Fire bird Fly Tying Video

From our friends at Loon Outdoors

The Fire Bird is a spin-off on the classic Bird’s Nest. In it’s original form the Bird’s Nest is a super buggy pattern that is a fairly quick tie. We love quick ties and buggy patterns! With the easy addition of a hot spot using our UV Fly Paint, this fly gains just a little bit of flare without compromising the parts of the classic that we love. Although it’s tied unweighted here, this fly would work well with a bead head especially if it is being fished by itself in deeper water.

Hook: Daiichi 1760 #10-18
Thread: 50d GSP White
Tail: Mallard Flank Orange
Ribbing: Small Brown Wire
Body: Senyo’s Fusion Dub Crusty Nail
Legs: Mallard Flank
Thorax: Senyo’s Fusion Dub Crusty Nail
Wing Case: UV Fly Paint Red

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Last Minute Trip for King Salmon Available

Sapsuk river king salmon

Long time Caddis Fly customer and big fish seeker David Bayles has had to bow out of his annual Sapsuk River fishing trip. David is trying to get his spot filled and is offering a tremendous last minute deal.


POSSIBLY THE BEST CHINOOK FLY FISHING IN THE WORLD– on sale!


Owing to a medical cancellation, one spot has become available, at a substantilal discount, during the prime week of the run of bright Chinook salmon on the remote and pristine Sapsuk river, in the shadow of the most active volcano in the western hemishere (Mt Pavloff) on the Aleutian peninsula, The Sapsuk is owned by a native corporation, entry is strictly controlled, and it is perfect fly water. You can reasonably expect multiple daily hook ups with alarmingly strong and aggressive fish in the 30-50 poud class, just a few miles from salt water. The dates are June 24 to July 1, and round trip charter transportation, from Anchorage, is included the package – along with lodging, meals, worldclass guides, boats, flies, everything but drinks and tips. The package is $5300, discounted by 1/3 to $3550. $3550 for, arguably, the best chihook fly fising in the world. Unheard of.

Send David and email at: david.bayles@icloud.com for further information or to take advantage of this unique opportunity.

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Willamette Falls Fish Counts – Steelhead Numbers Looking Good for 2016

2016 is looking markedly better in terms of Summer Steelhead numbers in the Willamette River system. Below you will see the fish passage numbers for May in 2015 and May in 2016. The 2016 numbers are much closer to our recent history of “good runs” of summer steelhead. Anglers can expect to see numbers of fish locally in the Willamette River from Dexter Dam through to the confluence of the McKenzie and on the McKenzie from Leaburg Dam down to the town of Leaburg. If numbers continue in 200-300 fish per day range through July we are going to have a great year!

 

2016 Counts looking good!

willamette river steelhead-2

2015 Low and warm water produced a poor return

willamette river steelhead-1

Posted in Fishing Reports, Lower Willamette, McKenzie River, Middle Fork Willamette River fishing | 1 Comment

McKenzie River Hatches in Full Swing

fly fishing the upper mckenzie with the caddis fly

The McKenzie River is seeing a tremendous variety of hatches this late spring early summer season. Golden Stones, Green Drakes and rusty colored Caddis are some of the larger bugs(patterns in the 8-12 size range). Pale Morning Duns, Pink Ladies, Little Yellow stoneflies and small tan caddis are among the smaller insects(patterns in the 14-16 size range).

wild rainbow trout - mckenzie river trout fishing

Cloudy days will see hatches all day. We are looking at some really warm days coming up, on those hot days hatches will be best from 5pm-dark. Water levels are ideal and fishing has been excellent!

Photo credit for this post goes to Todd Moen from Catch Magazine.

Get out there it’s been really really good fishing of late!

