EWEB to shut down Walterville Canal on McKenzie River to help spring chinook run

Due to the low water year, and public pressure from guides like Aaron Helfrich and Ethan Nickel, EWEB has decided to shut down the Walterville Canal for three weeks starting May 17, and reduce its take from the river from June 7-30th. EWEB’s Walterville Canal is located in the river section between Hendricks and Bellinger, and poses problems for both upstream migrating salmon, and wild trout.

When you run this section, you’ll notice EWEB is taking over half the flow of the river. As Ethan pointed out, in regards to wild trout and aquatic insect populations, the river can only support what the lowest and warmest water conditions of the year will allow. The effects of this year’s drought will be especially damaging in the sections of the river where over half of it is missing.

According to EWEB: The reduced canal flow also is intended to reduce, or possibly eliminate, the need to perform once-a-week shutdowns of the Walterville Canal when too many fish congregate below the tailrace barrier (we haven’t done this for fish-management purposes since 2007). We are hopeful that a steady, but much-reduced, flow in the canal will result in more adult salmon choosing to migrate up the river, instead of into the tailrace. These reduced flows also will provide you with higher and more predicable flow of water in the river bypass section. Our goal is to eliminate sporadic shutdowns for fish-management purposes. However, we will have to monitor this reduced-canal-flow situation daily and cannot predict with certainty whether any single-day shutdowns will be necessary during the period from June 7 through June 30.

EWEB’s shutdown of the canal will coincide with scheduled maintenance. The reduced flows from June 7 to June 30 will “cost EWEB” an estimated $95,000 in lost power generation revenues.

EWEB should be congratulated for helping out wild fish, and anglers need to be ready to continue to hold the utility accountable.
-MS

Posted in McKenzie River, Oregon Conservation News | 1 Comment

Barrett’s Ice Butt Mothers Day Goddard Caddis

In this video Barrett demonstrates how to tie one of our favorite early season caddis patterns. We love this fly during those blizzard caddis hatches in April and May. But it will fish all year round in various size and colors. This high floating caddis pattern employs spinning hair, which can be a pain. The small amount of hair and few steps, make this spun hair fly easier than most.

Ice Butt Mothers Day Goddard Caddis

Ice Butt Goddard Caddis

Hook: 2488 # 12-18
Thread: 6/0 Black Uni-Thread
Egg Sack: Caddis Green Ice Dub
Body: Spun Dyed Dun Deer Hair
Hacke: Grizzly Dry Fly

Posted in Fly Tying | Leave a comment

Step Up for Native Fish this Saturday

IMG_3146

I’ve prepared a special set of Intruders for this year’s Native Fish Society auction and banquet. Some happy steelheader will go home with six flies, all of which were specially tied over this past weekend, representing over 16 painstaking hours at the vise. Not only do they represent considerable effort in the tying, but their design is the culmination of two years of intense development and on-the-water testing. Several key refinements have been added here, including the use of tentacular grizzly hackle tips in place of Lady Amherst for added movement and contrast. My nerdy fishing pals will begrudgingly attest to the effectiveness of these flies. If they hesitate, it’s only because they’re still sore from having their pockets picked. But you can take it from me: these flies are worth the time and trouble.

This coming Saturday marks the Native Fish Society’s 14th annual auction and banquet. The event will again be held in Northwest Portland, at the Mongomery Park building. Tickets are $75 each, and include a fantastic meal. Here’s a link to details: http://www.nativefishsociety.org/homewaters/

Many of Oregon’s finest fly guides donate special trips to the auction as fundraisers. The list of available trips, gear and non-fishing items is world-class–maybe the finest to be found anywhere (http://www.nativefishsociety.org/homewaters/documents/AuctionItemswebpageteaser24.pdf). Somewhere way down on that list is a trip for two led by yours truly–should go real cheap!

The Native Fish Society is my favorite organization. It is specifically dedicated to the preservation and restoration of native fishes and their habitats in Oregon. Bill Bakke, the group’s visionary founder, has devoted his life to defending our endemic salmonids–the sacred core of human culture in the Pacific Northwest. So, in my world, where salmon, steelhead and trout reign supreme, Bakke and his team are my spiritual leaders. They hold the line for all of us salmophiles, under incredible pressure, arming themselves with a heady blend of science and common sense. In my opinion, all of us who care about our rivers and our fisheries owe them a great deal of gratitude and support.

