Chinook Salmon Tackle Selection – October 2013

The 2013 Fall chinook salmon season on the Oregon coast is shaping up to be one of the best we have seen in at least a decade.  No bull.  More early fish, and the prospect of a steady push of fresh salmon entering through the end of December, with the South Coast closing strong for the season.

I’ve offered opinions previously – recommendations to help anglers who are trying to gear up for this specialized fly fishing niche.  the first was in November 2011 and the second was was in November 2012.

It’s difficult to convey just how excited I am about this season.  Honestly, I wasn’t at all sure I would ever live to see a run of Chinook hit the coast like this one has, is, and hopefully, will continue for the next three months.

But this post is going to be bare bones and help any of you who decide to go fishing for Kings with the fly rod, perhaps for the first time this season.

First admonition: leave the gear rods home. The only way to catch Kings on the fly is to cast the fly.  I promise that Chinook eat flies and they eat ’em good.  I still – sadly – run into people who think that fly anglers only snag or floss Chinook; but they are misinformed and I’m not going to waste anyone’s time debating or analyzing the wrongness of their views.  Last time I fished, I was blessed to have a 42″ Chinook eat a fly minutes after first being offered eggs suspended under a bobber and then a spinner.

Now to the topic of tackle selection.  After reviewing the previous advice I’ve offered, my ideas haven’t changed by much, so I’m going to mention the tackle I’ve been fishing this season because it is currently being beat around in my Super Pram and these rods, reels and lines have already proven themselves under serious load from Chinook.

Please note: as you read this material, keep in mind that I do not mean to exclude other brands or models of rods, reels and lines from the list of great tackle  to use fly fishing for Chinook.   There are plenty of excellent tackle choices and the staff at the Caddis Fly will be able to make interpretations and additional recommendations to guide you into appropriate gear for salmon fishing.

Oregon Salmon Fly Rods:

I’ve been fishing 8 wt, 9 wt and 10 wt rods for Kings this season.  I’m reaching for the 8 and 9 wt rods more often then the 10 wts.  A 9 wt Sage ONE is always in the boat, as are a pair of 8 wt Echo PRIMEs,  an 8 wt SAGE Motive, and a Burkheimer 995-4 and 7115-4.

The SAGE MOTIVE  is a new rod and has been a surprise to me.  I have pressured  a lot of Kings on the 8 wt – daring it to explode – and it took all the punishment in stride.  I love my SAGE ONE and am especially fond of my odd, one piece ECHO PRIME rods.  Honestly, I love all these rods, and they are my constant companions outfitted with different fly lines to fish in different water depths.

A very economical stand-in for these rods would be a 9 and 10 wt Echo ION or  Echo 3 Saltwater fly rod – my IONs and E3SW rods now, after proving themselves equal to the test, get loaned to friends only because at some point the number of rods in my boat becomes completely unmanageable.

Salmon fly reels:

I’ve been fishing a SAGE 8000 Pro series reel, a Hatch 9, three  Nautilus reels, and a SAGE EVOKE reel this season.  Every one of these reels has survived serious stress applied by salmon.  I will note that every fly reel I have ever owned is subject to the problem of occasionally finding my mono shooting line lodged somewhere it isn’t supposed to be.  This has been true with hundred buck reels and nine hundred buck reels.  I’ve concluded that this is partly due to my line handling ineptitude and I am resigned to just taking the spool out, clearing the foul, and re-inserting the spool.  Last week I accomplished this with a fish on, and got lucky.  Just don’t feel like you’re the only one because you ain’t.

The SAGE EVOKE is new in my boat this year and I’m very impressed with the drag and the reel’s overall toughness.  My Echo Ion reels are now my loaners and are in their second full year of fresh and saltwater overuse.  For the cost, they will get the job done and get you into the game immediately.

I fish two types of fly lines: shooting heads and full lines.  Currently, RIO is the principal provider of quality shooting heads.  I fish every head density from full floating, Intermediate, Type 3, and Type 6 – all on Rio Slickshooter, Gripshooter, or Airflo Intermediate Running Line 30 Lb.

The Rio Outbound, RIO Striper,the Airflo 40+, SA Streamer Express, and Airflo SNIPER fly lines are all examples of full fly lines that are available with slow to fast sinking head sections and integrated running lines. All of these lines are relatively easy to cast, and they also eliminate the  loop-to-loop connection that goes “bangity-clack” through the guides. If   a person must choose one of these fly lines, it would be the type 3 sink tip which is roughly a sink rate of 3-4 inches per second. Your second two fly lines will be Intermediate and Type 6 sinking heads, the former will be your go-to under low water conditions, but the latter will be absolutely essential in high water.  Yes, fly lines are crazy, and I often carry five rods with five different lines ready to fish in my boat.

