Hatchery Trout Hurt

As regular readers know, we recently took our campaign against planter trout in the Mckenzie to the next level with the publication an opinion piece by Matt and Chris in the Register Guard suggesting that it is time to move towards managing the Mckenzie for wild fish.

Most people, myself included (until recently) haven’t realized the full extent of the harm to native fish populations caused by stocking hatchery trout. My research uncovered a 1982 (I believe) paper by E. Richard Vincent of the Montana Department of Fish and Wildlife entitled ‘The Effects of Stocking Catchable-Sized Hatchery Trout on Wild Trout in the Madison River and O’Dell Creek, Montana.’ You don’t have to make it far into the document to be amazed. I think I’ll let Mr. Vincent do the talking:

ABSTRACT

Fall wild populations of two-year-old and older brown and rainbow trout increased 159% and 868% in number and 160% and 1016% in total biomass respectively, four years after the last catchable-sized hatchery rainbow trout was stocked in the Varney section of the Madison river. Brown trout increases peaked within two years after stocking of catchables had ceased, whereas wild rainbow trout biomass levels were still showing increases four years after the last stocking. Wild brown and rainbow trout between 10.0-17.9 inches showed the greatest increases when stocking ceased.

I can’t stand 17.9 inch trout trout, can you? Meanwhile . . . .

When catchable-sized hatchery trout were stocked for three consecutive years into a previously unstocked section of O’Dell Creek, the number of two-year-old and older wild brown trout population was reduced 49% in total number and biomass. Wild brown trout between 10.0 and 17.9 inches showed significant declines in number after stocking was initiated, whereas those smaller than 10 inches showed no significant change in numbers.

In the most recent assessment of wild trout on the Mckenzie River, 257 of 307 fish tagged were under 10 inches. Hmmm. This sounds consistent with Vincent’s findings. None of this information is unknown to our local fish managers, the Madison River/ O’Dell Creek fieldwork was performed between 1966 and 1972. Meanwhile in 2009 on the Mckenzie we are dumping 140,000 or so eight inch planters into what could be a fantastic fishery.

Could it be that we’ve been stocking the Mckenzie for so long we’ve forgotten what it could be? I think it’s time to find out.–KM

Posted in Oregon Conservation News | 17 Comments

Local Fall Fishing Update

Fishing  held up nicely this past week despite some very cold and wet conditions. The coming weeks prediction is for gorgeous weather and ideal river levels for both trout and steelhead fishing. The McKenzie is fishing well in it’s entirety. The Middle Fork of the Willamette is also excellent above and below Hills Creek Reservoir. Small creeks and rivers like Horse Creek, the South Fork of the McKenzie, Salt Creek, and Salmon Creek are fishing well as the clock ticks to their close October 31st.

Warm weather will reinvigorate the small Caddis, Short Winged Stoneflies, and October Caddis hatches that have been suppressed with the cold. When it did cool down, and we know it will again, look for Blue Winged Olives, Lesser Green Drakes, Gray Drake and Pale Evening Duns.

Steelhead Fishing has been great when the McKenzie and Willamette have been in shape. Things were a bit tough when the water jumped up out of Dexter Dam this past week but levels are ideal right now. Warm afternoons lack of fishing pressure have the fish taking swung leeches and egg patterns.–CD

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Posted in Lower Willamette, McKenzie River, Middle Fork Willamette River fishing, Summer Steelhead | 3 Comments

Jay’s Deschutes Steelhead Report September 27 – 30, 2009

So – I had been hearing these wild reports about twenty fish days. From credible people. Steelhead, not trout. Then there were the fly fishers who would only say that “they had a good trip and yes, they did catch a FEW fish”.

It was almost more than I could bear. So, given an invitation from a dear friend who I haven’t fished with for waaaay too long, I said yes, let’s go on the Big D. I stashed all my fall salmon gear, pulled out two Spey rods, stuffed a couple hundred flies in my vest and called back to ask what flies they had been fishing.

Jay Nicholas Deschutes September

Naturally – and this is the absolute truth, I did not have one, not ONE of their “hot” flies. Not that steelhead care when they’re on the grab, right?

So on the evening before the trip, there I was, tying a dozen of the “right” fly, just in case. How silly can a guy get?