I sincerely hope you will save the date and join me in supporting the Native Fish Society this weekend. There will still be plenty of time for fishing!–RR

Posted in Oregon Conservation News, Oregon Fly Fishing Clubs and Events | 7 Comments

McKenzie River Trust free movie night April 7th: RiverWebs

McKenzie River Trust is hosting a showing of the movie RiverWebs, Wednesday April 7th, 7pm at the Hult Center Studio across from the Jacobs Gallery.

riverwebs

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

Campeche Mexico Tarpon Trip Planned

Campeche Tarpon

OregonFlyFishingBlog.com and The Caddis Fly Angling Shop’s very own Barrett Christiansen will be leading a small group of anglers on a Tarpon fly fishing trip to Campeche Mexico.

Located on the Western Yucatan, the quaint historic city of Campeche is virtually an unknown destination in today’s world of global angling. This region features more than 80 mile of mangrove coast, hundreds of inlet creeks, and numerous channels, making it the most prolific baby tarpon fishery in Mexico, if not the world. Offering skilled and kind hearted guides, a wonderfully quaint town with Mayan and Spanish history, and flats-style sight fishing for high numbers of feisty tarpon in the 5-30 pound class, Campeche is bound to become a staple for avid saltwater anglers.

Each day anglers depart their hotel early to meet their guides, board the pangas and venture out into the vast and varied waters of the Los Petenes biosphere preserve. Typical days will have anglers seeing hundreds of tarpon that range in size from 5 to 30 pounds with opportunities to cast to 20 or more. Depending on wind and tide conditions, anglers will either fish out on the open flats, along the edges of the mangroves, or in the creeks. Light breakfasts are served at the hotel and ample lunches are served on the boat. Guests enjoy evening meals (not included) at various restaurants in the charming historical city.

Campeche Tarpon

Your typcial fishing day is:
4:45 am wake
5:30 am breakfast
6:00 am – 2:30 pm fishing
Afternoons open for swimming and exploring the charming town of Campeche and dinners on your own.

Campeche Tarpon Dates for 2010 Nov 13th-20th

Saturday November 13th Arrive Merida, Mexico: In Merida you will be met by a driver who will take you to your accommodation in Campeche approximately 2 hours away. Your head guide will meet you at your hotel to help you check into your room and explain the fishing program.
Nov. 14th-19th Six full days of guided fishing with Campeche Tarpon + Lodging at Hotel Plaza Campeche
Saturday November 20th: Transfer from Campeche to Merida and Depart for home.

2010 Rate
Seven day Six Night Package $2700 based on double occupancy and sharing a guide.
Included: Guided fishing, accommodation at hotel, breakfast, and lunch, ground transfers from Merida to Campeche(2 hours), fishing licence, and local taxes.
Not Included: International air fare to and from Merida, Mexico, evening meals, guide gratuities and any additional activites.

Campeche Tarpon

We have a few spots left and would like to invite those interested in attending to call the shop (541-342-7005) or send us an email (caddiseug@yahoo.com).

Posted in Fly Fishing Travel | 1 Comment

How to tie and rig tube flies with Jay Nicholas

In this three part video series Jay demonstrates how to use a tube fly adapter tool, how to tie a simple tube fly and how to rig your terminal end when fishing tube flies. Tubes have incredible potential for various fly tying applications these videos simply scratch the surface.

HMH Tube Fly Tool
HMH Tubes

Jay’s Egg Sucking Leech Tube Fly

Tube: HMH Small plastic Tube
Thread: Lagartun X-Strong Fl. Orange
Body: Crosscut Rabbit Black
Flash: Mirage Flashabou
Eyes: Pseudo Eyes
Head: STS Trilobal Dub

Video 3 Rigging Tube Flies

Gamakatsu C14S Glow Bug Hook
HMH Tubes
Gamakatsu SC15 Hook
Hareline Super Eggs

Posted in Fly Tying | 5 Comments

New spey fishing gear: Rio Skagit MOW sink tips

Coming out next month (May 2010), Rio is introducing new sink tips for two-handed Skagit style spey fishing. Based off the DIY sink tip modifications from spey gurus Mike McCune, Scott O‘Donnell and Ed Ward, the MOW system is designed to help anglers fish short, fast-sinking tips (2.5′ to 7.5′) without casting disasters.

Here, Rio Rep and spey guru George Cook explains the system.

