltwater flat than anything else in New England.
Still-water bass and panfish — Windham County ponds and reservoirs
Largemouth bass, bluegill, yellow perch, rock bass, and crappie are found throughout Windham and Bennington counties. Ideal for beginners, families, and anyone building their first fly fishing experience. These fisheries receive little to no fly fishing pressure — the fish are not educated, and the margin for error is wider than on moving water.
Trip Formats
Half-day guided trip — Four hours on the water. Appropriate for beginners, families, and anglers targeting a specific species or technique. Instruction included.
Full-day guided trip — A complete day covering multiple water types or a sustained focus on one fishery. Appropriate for experienced anglers and those wanting to cover more ground.
Instruction and casting clinics — On-the-water instruction for first-time fly fishers and anglers looking to improve specific skills. Available as standalone sessions or added to guided trips.
All skill levels welcome. No prior fly fishing experience required for warm-water and still-water trips.
Where We Fish
BrattleFly operates out of downtown Brattleboro, Vermont — at the confluence of the Connecticut and West Rivers, an hour from the Battenkill, and within easy reach of still-water fisheries throughout Windham and Bennington counties. Brattleboro sits at the southern gateway to Vermont on I-91, making it a natural first stop for anglers traveling north from Massachusetts toward the White River, Black River, Otter Creek, and the Northeast Kingdom.
The warm-water fisheries immediately surrounding Brattleboro — the Connecticut River corridor and West River — are largely uncrowded. That combination of quality, accessibility, and low pressure is increasingly rare in New England.