We departed Corvallis on Sunday morning, grabbed coffee and made it to Macks Canyon by 2 PM. Down river we went, with our friends ahead, staking out territory to fish that evening. Steve and I fished with Dave and Doug Stewart, son-father team of experienced Deschutes River steelhead fly fishers.

“Stand here”, Doug said to Steve. “Jay, go down-river about fifty-yards and fish the tailout”, he advised. Dave and Doug took leftovers and gave us the best camp water.

Before going on the trip I had noted that the weather was cooling and predicted, half jokingly, that fifty-thousand steelhead were probably swimming furiously downstream to exit the Deschutes while we were driving over the mountain. Ha ha. They really did.

Jay Nicholas Deschutes September

So instead of twenty fish apiece, Steve got one nice wild fish and I got grabbed hard. Next morning was a repeat, except I was grabless.

We had great fun and it was easy to keep track of the fish and the grabs. Small numbers are easier on my cluttered brain anyway. My friends ate bacon and sausage, steaks, and slathered butter on their spuds. They pounded the microbrews while I ate sagebrush and scallions.

Jay Nicholas Deschutes September

Jay Nicholas Deschutes September

The wind blew – HARD. A 600 grain Skagit head with T-14 was nasty to cast during the day. Nasty-and-a-half. One expensive tornado-proof tent took-off up-river with shattered tent poles. Our tarp kept flapping loose and slapping us with a loose tent stake. We had great coffee; I mean GREAT coffee for breakfast. The jet boat guides spammed the river with spoon chucking, side-planer slinking, corkie tossing, tadpolly swimming clients all day long.

Jay Nicholas Deschutes September

We had our camp water and managed a pull or two a day, if you count the little taps and “well, I think it was a pull; no, I’m sure it was a pull; at least I think it was a pull”. One pull held on long enough to be confirmed as a chrome bright Chinook. Go figure. Give me a stroke of luck over skill any day.

We waited for microsecond pauses when the wind shifted from upriver to downriver, only to find it screeching straight into our faces.

The toilets. Did I mention the toilets? Beautiful. Comfortable. Works-of-art-composting toilets. One night it blew so hard and was so cold that I considered sleeping in the toilet. Seriously.

Jay Nicholas Deschutes September

I only went for one swim, survived that nicely, and even got my hat back. Hung my clothes on a handy tree limb to dry. A dead alder blew over and nearly smushed my buddies while I was on clinging to a bedrock ledge trying to not get swooshed into the river again. My underwear blew around camp for the next two days.

Colorado coming up. Go left. No. Go right past the pointy rock and THEN go left. I think. “How’s the fishing”? Fifty guys and one woman were tossing hardware on the way to the take-out. SLOW, they all reply, not like last week, they all say.

Jay Nicholas Deschutes September

PS: The little fly with the orange butt and – – – -, yes, it did work.

JN

Posted in Central Oregon Fishing Report, Summer Steelhead | 5 Comments

Fall 2009 Mongolia Taimen Fishing Report

Our friend Matt Ramsey brings us this report from his recent guiding season in Mongolia.

Having just returned from my 12th season in Outer Mongolia (has it really been that long?), I thought you all might like a slice of the scene from the other side of the world. This September, Sweetwater Travel Company ran two camps on the upper and lower reaches of the Eg-Uur system in Northern Mongolia. I was guiding and managing at the Lower Camp for the month.

Forget about all the bro-brah, stuck in the mud, weeks-without-a-fish, taimen fishing videos you’ve seen. With jet-boat access to over 175 miles of prime taimen habitat managed for catch-and-release, single-barbless-hook, fly fishing-only, this is the premier taimen fishery on the planet.

Here are some season highlights:

Week 1: Season Opener

I flew into camp with the first group of guests via MI-8 helicopter from Ulanbaatar. Aussie guest (a chopper pilot himself), Charles Barret Jr., once seated on the generously loaded Russian bird, looked stricken as he proclaimed, “Mate, I am NOT enjoying this!”

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Despite his misgivings, we all arrived safely in camp, ready to get out on the water. The river was in great shape, lower than it had ever gotten the previous season, and fishing was very good. Some of the best action of the year took place during this first week.

Our ace Mongolian guide, “Big Fish” Bayaraa Bayarsaikhan, led a guest into a 48-inch fish on his third cast of the first day in the home pool across from camp.