Previously, anglers created custom tips and used Skagit cheaters to swing a fly through areas that need short fast tips, like submerged boulder gardens. The Skagit MOW tips are great for probing small pockets where a big sink tip would hang up.

You can pre-order your Rio Skagit MOW tips today.

Posted in Fly Fishing Gear Review | 1 Comment

Chewee Skin Golden Stone Fly Tying Video

Another storm is pounding the Willamette Valley and it looks like our rivers are going to jack up again. It must be time to fill the fly boxes. The water will be up when the weather settles out, heavy nymphs will need to be part of the arsenal.

In this short video Barrett demonstrates how to tie a Golden Stone using new material. U.V Chewee Skin  from Hareline Dubbin is an excellent material to use for shell-backs, wing cases and bodies. We see U.V Chewee Skin having some excellent applications for bonefish and other saltwater patterns. “U.V colors in the 360 nm wave length are highly visible to fish in low light conditions. UV-A penetrates water over 600 ft. Using a mixture of highly and non UV-A material will attract more fish.”

The Chewee Skin Golden Stone is the ideal weight. It’s cast-able, but heavy enough to carry down to the bottom with it a dropper nymph. Fish the two flies under a Thingamabobber about 6ft.–CD

Chewee Skin Stone Fly Nymph

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Strike Indicator Overview

Spring has sprung and it’s time to get outside get outside, bulk up on your Vitamin D, and sling some flies to frisky trout on your favorite stream. The season has already presented every opportunity to use to your favorite technique. Everyone loves to fish dries to feeding fish, but sometimes you just have to take the bug to where they live. Nymphing with an indicator is undeniably effective, and now we have so many choices in indicators it makes my head spin. Yes, we are in the golden age of indicators.

Trapped air technology has been the hot ticket lately; very little weight on the leader and an indicator that holds a tremendous amount of weight for its size. Available in a variety of sizes to meet you needs. Now you can fish two big, burly, weighted bugs with no worries of sending your indicator to depths. Thingamabobbers are the ticket and attached to the leader by looping it on like many indicators of the past.

Now we have new line of indicators that allow you to easily attach the indicator by tightening a screw around a loop of leader. The Screw-Ball is hard foam, the Sungicator is for the yarn lover, or the Under-Cator features trapped air technology with a flanged-tipped screw for easy tightening or removal. O-rings effectively protect you leader in all these products.

I have found these products wonderful when I take off with one rod on a wading trip and will face a hatch at some point in the day. I want to be able to quickly remove my indicator and get a dry fly in the water to feeding fish. If you use indicators check out these new products.

TT

Posted in Fly Fishing Gear Review | 4 Comments

Keep Nestlé out of the Columbia Gorge, protect coldwater steelhead and salmon habitat

From Russell Bassett’s Native Fish Society Blog: Nestlé, the world’s largest producer of bottled water, wants to manufacture their Arrowhead Brand in Cascade Locks. In order to do this, Nestlé needs access to spring water so they can sell it to consumers with that description. Cascade Locks, however, does not have rights to the water from Oxbow Springs, a Herman Creek tributary. In order for the town to sell spring water to Nestlé, Cascade Locks seeks to obtain water rights from ODFW, which currently uses the spring water to support a hatchery for coho salmon, Idaho sockeye and Grande Ronde spring chinook. In return, Cascade Locks would provide water from their aquifer to the hatchery.

What’s the problem with this plan? Well, the bottling plant could adversely affect migratory fish. Salmon and steelhead passing through the Lower Columbia to points and tributaries upriver often have to deal with high temperatures, and Herman Creek provides a cold water thermal refuge. Food and Water Watch and a coalition of others petitioned ODFW this week not to approve the deal, and OPB said any decision is one year away.

We talked to Tom Chandler of Trout Underground who battled Nestlé on California’s McCloud River last year. Here is Tom’s summary of the process:

* The original negotiations with the McCloud Services District were undertaken in secret
* Public review of the contract was limited to one meeting – at the conclusion of which the Services District voted to accept the contract (to the stunned amazement of the attendees)
* The contract essentially handed over control of McCloud’s water supply – for up to 100 years
* Nestle was paying $26.40 per acre foot for water (a small fraction of the market price), and the fees paid for the water itself weren’t going to increase over the 100 year life of the contract
* While Nestle enjoyed the first rights to the water (ahead of the town’s own residents), they also offloaded most infrastructure costs onto the town
* 250-300 trucks per day would roll into town (24/7/365), creating a level of noise and air pollution the town had never seen
* Nestle had never conducted any environmental review of the impacts of water removal on the watershed, so their claims of “no harm to the environment” were widely derided

