Poronui Station logo The Lodge Fishing Options Heli Fishing
Quicktime VRs Fishing Calendar Activities Trip Information
Newsletter Reservations Contact Us Public Access to Poronui Poronui Station logo

Clothing

At Poronui Ranch the atmosphere is relaxed, and neat, casual clothing is most appropriate. A sweater or jacket is useful for cooler evenings, or for visits to our cool wine cellar.

During the summer months most professional fishing guides wade wet. The uniform of choice is a pair of polypropylene long johns under short pants. Early or late season lightweight goretex (or similar) waders are the most practical. Clothing is best layered with a T-shirt under a long sleeved cotton shirt and a light sweater or jacket. Some form of weatherproof outer garment is essential for fishing in New Zealand, as the weather in the mountains can change quickly. Some guests carry a backpack, others use vest pockets.

The sun is particuarly bright this far south, so a wide brimmed hat is recommended. Sunblock of factor 15 should always be worn on the face and hands - even under cloudy conditions. Polaroid sunglasses in an amber or brown tint are essential for seeing fish in our streams.

Felt soled wading boots (without cleats) are another essential and are best worn with neoprene socks and gravel guards. If an angler is to bring no other fishing gear, we recommend your own wading boots.

The North Island has few nasty insects - but a good quality repellant is handy.

All clothing, hats and acoutrements must be dark or dull coloured as our fish take flight at overly bright colours.

Finally, if you want your friends believe your fishing stories, a camera is a must.


Fishing tackle

The all round rod of choice for New Zealand anglers during summer is nine foot in six weight. Coupling this with a quality reel (with a good drag system) and a matching weight forward line is the best choice for most fishing conditions here. A competent angler may well prefer a lighter and shorter rod on smaller streams, but for bigger water this may be inadequate.

Most of our fish are cast to within 40 feet. This may sound easy over open water, but with a breeze in your face and no back cast room, a less experienced angler is better with a rod nine feet plus and a line that is overweighted by one (so a six weight rod with a seven weight line) to make longer casts and mends easier.

Like clothing, the fly line must be dull in colour with dark green or grey preferred. White, orange or any other flourescent coloured fly line is not suitable for New Zealand's clear water conditions and leaves the angler at a serious disadvantage. At Poronui Ranch we have facility to dye fly lines. An assortment of tapered leaders from 9-15 feet, sizes 3x through 5x with matching tippet material is suitable.

Don't bother bringing a landing net - most American and English nets are too small for our trout.

Flies

Many North American and English patterns work very well in New Zealand, particularly dry flies.

In sizes 10-16: Royal Wulff, Parachute Adams, Humpy (yellow and green), Elk Hair Caddis and Twilight Beauty (like a Dark Cahill) are all ideal.

Local favourites are Red Tipped Governor, Kakahi Queen, Cicada (like a green Joes Hopper), Black Gnat Blowfly (must be flourescent blue), Coch y Bondhu. Nymphs need to be dark coloured with lots of hair and very heavy.

A roughly tied Hair and Copper with plenty of weight bound in (it has to audibly pop when it hits the water) and with a little flashabout as an attractor tied into it will also be sucessful.

In sizes 8-14 our favourites are: Beadhead, Pheasant Tail, Half Back, Stonefly (black), Peeking Caddis, Girdle Bug.

Copyright: Poronui Ranch Ltd Site by Fusebox Design