Fall Guide Special Starts October 16th 2013

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Starting this coming Wednesday the 16th of October we will be offering special pricing on our local guided fly fishing trips. Instead of our standard $425 per day we will be running a prime part of the day “3/4 guide day” for two anglers for $325 per boat (2 anglers per boat). The trip includes gear, flies, leaders, tippet and water. The trip does not include lunch. As we get deeper into fall the “prime part of the day” is the warmest part of the day. We are having our best success from around 10-4pm.

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Give us a call to take advantage of some of the great fishing on the lower McKenzie and Willamette Rivers. October Caddis, Blue Winged Olives and Short Winged Stoneflies have some of the very best fish of the year showing themselves. Beautiful fall days still lie ahead. To book our guide special give us a call at 541- 342- 7005.

Posted in Lower Willamette, McKenzie River, Shop Sales and Specials | Leave a comment

Blending Dubbing Course 201 and October Caddis Pupae Fly Tying Video

In our first video Tony gives some tips on blending your own special nymph dubbing. When you add numerous colors to the blend, greater color depth and longer fiber length is achieved. This dubbing blend can even be used as a nymph collar hackle which we will demonstrate in the coming days.

The second video is of a deadly October Caddis Pupae pattern that gets down in a hurry. The basic style of the fly can be adapted to a green rock worm and many other caddis pupae species.

The Glowing October Caddis is tied “jig style”. We have been fishing these jig style flies quite a bit this Fall and the results have been outstanding. The fly has a fast descent, but since it rides hook up it rarely snags. The hook (C400BL) is extraordinarily strong and sharp, it also penetrates really well. Give these jig style flies a shot, there is no question they have altered my catch rate for the better in 2013.

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Tony’s Glowing Caddis Jig

Thread: Veevus 10/0 Black
Hook: TMC C400BL, Size 6-14
Bead: 5/32 Slotted Black Tungsten Bead
Rib: Brown Copper Ultra Wire-Brassie
Underbody: Veevus Holographic Mylar-Tinsel, Gold
Overbody: Hareline D-Rib-Medium, Amber
“Hackle” Dubbing mix:(a pinch of each) Hareline STS Trilobal Brown Stone, Olive, Claret, Red, and Kingfisher Blue. Red Squirrel Tail Fibers. Blend Coarsely in electric coffee grinder.
H
ead: Black Hareline Hare’s Ear Dubbing

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

2013 Two Fly Tournament Wrap Up

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The Caddis Fly’s 2013 Two Fly Tournament raised just over $5000 for The McKenzie River Trust’s habitat restoration projects. We had a marvelous group of anglers and guides who participated to make the event happen. Anglers enjoyed the best fishing day we have had in the tournaments short six year history. Five of the seven boats had three fish (total length of three fish) totals of over 50 inches.

We lucked out with a perfect set up of water and weather conditions. Earlier in the week heavy rains caused high and off color water that reset the river and revitalized the fish. By Saturday the river was absolutely perfect and fishing was as good as we have seen it.

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The winning boat was guided by Mike Reardon with anglers Jeff Woolsey and Doug Hoff, pictured above with a fish they did not measure. Last year Woolsey and Hoff came in second by 1/4 inch. Needless to say great satisfaction was taken when they put up the fantastic total of 55 and 3/4 inches.

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Most of the boats in this years event fished the lower river from Hendricks down. Many of the anglers said it fished as well as it had ever for them! There is no question that the no stocking program from Hendricks down is having a profound effect on the fishing. Anglers caught more fish between 15″ and 18″ than we have seen in years. If you get a chance to fish the lower river this week do it, it’s really really good. For more info on whats happening on the lower McKenzie please have a look at the McKenzie River Trout Study. http://www.mckenzietroutstudy.org/ Hats off to the group of dedicated anglers leading the charge on this project, it’s really making a difference in the lower McKenzie River.

Tony Casad on the upper river

Special thanks to the Anglers who participated in this years tournament
Jeff Woolsey
Doug Hoff
Tony Casad
Darlene Dolby
Joan McCreery
Christian Beck
Keith Tatersall
Scott Halpert
Ron Hegge
Zach Hegge
Brandi Ferguson
Chet Croco
Joe Polanuk
Lee Davidson

two fly photo upper river

Special Thanks to the guides who donated there day on the water. The tournament relies on the guides participation so big thanks guys we really appreciate it!