“Nestlé will say that they’ve never harmed a watershed. That’s a lie. A court in Michigan clearly decided that Nestlé’s pumping activities there were damaging a wetlands and a river. Nestlé only agreed to negotiate reduced pumping after the judge got fed up and threatened them with a restraining order,” Chandler said. “Small communities that get involved with Nestlé often find themselves on the wrong end of Nestlé’s considerable legal firepower, and most lack the resources to fight.This is exactly what happened in Fryeburg (ME), where Nestlé filed a lawsuit and four appeals, finally overturning the decision of the local planning commission – largely on a technicality.”

This is not the kind of predatory corporation we want controlling our public water resources.
-MS

Posted in Oregon Conservation News | 2 Comments

March Brown Foam Parawulff

Having a variety of March Brown imitations can be key to a successful day on the water. On some days fish want a high floating traditional, on others they want a pattern that sits low to the water and more closely resembles the struggling emerging adult. In this video Barrett demonstrates using foam instead of dubbing to create a uniform water resistant body. He also shows us how to tie and divide a synthetic winging material called Sparkle Emerger Yarn. The March Brown Parawulff is highly effective late February-April when March Browns are emerging and fish are looking towards the surface. Use pale yellow Sparkle Emerger Yarn and a lighter foam body on a size 16-18 hook and you will have an excellent Pale Morning Dun pattern.

March Brown Parawulff

March Brown Foam Parawulff
Hook: TMC 100 or Daiichi 1180 #12-14
Thread: Uni 6/0 Brown or Tan
Tail: Moose body hair 6-8 fibers
Body: 2MM Tan or Lt. Brown Fly Foam
Wing: Sparkle Emerger Yarn Tan
Hackle: Cree or Grizzly Dyed Brown or One Grizzly and one Brown
Thorax: Stalcups MicroFine dry fly Dub

Posted in Fly Tying | 1 Comment

McKenzie and Willamette rivers reset with high water

Recent down pours have been hammering our local waters. We do need the water, and the fish never mind a reprieve from pressure, especially on a low water year. As the rivers drop into shape late this week how should you approach the high water?

It looks like Thursday mid-day should have the McKenzie under the gage height of 3.0. The river can fish above this level but it is a good number to watch. Recent low elevation snow will have the water temps down a bit. Have a rod rigged with dredging gear. A heavy stonefly nymph, really heavy like  Beldar’s or Tungsten Trout Retriever. Couple it with a Possie Bugger, Mega Prince, Idyl’s Holo Prince, Ice Prince, Morrish’s Super Pupa or Morrish’s Hotwire Caddis tied off as a dropper under a Thingamabobber.  This will have you covered on the depth and imitation side of things. We have seen tremendous numbers of caddis and March Browns this spring, look for that to continue. If things do warm up during the day swing wets like Dark Cahills and Hare’s Ear Soft Hackles. The water is going to up and moving so look to the inside edges and softer flowing banks. Dries to have during the warmest part of the day include, March Brown Parachute, X-Caddis, Peacock Caddis and Hogan’s Yuba River Emerger.

Don’t be surprised if you run into an early steelhead, they are moving into the system and early indications have 2010 looking like a good year.–CD

Posted in Fishing Reports, Lower Willamette, McKenzie River, Middle Fork Willamette River fishing | 3 Comments

How to Blend Fly Tying Dubbing

In this short video Jay Nicholas explains the how to, and why to, of creating your own dubbing blends. Jay uses a variety of Hareline dubbings including, Hare-Tron Dub, Hareline Dub, Ice Dub and STS Trilobal Dub. Finding the best dubbing blend for your fly pattern can take some experimentation, but when you find that unique blend that really is different and the fish notice, your efforts are rewarded. Grab your coffee grinder and give it a try.–CD

Posted in Fly Tying | 5 Comments

Tarpon Toad Fly Tying Video

Get ready for Tarpon season with this version of the ever popular Tarpon Toad. Barrett demonstrates how to tie a Florida Keys classic. Using the “figure 8” method and McFlylon to make a body. This simple but highly effective pattern is one to have when fishing for Tarpon anywhere in the world. Purple/Pink and Red/Black and all Tan versions are also effective. The same method to create the body on the Tarpon Toad can me adapted to making Merkin style crab patterns as well.

