Overview
Tired of rigid lodge schedules and missing the magic of first and last light on the water? The best fishing happens when you move at the river’s rhythm — guided by conditions, not the clock.
We are an Argentine-run, Patagonia-based outfitter offering fly fishing experiences that most operators never attempt. Our specialty is the kind of fishing local guides actually seek out for themselves: remote waters, low angling pressure, and a deeper connection with the landscape. From multi-day road trips to wilderness float expeditions, we take you well off the beaten path — into places most visiting anglers never reach. Our trips are built for those who value adventure, privacy, and the raw, unfiltered beauty of Patagonia.
Description
Most outfitters stake out one or two fishing areas and build their entire season around them. We take a fundamentally different approach. Our programs span the length of Patagonia — from the trout-rich waters of Neuquén Province to the remote, nearly untouched rivers and lakes of Santa Cruz. We follow the season, moving with the best fishing conditions as they shift across each region. That means you’ll always be in the right place at the right time, whether you’re chasing dry fly action, hunting big browns on streamers, or somewhere in between.
We believe a single week in Patagonia doesn’t do the place justice. It takes real time and planning to get here, and the fishing rewards those who stay. Our shortest program runs ten nights with eight fishing days; our longest extends to fourteen nights and twelve fishing days. All programs accommodate up to six anglers and are fully supported with expert guides, capable trucks and boats, gourmet meals, and all logistics handled from start to finish.
Our programs move through some of the finest and least-pressured waters in all of Patagonia. The rivers and lakes we fish are chosen not for convenience, but for quality — remote access, healthy fish populations, and the kind of scenery that stops you mid-cast.
The fishing shifts meaningfully across the season. From November through mid-January, high water gradually recedes, and weighted streamers on sinking lines dominate early, giving way to increasingly productive dry fly fishing as mayfly and caddis hatches build. Dragonflies hatch on the lakes in December, creating some of the most exciting surface action of the year. Through late January to mid-March, multiple hatches continue to bring fish to the surface at dawn and dusk, while terrestrials — hoppers, ants, beetles — become an increasingly important part of the equation as summer deepens. Then in late March through April, cooling water temperatures reactivate fish that have been sluggish all summer. The big browns begin staging for spawn — aggressive, territorial, and very catchable. It is the season that many guides wait for all year.


