Mike Reardon
Ty Holloway
Lou Verdugo
Clay Holloway
Karl Meuller
John Fabian
Chris Daughters

Finally a big thanks to Redington, and Anglers Book Supply who provided prizes for the event.

Posted in Fly Fishing Contests | 3 Comments

Hartwick’s Hoser Fly Tying Video

Harwick’s Hoser tube fly works well for steelhead both Summer and Winter. Tony demonstrates how to tie this multi step large profile pattern. Tie a few and and them to your box!

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Hartwick’s Hoser


Thread: Veevus 10/0 Black

Tube: Protube Nanotube
Junction: Protube Junction Tube, Red
Butt: Blue Hareline STS Trilobal Dubbing
Butt Hackle: Silver Doctor Blue Hareline Saddle Hackle
Rib: Fl. Blue Polar Chenille
Body: Medium Flat Pearl Mylar Tinsel
Bump: Blue Hareline STS Dubbing
Cone: Black Large Procone
Bump: Kingfisher Blue Hareline STS Dubbing
Underwing: Kingfisher Blue Craft Fur, Blue Ice Angel Hair
Wing: Kingfisher Blue Metz Magnum Hackle tips
Hackle: Black Marabou tied collar style, a couple turns of Black Schlappen

Posted in Fly Tying, Fly Tying Materials and Supplies | 2 Comments

Dory Fleet update, October 5 2013

October 5, 2013.

Flat ocean? Hook up the Dory and go.  It’s that simple.

The Black Rockfish were difficult to find, bit reluctantly, but were the largest we have seen all year.  Casting Clousers for Chinook, we hooked a few silvers, had fun, and released them Dory-side.  Barbless hooks made that easy on us all.

The ocean was gorgeous, we all caught a few fish, and it was a tremendous day to be on the wild Pacific with pelicans diving on bait.

Thanks to my friends who graciously put up with my fishing antics, excitability, and fly experiments,  allowing me to enjoy the salty fishes of the ocean.  All to soon, I will be back inland chasing Chinook, and i do mean chasing, because they are not pausing long in the estuary after the recent rains.

Jay Nicholas

Posted in Oregon Salmon fly fishing, Oregon Saltwater Fishing | 1 Comment

Tying a Great Lakes Blue/Gold Intruder Steelhead, Salmon Fly on Senyo’s Articulated Shank

How great can it get? Jay Nicholas woke up today and found the freedom to slap down the coolest, most fish appealing colors, textures, and proportions of materials on an one of the new Greg Senyo Articulated Intruder shanks.

Life is good. No, this fly does not sport a sales-enticing name, but it has great color shades and will flow, wiggle, and flash in the water as it swims. What more could a salmon or steelhead ask for.

Many of our videos are produced with a couple of goals in mind. One is to demonstrate basic fly tying techniques. Another is to show off basic proportions and fly construction thinking or philosophies. Finally, we want to share new materials for our viewers consideration as well as show how a variety of new and old materials can be combined to create great looking, great fishing flies.

Only a few of our videos are produced with the sole purples of showing a hard-and-fast pattern formula. You will recognize those when you see them.

In the meantime, we are here mostly to practice our craft, share techniques and ideas, and have fun.

May your fly tying be as much fun as ours is. Usually. Yes, we have our less-then-fun fly tying days too. Insert big sigh here. Today, though, is a great day.

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Key materials of this Great Lakes Blue/Gold Intruder Fly are noted as follows:

Thread – Veevus 6/0 or 8/0 black
Hook – Gamakatsu Octopus #2
Alternative Hook – Daiichi Intruder Hook, black #2
Senyo’s Articulated Shank by Fish Skull, 40mm
Senyo’s Intruder Trailer Wire
Butt – Pro SportFisher American Possum, spun in dubbing loop, Red