Salmon leaders: recommendation. Try a 9 ft Rio Steelhead & Salmon Tapered Leader somewhere in the 10 Lb -16 Lb zone.   If you make your own, give Maxima Ultragreen a go, and keep your tippets in the sub 20 Lb class.

If all you have is a 15 ft sink tip single hand rod or a spey rod with a 12 – 15 ft tip and you long to go salmon fishing, then ignore the advice and just get on the water

Salmon flies –

Comet , Boss , and Clouser type flies all fish well and catch the “beasties”.  You can fish Intruders and bunny leaches and MOAL style flies too.  Again, the most important thing to do is tie on  a fly and cast it on the waters where Chinook live.

I know this is repetitive “gobbeldygook”.  Can’t help it.  Advice is constantly requested at the shop and in emails and phone calls.  We all started here at some point.  I remember calling Kaufmann’s decades ago and getting obfuscated with disinformation from some shop guy (ha ha, I fish with him now, yes I do Mr. so-and-so) and then buying my shooting heads from a barely-past-puberty Chris Daughters at the Caddis Fly in Eugene on my way South to fish the Rogue for Kings.  Seems like a lifetime ago.

I got my boat loaded, fresh loops on new and old shooting heads, flies tied and I’m going salmon fishing. Join me?  Just not too close please.  Got myself a brand new hernia and i M hoping to make is through the rest of the season.  Wish me luck please – and best of luck to all of you fellow salmon angler guys and gals.

Jay Nicholas – October 20 2013

Posted in Fly Fishing Gear Review, Oregon Salmon fly fishing | 3 Comments

Euro Jig Nymph Brown Fly Tying Video

In the video below we demonstrate how to tie another highly effective trout nymph in a “jig format”. The Euro Jig in Brown can be fished by itself or in tandem with another dry fly or nymph depending upon your rigging. It has been tremendously successful on the McKenzie and Willamette rivers this late Summer and Fall.

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Euro Jig Nymph (Brown)


Thread: Veevus 10/0 Brown

Hook: TMC C400BL, Size 12-14
Bead: 1/8 or 5/32 Slotted Copper Tungsten Bead
Tail: Wood duck Flank
Body: Hareline Brown Midge Tubing
Throat: Pearl Flashabou
Thorax Dubbing Mix: Hareline STS Trilobal–Brown Stone, Claret, Olive, Red, and Kingfisher Blue.

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

Great Fall Fishing Continues on the Willamette River

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We have a great week of weather ahead, and it’s a beautiful time to enjoy some of the excellent fishing on our local waters. Our local guide trip special is still on ( $325 for a 3/4 day float trip for two anglers ) and is a great way to efficiently cover the lower McKenzie and Willamette Rivers. With day time highs nearing 70 showing on the current weather reports it’s a fantastic time of year.

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Clay had a great day out guiding yesterday. His guests had a blast catching good numbers of rainbow and cutthroat trout. Their trip even included a nice summer steelhead on a dry fly!

Give us a call to book in!

Posted in Fishing Reports, Lower Willamette, McKenzie River | Leave a comment

Mongolia Taimen Fishing Report, Fall 2013

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Another season in the wilds of Outer Mongolia has come to a close. Every year is a unique adventure, leaving one with indelible memories and new friendships. Case in point: the 2013 Fall season was marked by volatility, star power, and fresh appreciation for the opportunity to pursue the world’s largest salmonid.

Week 1: Noah was too busy to make the trip.

On the way to camp, this year, I rode with my good friends and longtime camp managers, Odkhuu and Mogi. We enjoyed the freshly laid asphalt highway for the first 75 km out of Muren, before getting back to the bounce and grind of standard Mongolian travel for the last 5 hours of the drive.

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Though you’d be hard pressed to find a local who feels the same, I couldn’t help feeling more than a twinge of disappointment at the inexorable taming of the wildness of the place. And the scars on the hillsides, where the builders had excavated the material for the roadbed were jarring to the eye.

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Once back on the good old Mongolian country highway, we stopped often to enjoy the scenery.

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Before I came over this year, Big Fish Bayara had warned me that the rivers were still running high from late summer rains. So I was somewhat prepared for my first view of the river the next morning.

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I called Sweetwater Travel Company’s Dan Vermillion to give him the news: we might be able to pull off a half week of fishing for the first group of guests, but might want to let them know that conditions are, shall we say, “sub-optimal” for taimen fishing. Dan was able to reach the guests, and they all decided to take a rain check until next season.

