Grayling: The Most Underrated UK Game Fish

Grayling occupy a strange position in UK game fishing – technically available on many of the same rivers as trout, genuinely beautiful fish with that distinctive sail-like dorsal fin, and yet treated by a lot of anglers as a consolation prize rather than a target species in their own right.

Part of this, I think, is timing. Grayling fish best through autumn and winter, exactly when most trout anglers have packed the rod away for the season. That means grayling fishing happens in relative quiet, on rivers that would be busy with trout anglers in summer but are practically empty by November – which, honestly, is one of the things I like most about targeting them.

They also fight differently to trout in a way that surprises anglers who haven’t targeted them specifically – that distinctive dorsal fin gives them real lift and a slightly different fighting style in the current, and a good grayling from a UK chalk stream or northern river is a genuinely satisfying fish to land, not a lesser substitute for a trout.

If you’ve only ever caught grayling incidentally while trout fishing, I’d genuinely recommend dedicating a proper session to them through the autumn and winter months when trout seasons are closing or closed. Nymph fishing tends to be the most productive approach through the colder months, and the quiet rivers alone make it worth the effort even before you factor in the fish themselves.

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