Barrett's Tarpon Toad

Tarpon Toad

Hook: Gamakatsu SC17
Thread: U140 Chartruese Ultra Thread or Uni-Thread 3/0 Chartreuse
Tail: Blood Quill Marabou Chartreuse
Collar: Crosscutt Rabbit Yellow
Merkin Style Head: McFlylon Chartruese
Eyes: Large Mono Black

Posted in Fly Tying | 1 Comment

McKenzie River Trout Update: Mark your calendars for April 8th

Wild Trout Panel Next Thursday
On Thursday April 8th, McKenzie River Native Trout advocates should plan on attending the McKenzie River Watershed Council meeting at the Campbell Senior Center 155 High St. in Eugene. Dinner at 5:00, meeting at 5:30pm.

MRWC is hosting a panel discussion on the various options for trout management on the McKenzie River. The five panelists include Trout Unlimited, the McKenzie Fly Fishers, Dave Vazquez, the McKenzie River Guides Association and the Vida Store. Each panelist will get 5 minutes to express their perspective; after each initial presentation, other panelists, council members and the audience will ask questions of that panelist. Ater all initial presentations, members of the audience will get an opportunity to express opinions that they felt were not presented by a panelist; panelists will get 2 minutes to make final comments.

Trout and Tourism
In related news, the Register-Guard yesterday ran an article about the McKenzie River Tourism Committee, a group dedicated to bring more business to the “forgotten” McKenzie Valley. Of the 68 miles of navigable McKenzie River, 38 miles (33 miles in 2010) are managed for hatchery trout production. Should nearly half of Lane County’s tourism engine be dedicated to anglers chasing a hatchery truck/boat? Should one of the last intact ecosystems with healthy Bull Trout and Upper Willamette Spring Chinook populations be the place for an artificial put-and-take experience? Obviously, we don’t think so.

We’re hoping to influence the folks involved in this project to consider these issues:

-The McKenzie River is one of the only rivers in Western Oregon where anglers have a legitimate shot at a trophy trout. And the best way to increase opportunity to catch trophy fish is to shrink the hatchery zone.

-Anglers can catch hatchery fish in Pittsburgh. Why would someone come here?

-The Metolius is a great example of how a river and economy can bounce back. In a recent Native Fish Society Newsletter, Russell Basset interviewed owner of the Camp Sherman Store, Roger White, who said that he had better revenues in 1996, after the hatchery program stopped, than the previous owner had in 1995 during the hatchery days. “That first year was scary as hell,” White said. “People kept telling me that no one would come and that we would go out of business because the stocking stopped. The first couple years were tough, but we saw things turn around. After three years the fish were rebounding well. As the river progressed, magazines wrote articles and more and more people gave this river a try.”

For more information: contact Sarah Mizejewski, Lane County Community & Economic Development, at 541-682-4445 or sarah.mizejewski@co.lane.us and let her know how you feel about these issues.

By the numbers: Trout tagging
Here is an update on the trout tagging process from the McKenzie Flyfishers’ Dave Thomas: In January 2010, ODFW announced it would no longer stock a five mile section of the Lower McKenzie River, from Hendricks to Bellinger boat ramps. This section of river had been stocked with triploid rainbow trout for decades, so the McKenzie Flyfishers asked the agency to study the effect of removing those stocked fish on the native population. Through a grant from the Fly Fishers Club of Oregon, Trout Unlimited Chapter 678 funded the project, and held angler training sessions during the first week in March. ODFW trained a total of 46 participants. The tagging process and data recording standards were covered and each participant became eligible to use study kits containing tagging guns, tags, maps of the study section, data recording forms and other paraphernalia. At the end of the first two weeks of the study we had logged 22 tagging trips through the study section, plus an earlier ODFW trip using electric shock to tag fish. These efforts together resulted in 105 fish caught and released. Of these, 15 native cutthroats and 55 native rainbow trout were tagged. We expect this year’s study to continue through May or until we have tagged about 700 fish, which ever comes first. In succeeding years, using the proportion of tagged fish to the overall catch, we will develop progressively refined population estimates and have a much better idea of the impact of current planting practices on native fish in the river.

-MS

Posted in McKenzie River, Oregon Conservation News, Oregon Fly Fishing Clubs and Events | 2 Comments