Posted in Fishing Reports, McKenzie River | 1 Comment

“Redemption” Micro Intruder Fly Tying Video

In this video Jay Nicholas demonstrates how to tie a “Redemption” Micro Intruder. The pattern tied on a nano tube and maintains the separation between “butt” and “shoulder”. The Micro Intruder pattern in the color scheme demonstrated is deadly in winter and summer! Ben Paull and Trevor Covich (OPST friends) spotted this pattern at the Sandy Spey Clave recently and exchanged knowing glances, remarking that they liked these colors.

Jay will be featuring a series of over 30 new Intruders, including Micro Intruders, in a soon to be released book – Advanced Intruder Strategies. This new book will build on the fundamentals introduced in Intruder Essentials and will feature Half Intruders, Senyo Shank Articulated Shank Intruders, OPST shank Intruders, ProSportfisher Articulated Tube Intruders, and the fascinating Micro Intruders.

All of Jay’s books can be purchased as signed and personalized copies by calling the Caddis Fly Shop or on Amazon (unsigned).

CD

Jay flies April 2016

Redemption Micro Intruder

Tube: Pro Sportfisher Nano tube
Butt: Senyo’s Fusion Dub Pink Lady
Rear Hackle: Pink Schlappen or Metz Hatchery Soft Hackle
Body: Lagartun Carded Flat Braid Fl. Blue
Shoulder dub: Senyo’s Fusion Dub sky blue
Shoulder Hackle: Kingfisher Blue Metz Soft Hackle
Shoulder Hackle 2: Fish Hunter Marabou Spey Blood Quills Silver Doc Blue
Flash: Lateral Scale
Tendrils: Black Ostrich
Hackle: Black Schlappen
Cone: Ultra Sonic Disc Metallic Blue Med

Hook: OPST Swing Hook sized to suit (usually 2, 3, or 4)

Posted in Fly Tying, Fly Tying Materials and Supplies | Leave a comment

“Three Salt” Chartreuse Micro Intruder for Chinook

Three Salt Micro Intruder

Tube – Pro SportFisher Nanotube sink 4
Hook guide – PSF large color of choice
Butt – Senyo’s Sky Fusion Dub + Steelie Blue Ice Dub
Butt 1st collar – chartreuse saddle
Butt 2nd collar – blue dyed lady amherst Pheasant
Body/waist – Lagartun carded flat braid pearl/blue
Shoulder Dub – Senyo’s Pink Lady Fusion Dub
Shoulder 1st collar – chartreuse Fish Hunter Spey marabou
Shoulder 2nd collar – black MFC ostrich 360 around tube
Flash – Mirage Lateral Scale both sides (FLA 133)
Shoulder finish collar – black schlappen/saddle with webby portion
Cone – metallic blue PSF ultra sonic disk

This is a fly with virtually neutral buoyancy that I fish in the estuary when the tide is flowing very gently, and I rely on the sink tip to place the fly at the depth I want it to fish. If I fish this in a river and need it to sink more quickly, I add one or more PSF Tungsten Raw weights to the tube, usually in front of the Pink Lady Fusion Dub.

This pattern is a proven Chinook Intruder that is on the small side when compared to many of the far larger Intruder style flies.

Enjoy!

Jay Nicholas

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Middle Fork of the Willamette: High Water and Fishing Well

Middle fork of the Willamette

The Middle Fork of the Willamette is running high and green. Fishing has been really good. The Green McKenzie Caddis hatch has been prolific. On overcast days the hatch has been all day, on brighter days the afternoon evening Green McKenzie Caddis activity has been excellent.

The release out of Hills Creek dam is 2000CFS and downstream of the North Fork of the Willamette the river swells to over 3000CFS. Look for the Corps of Engineers to curtail the flow at some point soon. Fishing will remain solid or get even better with a little lower water.

middle fork trout fishing

Posted in Fishing Reports, Middle Fork Willamette River fishing | Leave a comment

Support Native Fish Society: Babine Raffle

From Native Fish Society:

You could spend a week steelhead fishing on the Babine for only $100!

babine

Babine Steelhead Lodge and Epic Waters are donating a prime Babine week for 1 angler to support the work of the Native Fish Society.

