Hardy Fly Rods at the Caddis Fly; Saturday June 11

Hardy

Please join Garry Sandstrom, our Hardy Rods Sales Rep, on Saturday June 11 at the shop to demo the latest Hardy Rods. Garry will be bringing the latest new rods from Hardy, the Sintrix family: both Zentih and Proaxis models in various weights. Garry brings a full breadth of products for our Caddis Fly customers to ask questions and learn the latest, not only from Hardy Rods, but from Waterworks Lamson, Scientific Angler, Dr. Slick , Fishermans Eyewear, and Hardy Reels. Please join us in the shop on Saturday, June 11, from 11:00am to 2:00pm.

Posted in Shop Sales and Specials | Leave a comment

Reminder: Trout Unlimited Meeting Tonight

Mckenziee-Upper Willamette Trout Unlimited will be hosting its standing meeting at 7:00 at the Vet’s Club in Eugene.  Guide Brian Marz will be presenting on spring fishing in 2011.  With high water conditions, the fishing has been atypical but there has always been something to fsh for when your home waters are out of shape.  Brian will present a video on his spring fishing experiences including everything form flats carp’n to salmonflies on the Deschutes. 

Hope to see you there.

7:00 PM, Veterans Club, 1626 Willamette Street.

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

First adult chinook returns to Upper Deschutes

Jim Bartlett, Portland General Electric Fish Passage Biologist-Facilities Team Lead passed the following photos from the Round Butte hatchery from late last month:

ATT20125708 Continue reading

Posted in Central Oregon Fishing Report, Oregon Conservation News | 7 Comments

The Best Way to Lose a Chinook Tournament

On the eve of Tillamook’s annual spring chinook tournament, the Bounty on the Bay, I arrived at a strategic viewpoint overlooking the upper estuary. It was 7:02pm and the sun was blazing. A hot wind howled down from the Northwest, pushing up frothy waves and making the bay look wildly inhospitable. My tournament partner, Chris Santella, was due to arrive any minute. We had planned to get in an hour or two of fishing before dark, but as I looked out at the angry, flooded bay, I knew we were busted. The adjacent public boat ramp was nearly empty, apart from a lone diesel pickup. I took a deep breath to quell my disappointment, then stepped out of my rig to look around. As I neared the pickup, a middle-aged man came rushing around the bumper, gripping a lively chinook. He quickly slipped the springer into a big cooler in the bed of his truck. The setting sun illuminated a prominent adipose fin as the fish flopped into the hold. The man’s eyes met mine, surprised and wary. He wasn’t sure what I had seen, and was visibly weighing the situation.

“Where is everybody?” I asked cheerfully, blowing off his crime. I was already a flat-lander from Slick-city. The last thing I needed was to turn in one of the locals for poaching wild salmon.

“Been nobody here for hours,” he chuckled nervously. “Hell, it’s been dead all season.”

“Guess it just came to life!” I quipped with a phony smile, walking past him to get a view of the water. I paused for a few seconds, long enough to see several chinook porpoising excitedly around a distinct current seam. “Holy shit,” I said, “They’re rolling like piranhas down there!”

“Yeah, now they are,” he said. “I’ve been fishing all day and they just started jumping a few minutes ago.”

I barely heard the end of his sentence as I moved to prep the drifter for launch. Chris arrived with a six pack of cold Sierra Nevada Pale Ale right after the boat hit the water. We exchanged greetings, jumped in the boat, and popped a couple of bottles. “To our success tomorrow!” we toasted.

It was a short row to the tide rip where salmon were still frolicking. I set the anchors, chose a rod, and tore line off the reel into a pile. My first cast was stopped by a tangle of running line. No surprise there. I sorted out the mess and made another cast, perpendicular to the current. The line sunk slowly, even while under the tension of a sweet, slow swing, and my gut told me the fly was coming through at about three or four feet in eight or nine feet of water. It felt good, and the fish kept up their show. Chris hammered casts in the same zone, using the same line, but a different fly. The wind was still intense, but it was at our back, so casting was easy.