Every night, the guides gathered in the ger for a fly tying session, cranking out fanciful skaters and streamers for the coming day’s fishing.

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As I said, fishing was very good the first week. Charles and his fishing partner, Roy Richards, had a day where they rose 17 taimen and landed 5. This type of hooked- to- landed ratio is not unusual. Taimen are the “gettawayingest” fish I’ve ever encountered.

However several trophy fish were brought to net during the first week.

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Week 2: First Rains

Our next group of guests were less experienced anglers than the previous group. By early in the week, a few only wanted to fish for the local trout (lenok) and grayling, citing the fatigue of chucking flies the size of a Raggedy Ann Doll on a 9 weight as an excuse.

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Like steelheading, taimen fishing requires a certain spiritual commitment to endless casting. However even when not committed to the rigors of taimen pursuit, there are still some cool surprises to be found in some hidden nooks and crannies.

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Towards the end of the second week, a day of rain brought the river up and murked it a bit. On the day of the rise however, a couple of guests had a day where they rose 12 taimen to dries including three over 40 inches, landing only 3. One memorable 4-footer was almost to the net when the doubled over spey rod exploded like a rifle shot. Shortly thereafter, the 25 lb. Maxima tippet parted, and we watched it slowly melt back into the depths.

Week 3: Here comes Santa Claus. . .

Beginning with the first evening of the week, we knew some big fish were in play. Bayaraa’s guest, Todd Fehr from Denver, hooked an 18″ lenok (while skating a mouse for taimen) that splashed at the surface before diving deep.

Suddenly his 9 weight folded over and he was reefing on something he couldn’t budge from the bottom. After about 10 minutes of tug-of-war, whatever it was (they never saw it) let go of the lenok which came in near dead, its skeleton crushed, eyes popped out of its skull, with bleeding scrapes down both flanks.

Welcome to Mongolia.

A few days into the week, we woke to find there’d been an overnight change in the weather.

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While I picked a long bend with lots of good wade fishing and built a big fire for my guests, Big Fish Bayaraa decided it was a perfect day to go back in search of the fish that had tried to eat Todd’s lenok. Half way through the run as the snow spit from the low clouds, Todd had a giant boil under his skating fly.

While Bayaraa frantically changed flies, Todd’s fishing partner, Fred Miller, kept casting with his sink tip and streamer from the other end of the boat. About 3 casts later, Fred hooked up just behind the boat transom and everyone let out astonished gasps as a giant fish broke the surface, flaring its gills and shaking its head. They landed it this time.

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By the end of the week, Todd still hadn’t landed a trophy, but his spirits were high, nonetheless. He diligently covered water and steadily improved his casting efficiency until (maybe there IS justice in fly fishing after all?) he landed a beautiful trophy fish in the final hour of the week.

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Week 4: Do we have to go home now?

The cold front of week 3 brought the river down and snapped it into a clarity rarely seen during fall season. You could count pebbles in 15 feet of water. Calgary’s Mike Gifford and his guest, David Scott, agreed to drive 2 hours by boat above camp (Brrrrrrrrrrr. . . .) early in the week in hopes of some sight fishing to taimen in the canyon. Conditions were perfect as we scaled cliffs, climbed trees (until I fell out of one), and walked high banks in search of Mr T.

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While we landed a few mid size fish (30-34 inches), the big ones we found were stubbornly uninterested in our flies, preferring to hassle the “little” 30 inchers we released. Moody bastards, those big taimen.

Towards the end of the week, our Texan team, Matt Faudree and Mac Mather joined me way back upriver for another tour of the homes of the stars. The cloud cover made this day a bit more productive in terms of big fish action, but each bigger fish still managed to avoid having its picture taken.

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Nonetheless, we still stopped in at the ancient riverside shrine of the Blue Buddha to give thanks for all the good fortune we had enjoyed.

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(Oh, by the way, did I mention that Mac got a 50 incher with Bayaraa? Are you noticing a pattern here?)

As my thoughts turned to the imminent return to reality, family and friends back home, I felt conflicted. The river was still in perfect shape, the weather great. Lots of taimen encounters left unresolved. Charlie Conn, the 14-season veteran guide/manager for the upper camp put it perfectly when we met up on the helicopter leaving camp,

“Dude, we’re leaving too early. Fishing is just getting good!”