So suddenly, we were without guests for the entire week. First-year guide, Matt Podobinski, and I spent the week tying flies, hiking around, reading, running the boats up and down the river, poking around in the springs and creeks adjacent to the main river.

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We found some cool fishing here and there and even managed to catch a taimen towards the end of the week, but conditions on the main river were actually quite dangerous.

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Throughout the week, the river dropped steadily but remained stubbornly brown.

Week 2: How to party like a Russian.

The next Monday, our first group of guests arrived on the chopper.

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This was a group of Russians from St. Petersburg, who spoke a range of “some” to “absolutely no” English. No worries for us though as the group had only a couple of serious anglers among them. The rest lost no time in busting into the cases of vodka and whiskey they had brought to soften their landing. The party most nights would go until 6 or 7 in the morning followed by a half-day of sleeping and maybe a couple of hours of fishing in the afternoon (for a few of the guys).

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Even with steady improvement in the conditions, the high water made for even tougher than usual taimen fishing. Some anglers fished hard all day, and were rewarded for their efforts.

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A couple of non-fishermen decided towards the end of the week that their time would be better spent elsewhere, so they took a jeep to the airport in Muren and flew off to new adventures. Last we heard they were happily installed in a brothel in Kiev.

Around the time that these Russians defected, Dan Vermillion arrived in camp with a detail of U.S. Secret Service agents. They were in camp to suss the place out in preparation for the imminent arrival of some very special guests.

Week 3: Don’t count your chickens. . .

The chopper pilots seemed to land with a theatrical flourish this Monday, and out onto the prairie stepped two of the world’s most well-travelled anglers: President Jimmy and First Lady Rosalyn Carter. Accompanied by an entourage including several good friends, a bevy of Secret Service agents, and U.S. Embassy personnel, the Carters were in camp to try their hands at catching a giant taimen or two. It fell to me to guide them for the week. *Gulp*.

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The first evening, we caught some lenok and grayling before a rain squall brought us back into camp. Just as I was taking off my waders, I got word that the President would like to go back out for some bonus time. I ran him across the river to wade the home pool, just the two of us. Despite being a very accomplished angler and fly caster, President Carter was having a bit of a time with his 8wt trying to huck muppets into the wind. I suggested he try one of the camp Spey Rods, an Echo 8134. Even though he had never used one before, he took to it like, well, a fish to water. He instantly understood how to make a roll cast and water haul into powerful overhead cast that soon had him burping the reel and pulling out ever longer strips of line. He was like a kid in a candy store, and was clearly wondering where this rod had been all his life.

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For any fly fishing guide, there are special experiences that remind you why you are lucky to have chosen this path. The week with the Carters was just such a time. I got to stand shoulder to shoulder and thigh deep in the river with President Carter for the entire week. And one thing I learned is that you don’t get to be President of the United States by being a wuss. This guy just turned 89 on October 1st, and I am not exaggerating when I say that he out-fished and out-efforted every other client at the Lower Camp this year. He would fish the entire nine-hour day, fish or no fish, with a grit and determination that were frankly intimidating. And while others in the party would grouse about the slow fishing, he truly relished the process and punishment of hard-core taimen fishing.

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President Carter caught several nice fish in the 2-to-3-foot class, and had a few chances at trophy class taimen through the week (more, in fact, than any other angler for the season), but as often happens, these eluded capture.

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However, the President did catch one fish that will be remembered for a long time. It was around midweek at the end of a long day punctuated by only a couple of strikes in the afternoon. Bayara and I were tag-teaming the guiding duties for the day and we both agreed on the last spot: Fred’s Bend slough mouth, where my father had caught his best taimen many years ago. In the evening light, and at the end of the run, last cast. . . finally: a solid strike from a heavy fish on the Cyclops. The President struck hard and the rod bent deeply. Fish On! After a stout battle, with several leaps and head shakes, Bayara slid the net under a broad-shouldered taimen of 36-38 inches. Clearly the best fish of the week.

Everyone was stoked! The “chase boat” with the Secret Service detail aboard swooped in for the photo shoot. I handed my camera to guide and chase boat driver, Ganzorig. Backing the President into a golden beam of evening sunlight, I knelt to pull the great fish from the net. Gripping the wrist of the tail, I took a moment to pull the mesh of the net from the taimen’s teeth before lifting it up for the assembled paparazzi. To borrow from another former president, at his moment I was picturing the banner unfurling at the lodge and me in my flight suit arriving back in camp to declare, “Mission Accomplished!”

You know how in life, there are certain moments where you’d give anything to have a do-over, a mulligan? Moments that play over in your mind as you lie awake at night staring into the dark? Scenes where you run through all the possible and obvious ways that things could have been different? Yes, it’s true: I dropped President Carter’s best taimen before any photo was taken.

