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Australian bass and estuary perch are built for ambush. They sit tight to timber, weed edges, rock bars, drains, and undercut banks, waiting for something edible to make a mistake.
This collection covers the flies you need for that sort of fishing, from surface patterns that bloop, skate and wake across the top, through to baitfish, shrimp, prawn and small streamer patterns that can be worked through the snags and current lines.
For bass, that might mean a noisy surface fly tight against the bank at first light, or a small baitfish pattern stripped past a drowned log. For estuary perch, it might be a shrimp profile worked slowly around bridge pylons, rock walls, moorings, weed beds and back eddies.
These are flies chosen for Australian water and Australian species. The sort of patterns that suggest cicadas, moths, shrimp, gudgeon, glassies, small mullet and other bits of food that bass and perch actually eat.
Whether you are fishing freshwater creeks, tidal rivers, lakes, estuary edges or brackish backwaters, this range gives you the right mix of surface, subsurface and structure friendly flies to cover the water properly.
Australian bass and estuary perch are built for ambush. They sit tight to timber, weed edges, rock bars, drains, and undercut banks, waiting for something edible to make a mistake.
This collection covers the flies you need for that sort of fishing, from surface patterns that bloop, skate and wake across the top, through to baitfish, shrimp, prawn and small streamer patterns that can be worked through the snags and current lines.
For bass, that might mean a noisy surface fly tight against the bank at first light, or a small baitfish pattern stripped past a drowned log. For estuary perch, it might be a shrimp profile worked slowly around bridge pylons, rock walls, moorings, weed beds and back eddies.
These are flies chosen for Australian water and Australian species. The sort of patterns that suggest cicadas, moths, shrimp, gudgeon, glassies, small mullet and other bits of food that bass and perch actually eat.
Whether you are fishing freshwater creeks, tidal rivers, lakes, estuary edges or brackish backwaters, this range gives you the right mix of surface, subsurface and structure friendly flies to cover the water properly.













Flyfishing for Australia’s specialty species calls for a different approach. From Murray cod in the Murrumbidgee to estuary perch in the Hopkins River, these fish respond to targeted flies and tactical presentation. Each species pushes you to think like a predator and adapt to the conditions, which is exactly why specialty fly patterns exist.
In freshwater, it’s about flies that behave the way the fish expect. Cod flies need to push water, get down quickly and stay in the zone around deep snags. Carp dry flies need subtle movement and a soft footprint to tempt spooky fish in slow-moving creeks and still waters. Bass and perch eat with aggression, so surface poppers and articulated streamers shine around structure and in low light.
On the salt, patterns matter just as much. Whether you’re casting at luderick along Sydney’s harbour walls or searching for bream in estuary channels, fly choice influences your odds. The best specialty flies are designed with this in mind — built to track correctly, resist fouling and stay visible in dirty or moving water. They’re not just imitations. They’re tools for flyfishers who want to fish smarter.
Do you prefer to shop in store and speak to a fellow flyfisherman? Put the below address into your map and come say hello to our friendly team today:
• 211 Moray St, South Melbourne VIC 3205
STORE HOURS:
• Mon-Fri | 9am-5:00pm
• Saturday | 9am-2pm
• Sunday | Closed