Taimen Fever. I can’t wait to go back.

MR

Posted in Fishing Porn, Fly Fishing Travel | 7 Comments

Slim Pickens: Hatten squeaks through low water conditions on Wild and Scenic Rogue

There are so many choices for great Fall Fishing in Oregon it’s hard to pick a favorite. At the top of my list every year is the Rogue Wild and Scenic. It’s a great combination of remote wilderness, 35 miles of challenging white water, feisty half-pounder steelhead, and unique campsites.

I just returned from a trip down there and the aggressive half pounders are most definitely “IN”. With a slow rotation of the Mega Prince, Possie Bugger, and Golden Stone Nymphs – if one wasn’t working, the other was and the famous Rogue Red Ants never even made it out of the fly box.

A bigger challenge on this trip than catching fish was running the river. It’s usually around 2,000 cfs this time of year but right now it’s about half that – 1,100 cfs which is very low. The boney water brought A LOT of rocks into play that are normally harmless and as a result, our boats took a beating!

The class II’s became III’s, the III’s became IV’s, and the IV’s … well, they became nightmares that tested the nerves and challenged the resolve. One rapid in particular worried me A LOT – Slim Pickens. At such a low river level, the only safe passage for a drift boat is a very narrow chute that’s just a little wider than a boat on the right side of a river running hard to the left. It requires technique and timing to fight the river and line your boat up so the current pushes you through the eye of this rocky needle. It’s so narrow, you have to tuck in the oars or you won’t fit through the opening… which means if you aren’t lined up right, you are helpless to prevent scraping and crashing off the walls – or worse, a breach, which completely destroys the boat.

Slim Pickens sequence:

Greg Hatten Rogue River

Greg Hatten Rogue River

Greg Hatten Rogue River

Greg Hatten Rogue River

Greg Hatten Rogue River

Greg Hatten Rogue River

Check out the full photo set of Hatten threading the needle at Wooden Boat People.

The last time I did this chute was at 1,900 cfs, and my left knuckle scraped the length of the wall – which is just one reason I was nervous about Slim Pickens at this water level. If the fishing wasn’t so great, I’m not sure the stress would be worth it… but that’s part of the attraction of the Rogue. Slim Pickens went great – so did Tyee, and Wildcat, the Coffee Pot (after a couple of spins around the dance floor), and of course Blossom Bar.

We ate fish every night, caught many more than we ate, released every native (ratio was about half and half) and had a fantastic trip down a classic river. If you haven’t had the pleasure – I highly recommend
it.

-GH; Photos by Scott Vollstedt

Posted in Southern Oregon, Summer Steelhead | 4 Comments

Fly Fishing the Rogue River on foot — Half pounder report

The fall is upon us once again and while the kids may be bummed out about returning to school, my heart skips a beat with the anticipation of returning anadromous fish. My annual outing on the Rogue with my dad got the fall season off and running.

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In recent years the fall fishing for Chinook has really dropped off for the fly fisherman in the Rogue estuary, but the half-pounders runs have continued to grow. Last year brought a record setting run, and while this year won’t break that record the 2009 run is above the 10 year average.

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We spent our days focused on the Agness area as usual, finding light fishing pressure and a lot of willing half-pounders and small adult Steelhead. Usually we will put the boat in, but chose to walk and wade this year. I purchased a new pair of the Simms boots with there new stud system for my dad; that proved to be just the medicine for the Rogue’s notoriously slippery bedrock. Dad was very impressed with the traction and I was pleased that I didn’t have to drag him out of the river!

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It was great to spend time with my dad and listen to his old Hardy Princess sing as he hooked and landed several really nice fish. And yes, he did out fish me this year. Something I will not soon be allowed to forget.

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These fish love the swung fly with an occasional twitch on a floating line. Traditional Rogue flies still account for a lot of fish caught: including the Royal Coachman, Juicy Bug, Red Ant, and many others. But our traditional trout nymphs tied in sizes 8’s and/or 10’s work very well when swung. Flies with peacock such as the Mega-Prince, Tungsten Ice Prince Peacock # 8 get grabs. Leaders should be long and relatively stout; the usual medicine is a 9ft 2X with 3 to 4 feet of 2X fluorocarbon tippet. You have a good chance of hooking an adult this year and 2x will get the job done. I prefer a 6 weight rod for the job, but have recently added a Dec Hogan 11’9” 4 weight Spey Rod to the arsenal. All I can say is WOW! The rod performed exceptionally well and was fun to fight the strong fighting and acrobatic half-pounder. I fished a 300gr Airflo Compact Scandi head and is was the perfect match.

