Torrence’s Pheasant Ear Nymph Fly Tying Video

Tony Torrence ties a spring trout march brown nymph using some of the buggiest materials around — Hare’s Ear and Pheasant Tail. Therefore, we’re calling this the Pheasant Ear. You gotta love the little flash on the wingcase.

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Torrence’s Pheasant’s Ear Nymph


Hook: TMC 3769 Sizes 8-16

Bead: Gold Bead—Tungsten or Std.
Tail: Brown Goose Biot
Rib: Copper Brassie Ultra Wire
Abdomen: Pheasant Tail
Wingcase: Brown Medalliion Sheeting
Single Strand Flashabou Lateral Scale
Thorax: Hare’s Ear Dubbing and CDC using Marc Petitjean Magic tool and Dubbing loop.
Comments: Finish Wingcase with Clear Cure Goo.

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Depth Charge Nymph Fly Tying Video

In this video, Tony ties a fly called the Depth Charge. This is a bulky, fast-sinking nymph that works well on local trout. A great option right now.

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Depth Charge Nymph

Hook: TMC 5262 8-14
Thread: Veevus 10/0
Bead: Two Graduated sizes of Tungsten Beads—Copper and Black
Antenae: Brown Goose Biot
Tail: Brown Goose Biot
Body: Blended Aussie Oppossum or Squirrel Dubbing
Rib: Medium or Brassie Copper Ultra Wire
Hackle: Natural Brown Partridge
Thorax: Blended Aussie Oppossum or Squirrel Dubbing

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

McKenzie Memories event at Cozmic Pizza

McKenzie Memories
Friday, April 5th from 6-8:30 pm
A Fundraiser for the McKenzie River Trust
$5 Suggested Donation
Cozmic, 199 West 8th Ave in Eugene – food and drinks for sale during the show

What was life like along the majestic McKenzie River in the early 1900s?

McKenzie-Memories-card-web

Back by popular demand, the McKenzie River Trust invites you to McKenzie Memories: an evening of storytelling, music, and rare historic short films and photographs. See footage of early settlers and old-time logging, including dramatic river log drives down the McKenzie, and hear special guest speakers share stories of the Whitewater Boat Parade, the history of the iconic McKenzie Drift Boat, and more.

If you share our love of Oregon’s wild McKenzie River and its remarkable history, this evening of storytelling and films is not to be missed.

Special Guest Speakers
Dave Helfrich will share a century of family history living along the McKenzie, including stories about his father Prince Helfrich, and Veltie Pruit. These local legends played a part in the Hollywood film How the West Was Won (1962), shot on the McKenzie River.
Randy Dersham will share the history of the iconic McKenzie Drift Boat and Whitewater Boat Parade during the 1940s-60s. Randy will also offer a rare screening of the short feature film Shooting the Deschutes shown at the 1939 World’s Fair. Shot in 1938, this classic adventure film starring Prince Helfrich and Veltie Pruit offers you a chance to see parts of the Deschutes River that no longer exist today.

Kickoff the April Matching Gift Challenge
McKenzie Memories kicks off a month-long Matching Gift Challenge offered by our friends at Mountain Rose Herbs. During the month of April, every dollar donated to the McKenzie River Trust will be matched dollar for dollar up to $5,000 by Mountain Rose Herbs! Your donation will help protect and care for special lands and the rivers that flow through them in western Oregon.

Bid on great prizes in our silent auction fundraiser from 6 to 8:30 pm. And when you buy a gift card during the McKenzie Memories event, Cozmic will generously donate 20% of proceeds to the McKenzie River Trust.

For more information contact Brandi Ferguson, Development Manager, at 541-345-2799 or brandi@mckenzieriver.org.