On the third or fourth swing, my line jerked hard. I stripped fast and set the hook twice before cranking up the loose running line on the deck. The fish made a good run, helping me close the gap, and soon it was on the reel and tearing off line against a tight drag. Chris took the oars and rowed me to the beach. The tide was low enough for us to step out on the sand, so I pulled off my shoes and socks and flew overboard. The chinook had run to the opposite side of the pool and was holding steady, right on the surface. Every time I tried to ease his head my way, he’d buck and pull another yard or two of line. In a couple of minutes he relented, and as his head slid up on the sandy beach, Chris and I marveled at the beauty before us–a perfect fish, about 15 pounds, showing off his brightest chain-mail in the setting sun. We clinked our beer bottles, praised the fish gods and got back in the game.

Spring Chinook Tournament Continue reading

Posted in Oregon Salmon fly fishing | 24 Comments

Deschutes River Trout Fishing Report: The Salmonfly Hatch is in Full Swing

salmon flies on the deschtes

The annual emergence of Pternarcys and Golden Stones is now out along the entire length of the Lower Deschutes, and the fish are certainly taking notice.   Between Pelton Dam and Maupin, the Deschutes is host to the most prolific hatch of these bugs anywhere in the country.  It is quite a spectacle.

I have done several multi-day trips on the stretch between Warm Springs and Maupin lately.  Earlier on, closer to the middle of May, the dry fly fishing was a little spotty, with some high and off-color water, and many of the fish still in transition as the hatch worked its way upstream.  In the last week and a half, however, the water has dropped and cleared, the fish have lined up where they should be, and we have had some spectacular sessions of dry fly fishing. Continue reading

Posted in Central Oregon Fishing Report, Eastern Oregon, Fishing Reports | 2 Comments

Pearsall’s Silk Floss and Gossamer Thread

Pearsall’s Silk Floss & Fly Tying Threads

No matter how much I learn about the art of fly tying, I find that there is a much larger universe of technique and materials than I have ever or could possibly ever really master.

So it goes with something as simple as fly tying floss and thread. Fresh off a recent Post that compared the properties of three of the most popular fly tying threads Uni, Danville, and Lagartun, a conversation with Marcos Vergara of Hareline Dubbin offered yet another wake-up call that brought the rich diversity of fly tying crashing home. Continue reading

Posted in Fly Tying | 8 Comments

Teasers & Trailers of Summer Blogs…

Yes, the Oregon Fly Fishing Blog will be hosting some intellectual amazing and eye-popping entries this summer; several, lord willing, from Jay Whoozit or so it is rumored. Continue reading

Posted in Classes and Instruction, Fly Fishing Gear Review, Fly Fishing Travel, Fly Tying | 3 Comments

Midwest Bass pond bonanza

The weather back east has been cooperating, hot days and cooling nights. We’ve spent just about every evening on a bass pond near my parents house, catching a ton of fish on deerhair bass bugs. Stacking and spinning deer-hair every night is a blast, knowing that the flies will work. There are a few other ponds nearby that we’ll probably get to this week, and we’ll probably have to cut the hooks off of these things before too long, but it’s the best bass fishing I’ve had in years. Paul and Nate have landed a few bass on the cane pole and snoopy rod, but Paul is too scared of the bass to pose with them for a photo.

Ohio Fishing Continue reading

Posted in Fishing Porn | 2 Comments

McKenzie Fishing Fine Despite High Water

Mckenzie River fly Fishing

Big water and big flies has been strategy of late on the upper McKenzie River. Nymphing has been consistent using Mega Prince, large Stonefly imitations and Possie Buggers. We have been fishing 6-7 feet of tippet below the Thingamabobber in moderate paced 4-10 foot runs, drop offs and riffles. Sun breaks, afternoon hatches and water temperatures creeping up during the later part of the day have helped fishing improve steadily over the past week. Continue reading

Posted in Fishing Reports, McKenzie River | 2 Comments

Diamond Lake Fly Fishing Report

fly fishing diamond lake

Chase Millemann brings us this report from Saturday. Diamond should continue to improve as the weather does, but it looks pretty good despite the cold. Thanks Chase.

