River Test: Hampshire's Classic Chalk-Stream and the Dry-Fly Tradition
River Test at Stockbridge: clear water, gravel beds and trout that won't tolerate a poor cast

The River Test runs with water so clear the gravel reads like print. Brown trout hold in clean tails of riffle and in the slow, gin-clear glides; a careful cast will often reveal fish before the fly lands.
Chalk-stream water comes from springs that keep flows steady and temperatures cool. That stability feeds abundant invertebratesâmayfly and caddis hatches that set the day for dry-fly anglers. The chemistry and clarity of chalk create the channels and riffles anglers prize; it produces the textbook trout pools every guide remembers.
Technique, tackle and tradition
Dry-fly fishing was refined on the Test and neighbouring Itchen. Frederick M. Halford's influence lives on in the insistence on presentation: upstream casts, long, delicate leaders and flies that sit perfectly on the skin of the water. Stealth beats brute force; gentle mends coax refusals into takes.
Anglers work light. A well-balanced rod and a responsive reel allow single-fly presentations and quick touch. Waders keep the stalk quiet; soft-soled boots, careful steps and patience do the rest. Grayling and the occasional pike share the river's story but it is the trout and the matching of hatch that define the sport here.
By dawn, a dry fly kissing the mirror of a slow pool and the slight, unmistakable rise of a trout remain the enduring image of the Test.
Recommended: lightweight fly rod