Posted in Oregon Conservation News | Leave a comment

Jay’s “Shimmering” Elk Hair Caddis Fly Tying Video

In this new video, Jay Nicholas makes the case for the two-tone caddis fly body dubbing, and wire rib on a dry fly.

shimmering caddis photo

Shimmering Elk Hair Caddis

Hook: TMC 100 #10-14
Thread: Veevus 10/0
Rib: Copper Wire Small or XS
Hackle: Grizzly or Dyed Grizzly
Body: Ice Dub UV Hot Orange and Caddis Green
Wing: Elk Hair

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

South Island Release Photos

underwater release cedarlodge.net

It’s finally raining today after about 50 days of dry clear conditions. The long dry stint is extremely abnormal for the constantly varied weather patterns of New Zealand’s South Island. Anglers have loved it farmers have hated it! Thanks to Jon Covich for some cool underwater photos this trip.

fly fishing new zealand cedarlodge.net

fly fishing new zealand trout cedarlodge.net

cedarlodge.net fly fishing new zealand

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Beldars Stonefly Nymph Fly Tying Video

Beldar’s stonefly nymph is a great pattern for any time of year. Tony uses this on the McKenzie, Willamette and Deschutes Rivers. This stonefly has a lot of steps… and a lot of weight. Not a pleasure to cast, but it’s a fish-getter.

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Beldars Stonefly Nymph

Hook: TMC 5262 bend mid shank
Thread: Veevus 10/0 Black
Head: Small Black Nickel Cone
Tail: Black Goose Biot
Rib: Small Black V-Rib
Abdomen: Black and Brown Trilobal Mixed
Thorax: Two 5/32 Black Nickel Beads
Black and Brown Trilobal Mixed
Legs: Black Medium Round Rubber
Wingcase: Wapsi Thin Skin-Mottled Brown cut with RiverRoad Wing Cutter
Hackle: Brown mottled Hen tied collar style

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Conservation news: Large Woody Debris, Dam Removals

Good wood!
According to Trout Unlimited State Council Chair Tom Wolf, HB 2396, the large Woody Debris Bill, and one of TU’s top priorities in this 2013 Oregon legislative session, has come out of the House Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee with a “Do Pass” recommendation. There was no opposition to the bill and now it will go to House floor for a vote, within this next week.

This is a good start fro 1 of TU’s top priorities this session. This bill would keep private landowners from removing Large Woody Debris from streams on their propery unless they obtain a removal permit from the Department of State Lands.

Bull Trout monitoring

Dams going down
Communities in 19 states, working in partnership with non-profit organizations and state and federal agencies, removed 62 dams in 2012, American Rivers announced today. The dam removals will restore 400 miles of streams for the benefit of fish, wildlife and people across the country. Full list here.

Native Fish Society Science Report
In his February 2013 Conservation Report Bill Bakke, Native Fish Society Director of Science and Conservation, presents his monthly review of the latest science and research on wild, native fish. This month’s collection is chock full of the good stuff! Topics include: Bears and their Movable Feast; Umpqua Coho Genetic Pedigree Study; ODFW Contracted to Develop Wild Chinook Surrogates; Finches, Starlets, Shakespeare and Societies of Acclimation; The Economics of British Columbia’s Recreational Fishery; The Hunt to Remove Northern Pike from NE Washington Watersheds; and The Startling Economics of Producing A Hatchery Steelhead for Harvest.

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Links: Gratuitous video blog roundup

Videos culled from the pages of our pals at Moldy Chum, Buster, Chester, and and the Osprey. All videos we recommend for wasting your workday.

Salmon confidential:

Salmon Confidential from Twyla Roscovich on Vimeo.

A deliberate life:

A DELIBERATE LIFE….. FILM TRAILER from RockHouse Motion on Vimeo.

Big flies in a swim tank:

Wild Reverence:

Wild Reverence”The Plight of the American Wild Steelhead” Film Trailer from North Fork Studios on Vimeo.