Body – Hareline cactus chenille, minnow blue
First collar (under wing) – EP Foxy Brush 3” kingfisher blue
Wing – Pro SportFisher Marble Fox Tail, Sunrise Yellow/Gold
Jungle Cock – Hareline real Fake Jungle cock, sample pack HBS
Alternative Jungle Cock – Hareline real Fake Jungle cock FJ3 Flame/Pink
Top Flash material – PolarFlash #2015 Black Rainbow
Side Flash accent – Holographic Flashabou, #6943 Firetiger
Rear Collar – Hareline Extra Select Marabou, Fl. Blue
Front Collar – Senyo’s Laser Yarn, #131 Fl Fucsia

Posted in Fly Tying, Fly Tying Materials and Supplies | 2 Comments

McKenzie and Upper Willamette Back in Shape and Fishing Great

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The lower river looks a bit murky still but it fished great yesterday. The upper river was phenomenal today and the next few days of weather look perfect for enjoying some Fall trout fishing.

Fantastic fall fishing

Best bugs include Chubby Chernobyl, Euro Jig, Possie Bugger, October Caddis, Parachute Adams and Blue Winged Olives.

Epic day on the upper mac

Best spots abound! Upper and lower McKenzie, Middle Fork of the Willamette near Oakridge and above Hills Creek, Salmon Creek, the North Fork of the Middle Fork to name a few of the great Fall options nearby. Enjoy!

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Posted in Fishing Reports | 1 Comment

Support the McKenzie River Trust this Friday at The Caddis Fly

We will be donating 10% off all in store sales to the McKenzie River Trust this Friday October 4th.

Do you need a new pair of waders? Rain Gear? A couple of dozen Possie Buggers?
Have you had your eye on a beautiful new fly rod?
Want to do some early holiday shopping for that special fisher-person?

Well, head on down to the Caddis Fly Angling Shop this Friday, October 4th, and 10% of your purchase will be donated to MRT as a kick-off for the annual Two Fly Tournament hosted by the Caddis Fly Angling Shop.

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Caddis Fly Angling Shop

168 W. 6th Ave, Eugene, OR

9am-6pm

541-342-7005

Come shop for your fishing gear and raise money for the rivers and streams we all love and share!

Posted in Oregon Conservation News | Leave a comment

McKenzie River Trout, Red Fang in the Fly Fish Journal

My favorite magazine, The FlyFish Journal, ran a feature article on the fight to get hatchery fish off the McKenzie River.

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It’s worth a read, if you want to relive that great night back in 2010 in the Springfield Amory.

ODFW 25-year planning committee meeting in Springfield

I haven’t gotten around to the rest of the issue yet, but I’m sure it’s amazing. Plus, it also features a short essay I wrote on my favorite Oregon, band Red Fang.

To date, Red Fang’s video for the song Prehistoric Dog has over 1.5 million views. I account for about a third of them. The premise of the video: Beefy heavy metal dudes drink enough beer to build weapons and suits of armor out of the aluminum cans and attack a group of LARPing kids in a Portland park.

In another video, they weld a plow to the front of a station wagon and drive it through a wall made from 80 gallons of milk, shotgunning PBRs and huffing nitrous oxide through balloons.

The music is great, but the magic of these videos is the guys themselves. The dudes in Red Fang look old. But they’re having this amazing time. And that inspired the story in the magazine.

Pick up your copy at the shop and enjoy.

-MS

Posted in Fly Fishing Books | 1 Comment

Coastal Fall Chinook Prospects, September 20, 2013

Read the headiness . . . .

“Fall Chinook run on Columbia largest in decades” (this from Oregonian Live.com)

You may be wondering what the heck our coastal chinook fishery has to do, if anything, with the Columbia River Chinook run?

Answer:  maybe not much but maybe a lot.  How’s that for retired fish biologist evasional thinking?

Consider that as of last week’s end, they had counted nearly eight hundred thousand fall chinook over Bonneville Dam.  The final tally at Bonneville may well run close to a million adults this year.  What’s the typical return of hatchery and wild Chinook to the Oregon  coast?   See if you can get an answer on this by going to the ODFW website.

Here is what I hope. I hope that the ocean survival that obviously helped those fish also helped boost survival of our coastal river Kings.  I also hope that with so many Chinook swimming around in the ocean off BC and SE Alaska, that the ocean fishery interception rate was lower on our coastal fish.  I’m pretty sure that I saw something like this in the late 1980s, when we had a monster coastal Chinook return and the Upriver Brights on the Columbia were huge in number and size as well.  I have this hunch that big brood years of the Upper Columbia Kings correspond with big runs of our coastal fish, at least enough of the time, to keep this hope alive.