The fish bucked as I cleared the net from its teeth, and the tail squirted from my grip. I rose to all fours and scrambled after the escaping taimen as it threw a rooster tail across the shallow gravel bar. Twice I touched it, but couldn’t cup the nose. In a final desperate effort, I dove headlong into the water like grizzly onto a salmon. Completely submerged, I wedged head and torso under the chase boat, felt the fish under me, felt it bump and squirm past my clutching arms, and it was gone.

Returning to the surface, waders full, hat and glasses askew, I encountered a very different scene than the one from which I had momentarily departed. The President’s trademark grin had been replaced by a look one might have after accidentally eating a cat turd. Ganzorig and Bayara stared off into the mountains in the distance, completely avoiding eye contact. The Secret Service agents’ mouths hung agape as they looked alternately at the President and at me.

Sitting numbly on the bow of the chase boat, I said something like, “I’m sorry, sir. That was a great fish.”
And President Carter said to me, “Shake it off, Matt. Now we can say it was any size we want.”

Week 4: Back to “normal” taimen fishing.

We bid farewell to President and Mrs. Carter and all our new friends, and the entire circus climbed aboard the helicopter. As they flew off out of sight, I had a lump in my throat, but I may have breathed a sigh of relief. We had a fresh crew of eager anglers in camp, and for the first time all season, everyone was keen to do some serious fishing.

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As the fall colors painted the mountainsides, the week fell into the comfortable rhythm that comes with any good fishing. Towards the end of the week, the taimen fishing actually started to get pretty good. The river level had dropped into still high but entirely reasonable shape, and the taimen were there.

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And though we didn’t land any big ones in that last week, the boys up at the Upper Camp, put us on the map once again. First year guide and Deschutes savant, Matt Carter was there to represent team Oregon, landing several fish over 45 inches including one beautiful big taimen of 51″.

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And then, “Golden Boy,” Jako Lucas (who you’ll remember from last season’s report) waited in the weeds all season, fought through the high water conditions on unfamiliar water, and finished strong by finding the fish of the year (again!) on the last day of the week.

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All told, the 2013 Mongolian Taimen Season at both of Sweetwater Travel Company’s Camps, was one to remember; they all are. I think back on all of the life experiences, friendships, and memories I have enjoyed over all these years in this special place. And through it all swims a fish. The taimen of Outer Mongolia cast a potent spell on the anglers and guides who chase them. They compel us to undertake the long and arduous journey to encounter them in their home waters. May they swim there forever.

Matt Ramsey

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Posted in Fishing Reports, Fly Fishing Travel | 4 Comments

Euro Jig Nymph Brown and Yellow Fly Tying Video

Tony demonstrates one of our most effective nymphs of late on the McKenzie and Willamette rivers. The Brown and Yellow Euro Jig is a slender “quick descending” nymph that catches trout really well. The C400BL hook is incredibly sharp and strong. We see numerous variations of this pattern being effective all over.

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Euro Jig (Yellow and Brown)

Thread: Cream, UTC140 Thread; Red, 10/0 Veevus
Hook: TMC C400BL, Size 12-14
Bead: 1/8 (or larger) Slotted Copper Tungsten Bead
Tail: Wood duck Flank
Rib: Fine, Brown V-Rib
Body: Cream UTC140 Thread
**Change to Red Veevus
Thorax: Dubbing mix: Brown Hare Ear Mask. Pinch of Brown Stone, and Scant Red STS Trilobal

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

Fall Fishing on the McKenzie Still Great

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Despite cooler mornings and what seems to be an early Fall, fishing throughout the McKenzie River remains solid. Fish have moved into slower runs and edges, but are still very willing to take the well presented fly. Dead drifting nymphs early in the day in walking pace 3-8ft runs has yielded some excellent results. As the day warms Blue Winged Olive hatches have been consistent. Look for foam lines, eddies and bubbled edges where a bugs will concentrate as they are struggling to get off the water. Fishing smaller Elk Hair Caddis in Brown and Tan as well as Parachute Adams all in sizes 12-16 during the warmest part of the day has been productive. A hopper dropper rig with and October Caddis Adult ( Parachute Madam X Orange, Kingreys Foam Caddis, Morrish Foam October ) as the hopper and a prince nymph as the nymph is also a very productive rig. When fishing broader tail-outs swinging a Possie Bugger and Dark Cahill combination is working well.

Get out and enjoy! You will find solitude, good fishing and great Pacific Northwest fall days.

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

New Zealand Travel Special

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Posted in Fly Fishing Travel | Leave a comment

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

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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.

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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