Choisir sa soie à mouche — Ce que personne ne vous dit

Axon Blog

Choisir sa soie à mouche — Ce que personne ne vous dit

13 May 2026

The first time I held a fly rod in my hands, I made the same mistake as the vast majority of beginners.

I bought a beautiful rod. I bought a matching reel. And for the fly line — I grabbed what the salesperson pointed to on the shelf. A #5. Same as my rod.

The result on the water? Total frustration. The fly line went nowhere. The rod wouldn't load. I thought I lacked technique.

It wasn't my technique. It was my fly line.

Why the fly line is the most important decision in your setup

Most beginner fly fishers spend hours comparing rods. The action, the material, the brand, the price. And they choose their fly line in 30 seconds — because the number matches the rod.

That's exactly backwards.

The fly line is the engine. The rod is the chassis. You can have the best chassis in the world — without the right engine, you're going nowhere.

Here's what nobody tells you at the fly shop: two fly lines with the same #5 designation can perform radically differently on the water. One will load your rod perfectly at 25 feet. The other won't load until 40 feet. Same number. Opposite results.

The reason? The actual weight in grains — not the number on the box.

Understanding the number on the box — what it doesn't tell you

The fly line numbering system dates back to 1961. It was designed for slow-action fiberglass rods. Since then, carbon fiber rods have transformed the industry — but the numbering system hasn't changed.

What that means in practice: a #5 fly line should weigh 140 grains according to the official standard. In reality, modern fly lines often weigh between 148 and 175 grains — and they're all labeled #5.

A 35-grain difference on a fly line is the equivalent of nearly 1.5 line sizes. That's enormous.

That's why Axon publishes the actual grain weight on all its fly lines. Because that's the only information that truly matters when choosing.

The 4 questions to ask before buying a fly line

1. Where are you fishing?

A small forest trout stream calls for a short, light-headed line — for precise casts in tight spaces. A large open river with wind calls for a heavier, longer head — to maintain control at distance.

The same line number comes in dozens of different profiles. Choosing the right profile for your water is just as important as choosing the right number.

2. What is your rod's action?

A fast-action rod loads higher in the blank. It needs a slightly heavier fly line to load properly — especially at short range. A progressive-action rod loads along its entire length. It's more forgiving of fly line weight errors.

General rule: with a fast-action rod, choose a fly line whose grain weight is at the top of the recommended range. With a progressive action, the middle of the range is sufficient.

3. Floating, intermediate, or sinking?

For the majority of river fly fishers, a floating fly line covers 80% of situations. It allows you to fish on the surface with dry flies and just below the surface with light nymphs.

An intermediate line sinks slowly below the surface — ideal for calm water and emergers. A sinking line descends quickly — for deep streamers and strong currents.

If you're just starting out: begin with a floating line. Master it before exploring the others.

4. WF or DT?

The Weight Forward (WF) concentrates all the weight in the front head. One to two false casts are enough to reach fishing distance. It's the choice of 90% of fly fishers today.

The Double Taper (DT) has a symmetrical profile — same taper at both ends. It requires more false casts but offers a more delicate presentation. Bonus: when one end wears out, you reverse the line. It's the purist's choice for small trout streams.

For the vast majority of situations: WF.

The cheap fly line trap

There's a real temptation to save money on the fly line and invest more in the rod.

That's exactly backwards.

An entry-level rod with a quality fly line will outperform a high-end rod with a cheap fly line every single time. The fly line touches the water. The fly line loads the rod. The fly line determines how your fly lands.

A quality fly line lasts 3 to 5 years with minimal maintenance. It's the investment with the best return in all your fly fishing gear.

The Axon system — guaranteed compatibility from the first cast

At Axon, every fly line is selected and tested to precisely match the rods in our lineup. We publish the grain weight, head length, and recommended profile for each combination.

No guesswork. No costly trial and error. You take the gear out of the box — it works.

That's the promise of Axon's pre-calibrated systems.

Have questions about which fly line to choose for your specific situation? Send us a message or email us at contactinfo@axonflyfishing.com — we respond personally.

Designed for passionate anglers, by a passionate angler.

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