Sure, I know that the Columbia smolts and our coastal chinook smolts go to sea at different times, and I’m not really up on the latest scientific poo-poo on Coded-Wire-Tag recovery in the ocean to know for sure how much the ocean feeding areas of the upper Columbia and coastal Kings overlap —  but I’m pretty sure they do and still I am optimistic.

So far, returns of early Kings to the North Coast seem a little better than we have seen for years, and that also gives me reason to hope that 2013 will be a great year.  If it is, I also expect 2014 to be strong, because Chinook return at ages 2-6 and it is rare to see a single-year peak-run followed by a very low-run year.  Not impossible, just rare.

So if you ever thought about swimming a fly for King Salmon, this could just be a good year to give it a try.

Here are a few photos from the 2013 season to date, scrubbed by the Office of Homeland Fly Fishing Paranoia, Hysteria, Secrecy and Security.

Best to you all, may your burdens be eased, eventually, by fishing.

Jay Nicholas – September 20, 2013

Posted in Fishing Reports, Oregon Salmon fly fishing | 2 Comments

Pacific Rivers Council event in Eugene Oct 2nd

Come on out Wednesday, October 2nd from 5:00-7:00 at the Hop Valley Brewing Co. Tasting Room in Eugene!

What: O&C Happy Hour and a screening of PRC’s short film: Forests to Faucets. Join us after work Wednesday, October 2nd for beer, snacks, and a short movie and discussion on current threats to many of Oregon’s most iconic rivers including the McKenzie, Siuslaw, Molalla, Nestucca, Trask, Umpqua and Rogue.

These rivers, and many others, will be impacted by proposals in Congress that would allow industrial timber harvest on our public lands. Please join us to learn more about this issue!

When: Wednesday, October 2nd, 5:00 to 7:00, film starts at 6:00 PM

Where: Hop Valley Brewing Co. Tasting Room
990 West 1st Avenue
Eugene, OR 97402

Pacific Rivers Council, American Rivers and the Wild Salmon Center are working to ensure that the management of over 2.4 million acres of federally-owned, public lands in western Oregon (also known as O&C Lands) is not based solely on the most profitable way to log these forests, but on the best way to keep the Oregon economy strong, our salmon and steelhead populations intact, and our water clean. And we need your help!

Posted in Oregon Conservation News, Oregon Fly Fishing Clubs and Events | Leave a comment

Ska- Opper Fly Tying Video

Scott Howell’s Ska Opper is easily our favorite skating steelhead dry fly. In this video Tony demonstrates how to tie this pattern in it’s natural color scheme. The video is a bit longer than we like, but the fly is a tough one and I cut it down as much as I could without compromising the “instructional banter” that often includes key tips on creating the pattern. Other colors to try are black and purple, black and chartreuse, and purple and chartreuse. Enjoy!

Ska-Opper

Hook: Daiichi 2110 “Bomber Hook”
Thread: Veevus 8/0 and Veevus 150D Gel Spun
Tail: Gold Krystal Flash and Orange Bucktail or Artic Fox Guard Hair
Butt: Fl. Orange Uni-yarn
Wingcase: Brown 2mm Hareline foam and a small pad of Orange 2mm foam
Body: Deer Spinning Hair
Legs: Black and Orange Medium Round Rubber
Hackle: Orange Guinea
“Wing”: Deer tied in and splayed
Throat: White Deer Belly Hair

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

Fly links around the web

Bonneville Dam Cameras: Apparently the Columbia Fall Chinook numbers are off the charts. Check out the web cameras on the dam fish counting station.

Fish-Counting Station with Public Viewing Windows Under Construction at Bonneville Dam. This Will Replace Old Fish Ladders and "Splash Board" Counting Technique 04/1973

Osprey Steelhead News: Last week, Anglo American, a major mining company and partner in the proposed Pebble Mine project announced it was pulling out! Big win for conservationists and anglers.

Native Fish Society: NFS posts its list of the top 11 best-restored rivers in the Pacific Northwest. Eight of the eleven are in Oregon.