I fished Diamond lake with my buddy Casey on Saturday. The weather report said
there would be a chance of snow, but we had no idea what we were in for. It was
a sideways blizzard for much of the day, and it felt more like a powder day than
a fishing trip. While the weather was rough, and the water was frigid, the
fishing was very good.

diamond lake trout

We fished chironomids under various mini leeches and
buggers. We put the leech about 8 feet below an indicator and the chironomids
about 4 feet under that. It didn’t seem to matter what kind of leech or
chironomid we used; the bite was consistent all day. We didn’t catch any of the
huge diamond lake rainbows that I’ve seen in pictures, but we landed decent
numbers of fish in the 16-17 range, and every fish was fat. I was worried that
we’d have a hard time catching fish on the fly after seeing the massive fleet of
boats fishing bait, but there were lots of fish, and despite the frigid weather,
they were hungry.

For a more comprehensive report on Diamond Lake Fly Fishing check out: thebajaproject.wordpress.com

Posted in Central Oregon Fishing Report, Fishing Reports, Oregon High Lakes | 2 Comments

Nate’s new 25′ Pursuit on Lake Erie

For those of you wondering what captain Nate’s gotten up to, he’s chasing warmwater species on Lake Erie in his new 25-foot center console. Luckily it has twin 150s, and we put them to good use yesterday outrunning a nasty storm that started in Southern Michigan and rolled into Lake Erie. Hopefully more details and more fish shots later this week.
-MS

Captain Nate

Captain Nate

Captain Nate

Posted in Fly Fishing Travel | 4 Comments

Switch “State of the Union” By George Cook

switch rods at caddisflyshop.com

George Cook the Northwest Sales Representative for Sage, Rio, Redington, Sarcione and more brings us this great “ramble” on Switch Rods as only he can. Thanks George.

Fresh off the famous Sandy River Spey Clave I can tell you that there is No Doubt that the Switch Rod Evolution has Landed Big Time in the Pacific Northwest. However, this game has a fair level of confusion amongst it’s enthusiastic following. The following ramble should help clear a path to the river with better Angling ahead……. Continue reading

Posted in Fly Fishing Gear Review | 1 Comment

“Enhanced” Larimer Bunny Tube Fly Tying Video

Summer Steelhead season is upon us. Time to restock your tube fly boxes. Use Jay’s version of a Bunny Tube fly for a basis in tying Summer Steelhead Tube patterns.

IMG_2359

Enhanced Larimer Bunny Tube Fly

Tube: Pro Tube Micro Tube
Cone: Pro Tube Pro Cone
Thread: Lagartun 95D
Tail: Mahi Green black Barred Rabbit Strips
Hackle: Fl Flame and Red Blood Quill Marabou
Flash: Gold Holographic Flashabou
Legs: Yellow Chartreuse/Fl Orange tipped Crazy legs

Posted in Fly Tying, Summer Steelhead | 4 Comments

Summer Steelhead coming: May numbers at Willamette Falls

Check out run counts for summer steelhead and spring chinook. A little over six thousand summer steelhead have come over Willamette Falls since May 22nd. That’s about half as many as had come last year by this time, but still more than 2009 number of 4,190.

May 2011 Summer Steelhead Willamette Falls

Willamette River Summer Steelhead

Posted in Summer Steelhead | 2 Comments

Paul’s first fishing trip: Snoopy roddin’

Well, it may actually be his second fishing trip (we took him out carp fishing when he was a couple months old). But this past weekend was the first time he could participate. We picked out a spinning rod outfit, a box of worms, and headed to a few local hatchery and warm-water hot spots (not on the McKenzie, thanks). My fishing time has been radically reduced since Paul came along, but I might have found a way to go fishing every afternoon now. Photos by my pal Kelsey.

Paul Fishing -- Photos by Kelsey

Paul Fishing -- Photos by Kelsey

Paul Fishing -- Photos by Kelsey

Posted in Oregon Warmwater Fly Fishing | 5 Comments