Keep in mind there are more 20+ pound wild steelhead on the Babine River than any other river in the world! That’s right, more than any other river in the whole darn WORLD!

Dates: October 15-22, 2016

How does it work? Native Fish Society is selling 100 tickets at $100 each. We’ll draw the lucky winner on July 1st and they’ll get ready for the time of their life!

To buy your tickets call 503.344.4218.

What if you aren’t the big winner? Every penny we raise during this campaign will support our work protecting and recovering wild, native fish in their Northwest homewaters. So, no matter what, you’re giving a boost to wild salmon and steelhead, not to mention your fishing mojo. And that $100 becomes a tax-deductable donation to Native Fish Society.

*Does not include travel to Smithers, British Columbia, classified waters license and gratuity.

Posted in Oregon Conservation News | Leave a comment

Simple Muddler Minnow Fly Tying Video

In this video Jay Nicholas demonstrates how to tie a versatile muddler minnow pattern. This pattern is great for trout and steelhead. Good variations include a weighted body and changing the color of the flat braid body.

Jay flies April 2016

Simple Muddle Minnow

Hook: Daiichi 1530 #6
Thread: White Veevus 10/0
Tail: Lemon Wood Duck
Body: Lagartun Carded Flat Braid
Wing: Senyo’s Freckled Predator Wrap
Hackle: Brown Saddle
Head: Natures Spirit River Humpy Deer

Posted in Fly Tying, Fly Tying Materials and Supplies | Leave a comment

Get Ready for Green Drakes on the McKenzie and Willamette Rivers

Green Drakes

Late May is the time of year when the Green Drake emergence begins. The hatch can last into July so it’s a great time to have some drakes in your box. We see some of the nicest fish of the year recklessly attack Green Drake Adults when the hatch is intense. Typically a late afternoon affair, on warmer days the hatch can push into evening. Fish love both adult and struggling or emerging imitations. Here are some of our favorite patterns and videos.

Extended Body Green Drake

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Parachute Ice Dub Green Drake

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Quigley’s Film Critic Green Drake Emerger

quigley's-film-critic-green-drake

Hairwing Green Drake

hairwing-green-drake

Crippled Green Drake

crippled-green-drake-3

Green Drake Parachute Fly Tying Video

Quigley’s Green Drake Emerger Fly Tying Video

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McKenzie River Fishing Report Late May 2016

McKenzie may with catch mag

This week the McKenzie has been fishing great! The river is in fine shape and a great variety of insects are hatching. I spent a couple of days as camera boat with Todd Moen of Catch Magazine filming Carol Labranch and guide Kelsey Helfrich for the River for Life – Women in Fly Fishing project. We fished above Leaburg Dam on our floats but all reports in the shop are indicating that the river is fishing well top to bottom.

McKenzie river "a river for life"

Best patterns have been Green McKenzie Caddis, Golden Stone imitations, Parachute Adams, Rusty Brown Elk Hair Caddis and Prince Nymphs.

McKenzie may with catch mag

McKenzie river "a river for life"

McKenzie river "a river for life"

McKenzie river "a river for life"

McKenzie may with catch mag

McKenzie may with catch mag

McKenzie may with catch mag

Posted in Fishing Reports, McKenzie River | 2 Comments

Green Butt Soft Hackle Fly Tying Video

In this video Jay Nicholas uses a classic steelhead fly theme to tie a wet fly for trout and Sea Run Cutthroat. Swing and twitch this one on a floating line for trout in the spring.

Jay flies April 2016

Green Butt Soft Hackle

Hook: Alec Jackson Chironomid #7-9
Thread: Veevus 12/0 Black
Butt: Chartreuse Ice Dub
Body: Peacock Black Ice Dub
Rib: Copper Wire
Wing: Grizzly hair Fiber (New from Cascade Crest Tools)
Hackle: Badger or Grizzly Hackle

 

Posted in Fly Tying, Fly Tying Materials and Supplies | 1 Comment

Out-takes from the 2016 Spey Clave

I experienced a great four hours at the 2016 Sandy Spey Clave on Saturday, May 14th.  A mere four hours. So little time and far too many friends to try and catch up with. Knowing that I was at risk of getting drowsy if I didn’t head home by 5 PM, I just randomly visited with a few friends who happened to stumble my way. No master plan to watch presentations. No idea what the presentation schedule was. No agenda regarding who or what I should see.