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If you haven’t had the opportunity to enjoy this unique fishery, October is prime time. You will not be disappointed in the beauty of the area and how hard these little fish can pull your string.

-Tony Torrence

Posted in Southern Oregon, Summer Steelhead | 2 Comments

Lucky strike. A Bartender is added to the fleet

I am going share a story of Serendipty. I’ve been lucky.

Wanting a boat to get out in the ocean and being longer on time than money, I decided I could get much more boat for the cash if I built rather than bought a production boat. I decided to go with a fairly simple, open power dory configuration. But what I really wanted was a Bartender.

I turned to the Wooden Boat Forum for advice on my selection but whenever anyone mentions a dory on that site there is always that guy who has to bring up Bartenders. I mentioned casually that I wanted a Bartender but thought a dory be much cheaper and would suit my needs. Well, here is where things get interesting . . . .

One of the forum members emailed me saying he knew where there was a Bartender hull that had never been finished or launched, that was in good shape and here’s the kicker, was free to a good home. Might I be interested? Umm, yes, I might be interested!

The gentleman who alerted me to this opportunity sent some pictures. She looked pretty rough but not enough to deter me:

Potential Project Boat

Shortly, I made the long haul down to San francisco and then on to Santa Cruz where I purchased a cheap, functional trailer and headed to the Davenport Mill where the boat had been stored in a state of benign neglect.

The owner of the boat assured me his coworker was the Michael Jordan of fork lift operaters and we began the extraction project. Once we had the hull as far forward as possible we extended the tines of the lift with some light boards and tried to lift the boat over the bunks of wood destined to become sashes. Terror seized me as the boards swayed under the weight of the hull now about twelve feet in the air. In this shot we had already replaced the light boards with some heavier ones. Thank gawd.

Bartender Extraction Project

We got her on the trailer without too much trouble and by 6:30 pm I was ready to leave Davenport for the 650 ish mile trip to Springfield. It was a bad time to leave. What are you going to do have two terrible hours of sleep in the truck or drive straight through? I drove straight through, slept a couple hours and began cleaning the boat up right away. She didn’t look nearly as shabby after a bit of scrubbing:

Bartender Hull

I have since turned my attention to the inside of the boat and she isn’t half-bad:

Sanding Continues

Bartender, Cockpit View

Now, I’m not kidding myself. There is quite a bit of work left to do but structurally, the problems are minimal. I need to replace all of the bottom portions of the frames. Easy and inexpensive. I have to fix the motorwell . . . there’s more but frankly, the boat is excellent for the price. Not only that but it is in the perfect state of completion. The heavy lifting is done but enough is left to finish her exactly like I want her.

Bartenders are excellent rough water boats, developed in Oregon by George Calkins with a reputation for crossing nasty bars and getting you home safely. They were used in Oregon and Washington for many years by the Coast Guard for search and rescue vessels. They are still used as rescue boats by Australia’s surf patrols.

A little more luck and some dedication and I’ll be using her next year to access the fantastic fisheries off Oregon’s Coast and just maybe I’ll take Matt up to the Straight in style but more importantly, in a safe boat. –KM

Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Comments

Q&A with fly tying author Skip Morris: Trout Flies for Rivers

Last weekend I had the chance to sit down with fly fishing author Skip Morris in his home town on the Olympic Peninsula. Skip had just published a new fly pattern book with his wife Carol Ann, Trout Flies for Rivers, and we talked about the new book, fly tying and fly design.

Do you have any sort of philosophy as a fly designer that you bring to the vise?

Skip Morris: If I had to pick a central idea for fly design, it’s probably function #1, and durability #2. And I try to keep an open mind.

I’ve got a fly pattern in Trout Flies for Rivers called the Wooly Wing that bobs like a cork — you snap it, and it’s up bobbing again. I found out wool floats great, using plain old sculpin wool for the wing. There is an article on that fly coming out in Fly Fisherman magazine.