Trout Underground: Tom Chandler posts a sobering, if not downright terrifying essay on the water situation in California.

From the Chum: Today at 10am PT, Secretary of Interior Sally Jewell will discuss her perspective on public lands, and answer your questions if you get them in on time.

Fat Guy Fly Fishing: Kyle Deneen gets bit by a diamondback rattlesnake, takes the time to gut and skin the snake, as well as documenting the process, rather than going to the hospital. Rad.

Posted in Oregon fly fishing links | Leave a comment

McKenzie River Trust’s Friends and Family Night at McMenamins Tonight

Homepage_Promo_McMenamins

Tuesday, September 24 from 5-11pm

McMenamins North Bank – 22 Club Road in Eugene
Live music by Neil Bjorklund and Friends at 8pm

Join us for dinner, brew, and live music at McMenamins North Bank, 22 Club Road in Eugene, on Tuesday, September 24th. 50% of all the night’s sales will be donated to the McKenzie River Trust! Bring your friends and family and join us for a wonderful evening along the Willamette River.

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The McKenzie River Trust protects and cares for special lands and the rivers that flow through them in western Oregon. Working along the Willamette, the McKenzie, and throughout six other watersheds in our region, the McKenzie River Trust is committed to a future in which intact, functioning ecosystems provide clean water, abundant fish and wildlife, and productive natural landscapes throughout western Oregon. Click here to make a tax-deductible donation to the McKenzie River Trust.
– See more at: http://mckenzieriver.org/2013/09/mcmenamins-friends-and-family-night/#sthash.vhnC94PI.dpuf

Don’t forget about our annual Two Fly Tournament. We still have a few spots available. Fishing, prizes, meals and a benefit to the McKenzie River Trust

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Posted in Oregon Conservation News | Leave a comment

Setting the record straight: Oregon Coho Bucktailing

The ATF showed up at my door last week, lobbed tear gas and stun grenades, scared the poop out of my cats (me too), but luckily my family was in the back room at the Fly Shop bagging up the final dabs (almost) of my lifetime supply of TMC 700 Hooks so Chris can practically give ’em away.

So, they cuffed me, waterboarded me, and threw me in their Van, where they proceeded to lecture me on the immorality of soaking herring, Hoochies, and flies in BEER while operating a watercraft. Hours into the torture session, they veered off into questions about saltwater fly leader construction, fly selection, choices of hooks, and so on, all related to Coho Bucktailing as described in a recent blog post, said post being accompanied by some very nice photos likely from some foreign country and what can only be described politely as rants sufficient to prompt any competent Doctor to prescribe powerful anti-psychotic medication. By the gunnysack full.  And yes, I have my very own gunny sack of the stuff.

Anyway, these ATF fellows (yep, all guys with big deltoids, short hair, black cargo Pants, and non-polarized Ray Ban shades) were obviously intrigued at the possibility of catching salmon in the ocean off Oregon and wanted more particulars as to the details.

They had mistakenly confused the persons responsible for the recent OFFB post that referred to puke, beer, and all sorts of tawdriness with only a little bucktailing on the side.

My protests of innocence, assertions that it was not me pictured with a fish in the Blog Post were soundly rejected with nary a smile or apology for their intrusion into my life.

It was best, I decided, to act as though the recent blog post was indeed crafted at my hand, pose as the writer, and pretend to posses a vast storehouse of Coho Bucktailing knowledge, myself, personally.

As I began to fictionally create a string of bucktailing laws, guidelines, and secrets, they turned off the surveillance cameras, wire-taps, and listened closely.

I told them about my last day on the Pacific, and they seemed to believe me, word for word, as if it were all true, which of course it was not all true but only parts were and parts were not but sometimes even I forgot which was what and so forth so anyway this is pretty much what I told ’em.

September 19 started with me fishing for Chinook in the estuary.  No bites, no fish seen hooked by anyone, and only a few fish rolling, where there should have been something to indicate presence of fishy life.  Hummmm.  Once again I chose the wrong place and time to ply the waters for Kings.

So I pulled the boat, headed for the Cabin,  and resolved to sand the deck that turned moldy last winter, only to receive a call from Buddy 3 asking regarding my interest in a Dory fishing afternoon to which I said H E Double Hockey Stick yes.