Posted in Oregon fly fishing links | 2 Comments

McKenzie River Trout Fishing Forecast: Spring is Here!

march brown fly fishing on the mckenzie river

Though the Spring Equinox is nearly two weeks away, signs of the new season are everywhere: warmer weather, crocuses blooming, green grasses sprouting in clumps from last year’s brown hummocks along the river banks, and March Browns starting to show on the lower McKenzie.

Over the last couple of weeks, nymphs like Mega Princes, Possie Buggers, Pheasant Tails, and various stonefly patterns fished under an indicator have been producing consistently, but dry and wet fly fishing opportunities have been few and far between. Moving forward, surface fishing should improve dramatically as the March Brown hatch ramps up.

mckenzie river trout spring

The emergence typically pops between 1 and 3 in the afternoon. Each day some bugs will hatch, but abundance will vary wildly from day to day with weather conditions. The best March Brown hatches will materialize under overcast skies. Reasonably warm weather and a little rain never hurts either. On bright and windy days, the hatch will be much less intense. Look for the big March Browns to be intermixed with smaller Blue Winged Olives.

spring trout on the mckenzie river

So far this season, we are enjoying lower and more stable water conditions than we have in the spring for a few years. The river is in great shape, and given the relatively mild forecast, it looks like good fishing conditions will persist for some time.

EN

Posted in Fishing Reports, McKenzie River | 3 Comments

Last Call for Winter Steelhead 2013 Season

Winter steelhead fly fishing

Spring trouting is around the corner..

However, March is one of our favorite months to target winter steelhead. Longer, generally dryer, and warmer days lend to more comfortable conditions. The rivers are in peak splendor and performance.

clay holloway with a winter steelhead on the umpqua river

Bonus: gone are the hatchery fish hunting crowds of January and February.

Here’s a sampling of some local river critters

Winter Steelhead Fly Fishing on the Umqua River

Winter Steelhead fly fishing caddis fly shop

The 1st of April signals the end of our guided winter steelhead trips. So if you have been considering hiring a guide to give you an Oregon winter steelhead experience, the time is now.

Ty and Clay Holloway

Posted in Oregon Winter Steelhead Fishing | 2 Comments

Northwest Fly Tyers Expo and Fly Fishing Show

god father of hackle henry hoffman

Show continues today in Albany. Lou sent these iphone photos yesterday. You still have time today to watch a great collection of legendary fly tyers.

fff show albany oregon

fff show casting pond

fff show tiers

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Spring Simplifly Tying Video

The Simplifly is a basic pattern in form that fishes well during a variety of conditions. Try it as a caddis pattern on your favorite river at any time of the year. Use a different color of antron to vary the color.

simplyfly

Spring Simplifly

Hook: TMC 2457 size 10-16
Thread: Uni thread 6/0
Bead: Gold Tungsten
Thread: Brown 6/0 Uni thread
Body: Twisted Antron
Hackle: CDC
Thorax: Hare’s Ear Dub

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New TU Chapter forming in Corvallis

Corvallis area anglers interested in starting a chapter of Trout Unlimited are invited to a general information meeting on Thursday, March 14th from 7-9pm at Sky High Brewing Company in Downtown Corvallis. The meeting is open to both current members of Trout Unlimited and the general public alike, although ultimate membership will require payment of annual dues to TU National.

Green Island McKenzie River restoration

This new TU Chapter will be tackling restoration projects from as far east as the Cascade Range and all the way west to the coast. The chapter will extend south to the Calapooia and South Santiam watersheds and north to Salem. Those in attendance will learn about the projects the Chapter has lined up, and will also be asked to help name the new chapter, and throw their names in the hat for leadership roles if so interested. A limited amount of beer will be provided, but organizers suggest you bring a few bucks to buy yourself a pint or two. For questions about the chapter, email Dwayne Meadows at dwayne73meadows@yahoo.com.

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Stickel’s Solar Flare Variation Fly Tying Video

Tony ties a popular winter steelhead tube fly pattern on this video, using barred ostrich. This is one fishy looking bug.