The fly is a general caddis or stonefly imitation. I’ve fished it on the Yakima, and just got back from fishing it on the Kootenai in Montana. That fly worked great when the caddis came out.

A lot of fly designers come up with a theme and then they crank out variations of that theme. Your fly designs are varied to the point that they don’t even look like they’re coming from the same designer.

For example, the Anatomical series of flies like the Anatomical Green Drake, is totally different from your other patterns. What is your take on ultra-realistic patterns?

Morris: Tying realistic – it’s fun, and if you’re sure that’s what the fish are eating, you might have an edge. I use the Anatomical Green Drake when the bugs are active, and I’m not seeing fish move to the dry fly. The debate is going to go on long after I’m gone on realistic versus impressionistic patterns. I straddle that fence.

It seems like new fly designs develop over time. Is that something you’ve experienced?

Morris: I’m always experimenting – it can take a couple years to get a pattern. That will lead me somewhere else. I imagine it happens for a lot of people.

I developed one pattern for beaver ponds for sea-run cutthroat. But sometimes it’s the only fly that will take salmon. It’s a wet fly called the Raccoon. One day fly fishing for salmon, fish were showing everywhere, but turned up their nose at everything. Everything except a yellow wet fly with a little yellow hackle. I ended up with a fly for coastal salmon and steelhead while I was tying for cutthroat in beaver ponds.

Did you have any influences when you started tying flies?

Morris: I had nobody to teach me. I got books out of the library and taught myself. The books were pretty confusing and had lousy images mostly. We didn’t have bobbins then, and you had to stick the thread in your mouth. I started tying between the ages of 11-13 in the early sixties.

Where do you consider your home waters?

Morris: There is a lot of good and interesting fishing here [on the Olympic Peninsula] but when I’m home I tend to work all the time. We do getaways in British Columbia where we fish for cutthroats and I still try to get to the Deschutes and Central Oregon once a year.

I noticed your wife co-authored this book. How is working and fishing together?

Morris: My wife did more work on the new book than I did. She tied a lot of the flies and did all the photography. She’s a really capable photographer.

Fishing together is not really an issue. I’m an easy-going teacher and that worked well. If you teach a little heavy handed it can be a problem. She’s a really good caster. She’s got it in the blood. Sometimes I have to drag her off the stream. And she’ll outfish me sometimes, and it’s really rude. Fishing together is easy. Working together is the tricky part.

What’s different about this new fly pattern book?

Morris: The main thing about that book is I did it the way I’d want a pattern book to be. It’s got different indexes so you can find what you’re looking for. A lot of the patterns are tied by the originators like Al Troth, Dave Whitlock and Mike Mercer.

I’ve been using pattern books since I was 11 or 12. I’d look at a pattern and say, how do you tie it? What I tried to do in here is either include the details the reader needs or out and out step by step with instructions. There are 31 tying sequences in here. There is also a DVD included that has two hours of tying sequences.

The materials discussion in the book are great. I love the hook chart that shows you what hook code numbers match up with fly usage scenarios.

Morris: The hook chart – that thing took weeks. I had to go online and get catalogs and get samples of hooks. I mic’d out the hooks with a micrometer. Standard wire? Standard length? These companies don’t have things standardized very well. Some remain guesses.

On the materials section, I tried to just use the stuff people use. If I went and started to talk about all the synthetic wing materials, half of them would be gone in four years. I just didn’t try to get too deeply into that stuff.

Do you have an opinion on synthetic versus natural fly tying materials?

Morris: I’m not a purist. I combine the two all the time. In general I tend to use synthetic dubbing for dries and natural for sinking flies. Synthetic doesn’t soak in water. Some of my flies are almost all synthetic. Some are almost all natural. I’ve been tying since I was a kid and I’m 58 years old. I’ve gotten really free of all the philosophical boundaries. I try to make flies the best way I can make them, mine or anybody else’s.

What’s the attraction to tying flies?

Morris: You can go through all the pragmatic stuff. There are only so many flies in the bins at the shop you can pick from. If you really stuck to a few patterns, you could save money.