The consequences of this behavior is a collection of random images, a very small collection, a tiny fragment of the greatness that unfolded at the event.

My apologies.

No story line here, just snippets, crumbs, to represent a day when I had a genuinely good time connecting and re-connecting with people who share my passion for flyfishing and fly tying.

Kerry Burkheimer. Randy Stetzer. Jeff HickmanEric Nufeld. Tim Rajeff. Steve Rajeff. Simon Gaesworth. Doug Brutaco. Dick Sagara. Marty Sheppard. Tom Larimer. Trevor Covich. George Cook. Jerry Swanson.

Here are the few images I brought home. No shots of the great on-river spey casting. Oh well, I had a great time and highly recommend this event for all.

Jay Nicholas, May 2016.

2016 Spey Clave insights a 2016 Spey Clave insights b

2016 Spey Clave insights d

 

 

 

2016 Spey Clave insights c d 2016 Spey Clave insights f 2016 Spey Clave insights g 2016 Spey Clave insights h

Posted in Classes and Instruction, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Lower Dean Chinook: Strongest Kings in the World?

Dean River King.

Dean River King

 

Time marches on, and my how it sprints on it seems. My dear friend Jeff Hickman is but a week from heading north to open Kimsquit Bay Lodge on the Lower Dean. Jeff knows the kings in BC and Alaska like I know the kings here in Oregon. It seems right that his king season on the Dean will be commencing just as my Chinook season is beginning to ramp up into the remainder of 2016. Jeff and I have had many a discussion about Chinook salmon around the world, and he enjoys teasing me with stories about the Dean’s kings.

While I know kings on the Oregon Coast, I’ve never fished the lower Dean, and have never had one of those magnificent salmon run me into the backing and head downstream through the rapids below.

Jeff and I talk about what makes a salmon strong – the genetics of energy reserves and pure potential fighting power. While I would rank Oregon coastal Chinook among the finest wild and hatchery fish on the planet – I have a strong hunch that Jeff might be right when he says that his Dean Kings are stronger than our Coastal River Kings.

On the genetics side of it, the Dean fish have evolved to make a longer migration and fight their way upriver through rapids and over falls. This environmental challenge alone could have produced a race of kings that are inherently stronger than our coastal Chinook, given the relative ease with which our kings can move upriver and the relatively short distance many of them migrate to reach spawning grounds.

I’d have to balk if Jeff tried to say that Dean kings are stronger than North Umpqua or Upper Rogue springers. These salmon make migrations of well over a hundred miles —  these salmon historically negotiated swift waters on their upstream migration too.

Of course, our debates are as usual fun and we end up with the highest regard for the salmon we each fish in our different waters.

Without trying to say one way or the other, I’ll say that —yes—I can well imagine that the Dean’s kings might be tougher than the kings in our short reach coastal rivers.

Might be. 

I’ll be seeing Jeff at the Sandy River Spey Clave this weekend and we will probably continue our discussion. Meanwhile, I asked him to shoot me a note regarding their season that is about to unfold. As usual, they were completely booked for the season, but two rods came open due to a cancellation.

June 24 through July 1st is the peak of the king season on the Lower Dean, and there are steelhead in the river then too.

Here is Jeff’s hastily penned note with a few teasers and reasons to jump on this opportunity of a lifetime.