So we launched from the beach in sun and lack of wind on an incoming tide and headed west into the salty brine in search of Black Rockfish.  We were distracted by Whales of some sort or another mostly the large kind that come up and spouted, and waved their flukes, and whatever and looked really cool.

Then we saw Rockfish blitzing bait just like Albacore, with dozens of the so called bottomfish leaping into the air ripping the bait and me peeing my waders excited, thinking they were silvers, which they of course were not.  Of course we did not catch any of those fish but we really did not care a hoot cuz they were so cool to see, but when we started fishing I looked down and saw Rockfish about six feet under the Dory so I let my Clouser (secret fly) into the water and watched a big LUNKER come up to eat the fly and got as excited as a kid and had to shout and make all sorts of commotion and wow how much fun was that.

Bucktailing?  Sorry.  Forgot the point.  We got to trolling our bucktails except they weren’t really BUCKTAILS but just kept our Clousers tied on and trolled along too slow (2.5 MPH) but then sped up to some unknown speed because the current was going this way and we were going the other or across or something like that and anyway then we saw some fish under the boat on the fish finder and cut the motor to cast but then the fish went away so we started the motor and I saw a beautiful Silver come up and eat my NOT BUCKTAIL and then a Chinook came up to eat Buddy 3’s NOT BUCKTAIL and we had us a double header on salmon out in the great wild Pacific Ocean and man was that fun well yes it was fun.

And then not too long after I made a long 80 ft cast and was waiting for my fly to settle into the ocean when I saw a Coho rush straight at our Dory and then come within six ft of the Port Side and head off into the deep and the fish had some funny looking flash thingy in the right corner of its jaw and then my line came tight with this very same Silver about 80 ft out leaping and slicing through the waves for a while with me laughing like an old coot having too much fun.

Remember these pointers about Oregon Bucktailing . . . .

1.  Bucktailing is effective.

2.  Tie on any old fly and drag it around the Ocean.  Hang it close to the prop wash or waaaaaay back.

3.  Stop the motor now and then.  Go fast and go slow.

4.  Fish a fly line with a leader.  Any line.  Any leader of 6 ft to nine ft is fine.

5.  Laugh.

6.  Smile.

6a.  It’s OK even preferable to eat both bananas and fried chicken the night before Bucktailing and during the fishing event as well.

6b.  Ye need not wear those silly blue gloves because the Coho don’t care one hoot about human scent on Bucktail flies.  Neither do Chinook.  Have you ever smelled a natural buck tail?  Wow those things do stink and the salmon don’t seem to care much.  Why should they care about a little human scent?

6c.  Regulations prohibit the soaking of Bucktails in Anchovy or tuna oil.  Seriously.  No foolin’.  Don’t even try it.

7.  Don’t take any fish seriously.  Say a prayer of thanks whenever you get bit.

7a.  Don’t take words of wisdom about bucktailing in a post on the Internet seriously.  Seriously.  Just don’t.  Seriously.

8. Repeat bucktailing as often as possible.

9.  Do not confuse the random event of catching an actual salmon of any species on a Bucktail in the ocean with knowing anything whatsoever about saltwater fly fishing.

10.  Stay hydrated while you are out on the ocean.  Incidents of Bucktail angler desiccation have been reported in JAMA; treatment for said condition should be administered promptly and involve hydrators including such cell-wetness enhancers like Gatorade and water or iced tea or lemonade. Sun protection is pretty important too and Chris sells Buff gloves and face-mack thingies and good sunscreen goo at the Caddis Fly shop and if you could find it in your heart to buy a dozen tubes of really cool transparent sun goo it would make me laugh like crazy and that in itself is pretty entertaining you betcha.  But then Chris would order an extra 400 bottles and no one would buy the stuff because it would be December and on the other hand, keep it reasonable, please, but always prepare for sun exposure so that your nose and ears don’t fall off after a day of Bucktailing …….

11.  Smile at yourself, cuz everyone else thinks your’e pretty funny. Or not.

Best to ya all.

Jay Nicholas, September 2013

Posted in Fishing Reports, Oregon Saltwater Fishing | 4 Comments