But I really think that it’s an intriguing craft. The possibilities are staggering – and I say that after 50 years of tying. I’ll go through a book like this and be shocked by how many ways you can wrap something around a hook. I think it’s a captivating, almost limitless craft with the appeal of its history. And on top of all that, you get to catch a fish on the fly you tied.

-MS

Posted in Fly Fishing Books, Fly Fishing Profiles, Fly Tying | 1 Comment

Heads up: Turn in your October Caddis Patterns this week!

The deadline looms for the Hareline Dubbin October Caddis fly tying contest. Turn in your patterns this week. Click here for contest details. Win some serious fly tying materials!

Middle Fork November 07

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Posted in Fly Tying | 1 Comment

Flies versus gear for fall king salmon

After four days of intense searching, anchoring, casting, and rowing, a narrow window opened for us. All our efforts came to fruition in a couple of magic hours. My Dad had been casting spinners with growing precision, picking up one solid hook-up each day, along with a handful of nice cutthroat. His best fish, a nice chinook, broke off inexplicably. The others just threw his hooks. I couldn’t get a grab on fly or gear, but I consoled myself with the knowledge that I had, at least, found the fish. Big fish. A few of the surface crashes were so large and violent they sent chills up my neck. Occasionally I would look up just as one cleared the water. Awesome! I’ll never stop marveling at their massive chain-mail sides. I love the obesity, the bulging shoulders and bellies. And those black-lipped jaws! Anyway, we found them, but it wasn’t working out like we had imagined. There were tons of silvers around, too, jumping wildly. Some areas were packed with them. But in typical coho fashion, they were infuriatingly tight-lipped. Even the trollers in the bay complained.

Rob Russell fly fishing for kings

Between us we had eleven rods: two spey rods, three single-handers, two bobber rods, two trolling rods and two spinning outfits. Ridiculous, I know. And every rod got some attention over those four days. Watching big fish jump all around the boat can really motivate a person to try EVERYTHING. But after a couple of days, as we hit our strides, I focused on my favorite single-hander and Dad on his favorite spinning rod. He was kicking my butt handily.

On the afternoon of our fourth day we drove to a little off-the-beaten-path estuary on a hunch. My go-to spots had all been thoroughly flogged, so it seemed like a good time to try something different. We pulled up to the little ramp, a thin cut in a high dike, and got out to look around. There were silvers crashing right in front of us, concentrated in a tight little depression as the lowering tide drained the shallows. We launched and rowed into position, anchoring up so we could swing a fly over the pool.

Rob Russell fly fishing for kings

I had some trouble getting the right anchor position due to strong afternoon winds, but after a couple of failed attempts, we lined up perfectly and started sweeping flies over the heads of our new quarry. The wind was at our backs, making for comfortable casting. The fish provided ample entertainment. At times we saw up to ten or twelve fish in the air at once. It was a coho party.

Then, as I watched more closely, I saw kings among them. Fresh ones. A few minutes into it, I felt the grab I’d been waiting for. A dull stop, a weak head shake and semi-slack line. I stripped hard and fast, yanking in at least 15 feet of line before the rod doubled over. I set the hook hard, then set it again. That really pissed him off. Next thing I knew I was watching my running line disappear. Dad pulled anchor and rowed me to a small tidal beach. In a few minutes a gorgeous wild coho was posing for pictures. We released the fish and hurried back to our position, knowing we only had another hour before the tide switched directions. That would turn us into the wind, making casting nearly impossible.

Rob Russell fly fishing for kings

Back in position, it was Dad’s turn. He felt the grab and expertly stripped line until he was tight to the fish. Another great battle, this time ending with the welcome sight of a mid-sized chinook, maybe fourteen pounds. We clocked it and celebrated first blood. All the work, the preparation, the gear, the money–it all seemed worth it at that moment. We relished the reward, reliving the battles we had both just experienced, laughing and clinking beer bottles.

Rob Russell fly fishing for kings

We went on to hook and lose three more fish, two nice silvers and a heavy king. The silvers we broke off after blistering runs and acrobatic leaps. No need to land another endangered fish after seeing one up close. The second king spit the hook near the surface, giving us a glimpse before bolting out of sight. Then the tide changed. We turned to face the wind and fought it for a few minutes. But our window had closed, and we knew it. We wrapped it up and headed for dinner.