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Stickel’s Solar Flare Variation

Thread: Veevus 10/0
Tube: ProTube Microtube and Junction
Body: ProTube Silver small drop weight
Hareline Polar Chenille
Collar: Hot Pink Artic Fox spun in loop
Hackle: Montana Fly Co. Barred Ostrich
Wing: Flashabou Lateral Scale—One strip folded on each side
Dyed Grizzly Hackle
Eyes: Jungle Cock or ProTube Synthetic JC
Head: ProTube Medium Procone

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

First trip back to Oregon

My first trip back, I ride the train down from King Station in Seattle, down the Puget Sound into Tacoma. This place, all of it, from Sekiu to Sacramento is my adopted home.

I see the bare blueberry bushes in the fields, the tiny plots of wine grapes, trees I can name. I lived in the East the majority of my life and couldn’t name hardly a single damn tree or bird, or tell you what they ate, or what they did in the winter.

Here, I know the trees and animals.

I even like knowing the stuff that shouldn’t be here, spotting invasive weeds like Scotch Broom, Himalayan Blackberries, Butterfly bush, Japanese Knotweed. The undergrowth is springing up now. Still February. One of our old neighbors said the entirety of our front yard in our little house in Eugene had bloomed in micro-crocuses, a purple and yellow combination so delicate and beautiful, you would think they were made of porcelain.

There are bridges, rusting over the rivers that I have never fished, but I feel the nostalgia, the connection to every dripping thing, each strand of moss, even the goddamn trash. I miss the people who live under these bridges. I miss a climate that would let them survive. I feel the gray layer of clouds like a warm comforting hand.

As we pass over the Sound, I realize that what I really miss is the Pacific Ocean. Seals and gulls and clear blue seawater, marshy mudflats unfolding to the horizon. And there’s nothing like it in the Ohio steelhead lifecycle, no bringing the marine nutrients into the ancient wooded valleys.

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The first morning in Oregon, Ethan, Kyle, Rob and I fish a midcoastal steelhead river. Rob fishes the entirety of the day with a gummy bear stuck on a jighead and catches two fish. I catch two on an egg pattern under a thingamabobber. Ethan and Kyle row, and cheer us on. The fish are big and the river is gorgeous. There are two guys in front of us, but plenty of fish to go around.

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The next day we fished the lower McKenzie. The lower river changes so much year to year. “It’s an alluvial system. All of your favorite spots will eventually disappear and new ones will take their place,” Ethan says, and it feels like a metaphor for my life.

Newly formed fishy spots can take up to a year to develop insect population that will hold fish. Patience.

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Little black stoneflies crawl all over the rocks at the boat launch.

We fish orange thingamabobbers, side drifting mega-prince nymphs. Rob tells a story of Alaska, an outfitter throwing food scraps into the river at the end of a trip and watching swarms of thirty-inch rainbow trout trying to take down a floating grapefruit.

Stellar’s Jays and belted kingfishers swoop over the river. We catch a bunch of wild trout.

Wild McKenzie Rainbow

Tying bugs

The next day Rob and I head to Tillamook to pick through the upper sections of those rivers on foot. Rob picks up pieces of trash along the riverbank while I fish. I’ve never seen him leave a place without picking it up first.

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Rob and I drove out of a sun drenched valley, singing with Gillian Welch’s Time (The Revelator). Two dozen Roosevelt Elk fed in a clearing of an abandoned house, the Coast Range swallowing it up.

I fly into Akron Airport, snow-blasted flat place with spindly trees and huge houses, and climb into my Honda Civic with the wild salmon bumper stickers, and my Gillian Welch CD picks up where Rob and I had basically left off. One of my favorite songs.

What will sustain us through the winter?
Where did last years lessons go?
Walk me out into the rain and snow
I dream a highway back to you.

-MS

Posted in Coastal Steelhead Fishing, Fishing Reports, McKenzie River | 7 Comments