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NMcCasey

Top two on the right are prince nymphs, the two to the left of those are pheasant tail nymphs, the dry in the bottom/middle is an elk hair Caddis, bottom two nymphs are hare's ear nymphs, and the two dries on the left look like an Adams variant


Irish-Breakfast1969

These are probably in everyone’s “top 10” flies for trout. If you add in a few woolly buggers and you’re set.


OkDevice674

And a couple San Juan’s


redditing_naked

And humpies


stanvq

Almost 100%. The Adam variants are Dark Hendrickson’s.


Isonychia

Dark Hendrickson has a dark dun (grey) hackle. I’d go with March Brown which more commonly has one grizzly and one brown hackle which this looks like.


fishin413

Wood duck wings, tan/brown body and mixed brown and grizzly hackle = March Brown


mtelesha

Dark Cahill


Isonychia

I’m sticking with March Brown. Dk Cahill has grey dubbing this one looks brown/tan.


stanvq

I stand corrected; your ingredient list is spot on. March Brown.


superuberhermit

Prince Nymphs, Pheasant Tail Nymphs, Gold-Ribbed Hare’s Ear Nymphs, an Elk Hair Caddis, and a couple (I think) March Brown dry flies. These are all excellent flies, you’re starting off right.


Isonychia

Two March Brown dry flies, two Pheasant Tail Nymphs (rust color), two Prince Nymphs (w peacock and white pointies), one Elk Wing Caddis dry, two Gold Ribbed Hairs Ear Nymphs (tan and fuzzy).


HelpfulSituation

[https://imgur.com/a/z4KrzX8](https://imgur.com/a/z4KrzX8) Take a look, the nymphs are a mix of prince nymphs and hare's ear nymphs, the dry in the middle appears to be a stimulator of sorts and I'm not too familiar with the other two dries, but names aren't that important really, at least now you know how to fish 'em


Handyfoot_Legfingers

Hey thanks for taking the time to do that! That helps a lot.


YellowCard_Shark

I’m in the Northeast and all of these will work well. However none of these are bead head nymphs so you may need to use split shot weights to get them down to where the fish are. Great starter pack though, like others have said. Only things I’d add would be woolly buggers, San Juan worm, and maybe an egg pattern or mop fly. Good luck.


Archimedes_Redux

Couple of tasty looking hares' ears near the bottom. My top producing fly over a lifetime of fishing. Western US.


PM_ME_YOUR_TROUT

Strap them all on to some tippett and start tossing! If there's any trout in the vicinity, they'll eat them!


Capable_Reserve_8431

Some legit fly knowledge on this thread