 

____________This note from Jeff Hickman______________

Although Kathryn and I bought Kimsquit Bay Lodge in June of 2014 and spent that Summer at the lodge managing it. last Summer was our first full season start to finish. It was a whirlwind! We did all of the bookings, planning, barging and made many improvements to the lodge grounds and fishing program. Luckily for us we were full and for the most part the fishing was legendary! Large runs of both Chinook and Steelhead. The one issue we had last year was a very light snowpack which made for all time low water levels. We also had a lot of sunny and hot weather. This doesnt effect the steelhead much, but the Chinook don’t like sunny weather and low clear water.

We are all prepped up for another fun season up north on the Dean River. This time with one extra staff member on board, our newborn son Oly Dean Hickman arrived April 12th this Spring. We are anticipating a great year with large runs forecasted and this year we have a solid snowpack.

Jeff Hickman Dean River a

We have been booked solid but just recently had two spots open up for us. June 24th – July 1st. This is a unique opportunity as normally spots are sold out a year in advance. This is a primetime week for what could be the strongest Chinook in the world in one of the most beautiful places in the world to fish for them. There are always chrome bright steelhead in the river then as well.

Jeff Hickman Lower Dean Steelhead

Kimsquit Bay Lodge is the only lodge that fishes exclusively below the falls on the Dean River…These are the hottest and freshest of the hottest fish in the world. Don’t have a spey rod big enough to handle these mean Chinook? No problem, the lodge has a full assortment of excellent rigged spey rods for guests to use. The lodge sits overlooking the saltwater and amazing views of the Dean Channel near the mouth of the Dean River. Catering to only 6 guests per week, and maintaining six staff members the lodge has a very intimate feel. Each of the two guides takes three clients per day in the jet boat.

Jeff Hickman Lower Dean

With world class guides, friendly staff and an excellent chef; double occupancy cabins with private bathroom and flushing toilets, the best boats and equipment. This is the ultimate anadromous fly fishing trip. Treat yourself.

Jeff Hickman

Fish The Swing &
Kimsquit Bay Lodge
Cell: (971) 275-2269
www.fishtheswing.com
www.fishthedean.com

________________________________________

Give Jeff and Kathryn a call if you’d like to join them the Dean this summer, for a fishing experience of a life time.

Jay Nicholas, May 11th, 2016

Posted in Fly Fishing Travel | 2 Comments

Pacific City Dory Fly Fishing Season Underway in 2016

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Well the seas are finally showing signs of settling down and we are able to get out on the ocean again this year.

I had the good fortune of fishing today with Bryson and Jeffrey as Capt. John Harrell searched the reefs and kelp beds in the nearshore waters around Pacific City today, May 11th.

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Our  fishing was among the most challenging I’ve experienced, but we managed to go home with our limits of Pacific black rockfish and dungeness crab – with a few lingcod in the mix too.

We found the sea bass and lings at depths from 20 to 40 feet, and when we found fish, they were receptive to a wide variety of Clousers between three and four inches long.

Fast sinking lines were the order of the day, and there are several old options available – including the Airflo Big Game Depth Finder, Depth finder, and Custom Cut Sniper T-14. Rio offers great ones in the Striper and the Custom Cut T-14 Outbound. SA offers several great fly lines that sink fast under their Sonar series of lines.

John Harrell was out on the 10th fishing and found the fish far more accommodating, schooled at depths of 20 to 40 ft, and generally rather more accessible than they were today. A week ago John’s clients found the bass on the surface for part of their day. It goes to show that every day on the ocean is likely to bring surprises and challenges.

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Thanks John, for the great trip. Thanks Jeffrey and Bryson for sharing the boat today. Thanks to the bass and the ocean and the surf and the whales and ….

Sorry. I really do love being out on the ocean, and the fish, whatever their mood, are  so much fun.

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Hope to see you soon.

Bryson can help you select lines if you have questions and many of my fly tying videos cover the range of saltwater flies we fish from the dory boats.

You may contact Jack Harrell to book a trip at 541 921 1276.

Jay Nicholas, 11 May, 2016

Posted in Fishing Reports, Oregon Saltwater Fishing | 1 Comment