I've caught fish my whole life on a fly, but never on a fly rod. The whole fry rod thing just seems a little gay to me.
From trout in streams, half pounders on the Eel...they're a sucker for a gray hackle with a yellow body fished with a light rod and a clear bobber. To Silver Salmon in the ocean. Troll a streamer with no weight back about 30' behind the boat, right in the prop wash and hang on!
I knew a guy who owned a fly fishing shop and he begged me to take him up on the Klamath for some steelhead fishing. I had access to a remote stretch of river. When we got there I told him he needs to fish a Renegade fly with a red tag, and fish it deep. I caught a limit and he didn't hook a fish. He couldn't get down to the fish. I offered to loan him my set up, but no. Before we left he asked if I would take a picture of him with the fish, which I did. The next time I went to his shop he had a big blown up photo of him and my fish hanging on the wall with his fly rod.
Having said that, there have been many times when a fly rod can't be beat. I just never got into it.
Lots of nuances to flyfishing that need attention. For example, you don't use a floating line if the idea is fishing deep. That's why they created weighted fly lines, weighted flies, weighted streamers. Most of all, it's about impossible to float a fly ON TOP of the surface with anything but flyrod gear. But then you already knew all that.
The first time I visited my buddy Joe after he moved from Baltimore to Ocean City, MD, we went out aboard his Boston whaler for stripers. He used his fly fishing gear with weighted line & weighted white streamers & I used spinning gear with weighted shrimp-colored plastic jigs. Our catch rate was about equal. Most hook-ups were about 10-15' deep.
I've watched him catch about every species of trout, white bass, largemouth, smallmouth, northern pike, bonefish, tarpon, salmon, crappie & walleye. About the only thing he didn't have much success with was big lake trout on one trip because they were extremely deep. So after two days he relented & used one of my baitcasting rigs.
One year at the OWWA annual conference, one of the tackle companies had casting contests for the different set-ups. With flyfishing tackle, he threw about 70 yds. I'm lucky to do 25-30 without getting in a tangle.
I can do really good with spinning or baitcasting gear, tho. In ancient history, Eagle Rare bourbon sponsored an outdoor skills competition that included trap shooting, air gun pistol shooting, 3D archery, a timed kayak race & a timed ATV obstacle course.
There was also casting accuracy with one's choice of tackle. They set out hula hoops at various angles & distances. I can't recall how many hoops, maybe about 8-10, but I nailed everyone with a baitcasting rig.
Points were awarded as per 1-3 finishers. I did enough in each of the other disciplines to win top prize. In addition to two bottles of boubon, this filled decanter was my trophy. All the booze in it has long ago evaporated, but I think I still have one of the bottles in my booze cabinet.
The bottles were packed in wooden boxes where the front panel slid upward...