That night we passed the digital camera back and forth, shaking our heads in amazement. Considering all the gear we had brought to bear on these fish over the last several days, it was incredible that our little flies won the day. And it all happened so fast…

-RR

Posted in Oregon Salmon fly fishing | 5 Comments

Local Eugene Steelhead Report

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The fishing for summer steelhead on the McKenzie and Willamette has been outstanding. This is usually the most productive time of year, and with great fishing weather, prime water conditions, and light pressure, the bite has been excellent. I have been doing very well swinging various wet flies and leeches on everything from a floating line to a type 6 sink tip. I generally carry various rods rigged in the boat with different lines to suit the different spots.

I take people fly fishing for a living and am so confident about the fishing that I am going to make an offer that very few guides will extend. If you hire me to take you steelheading between now and when river levels swell with the fall rains, if we do not bring a steelhead to the boat, you don’t pay. Regardless of your skills or experience level, if you want to catch a steelhead on a fly, let’s make the magic happen.

If you are interested, contact the Caddis Fly for details and availability and to book. I don’t have that many days open between now and the end of the season, but I would like to fill those that I do. I don’t have any days open before October 11th, but from there on out I have some openings. This offer is good for both half and full day trips.
Ethan Nickel

Posted in Summer Steelhead | 1 Comment

Dire Straits: Near-death-experiences, hot salmon bite on Juan de Fuca

My stomach is still reeling, jaw sore from clenching my teeth with anxiety. Happy to be home in Eugene, on dry land, never to set foot in Curley’s Fiberglass Pig #15 again.

I traveled north last weekend to the Strait of Juan de Fuca to fish out of a rented boat from the town of Sekiu on the Olympic Peninsula with my pal Julian from Seattle. Neither of us had fished the Strait before.

Our first day on the water was a half-day, and we decided to spend it fly fishing for rockfish and lingcod. We set out in our little rental boat, headed west toward more favorable fishing regulations in Marine Zone 4 and Neah Bay. Once we reached Marine Zone 4, the mouth of the Sekiu River, we spotted massive rocks jutting out of the water in the distance.

Far out on the horizon, Seal and Sail Rock seemed like a perfect place to find bottomfish glory. It was a long haul, nearly 15 miles from Clallam Bay we later found out, but it seemed worth it. The rocks were surrounded by kelp forests and the water dropped off to thirty feet deep.

There were lots of gray whales nearby, and they seemed to be rubbing themselves against the rocks. They were literally right next to shore. The spray from spouting whales dotted the shoreline every few hundred yards in either direction.

Juan De Fuca

That may have explained why the rockfish bite was off – a herd of forty-foot long whales rubbing their barnacles off en-masse against your house would be unsettling.

When the gas gage started to sag toward the halfway point, we decided to turn back, but found it tough going. The wind had shifted, and we were headed into a nasty chop.

At this point it would be a good idea to describe our boat – dubbed Curley’s Fiberglass Pig #15. Imagine a 55-gallon drum, cut in half vertically, with a small unreliable outboard clamped to the back. Or a cardboard box shellacked with some polyurethane. The thing had a wide, flat bottom with hardly a keel, low sides and no real V-shape in front. It didn’t slice through waves, as much as it tried to push through them. It veered out of control randomly – a sensation like riding a bike on an iced pond.

On the way back, the little 15-horse engine strained to push the boat up the swells. Eventually it started to smoke and died. That’s when the fear got on top of me.

We were miles from the marina, facing a very likely fuel management mistake, and before we even ran out of gas, the damned thing decided to give up. I lost it. I put the oars in the locks and started paddling toward shoreline without making any headway. The oars were in worse shape than the boat and I couldn’t even keep the bow facing the waves, let alone make any ground. At that point I was ready to take my chances with the life vest and abandon ship. That’s how much the fear had gotten on top of me. I was going to jump out. But Julian snapped me out of it and nursed the engine back into relative cooperation.

Obviously we made it back or you wouldn’t be reading this, but it was tight. Lesson learned – the Curley’s Fiberglass Pig’s max distance is probably three miles, not fifteen.

That night we tried to toast to our survival at the Spring Tavern down the street, but it didn’t serve hard liquor and Two and a Half Men blared on the TV. The Spring Tavern is where good times go to die. Forewarned is forearmed – pack your own party for Sekiu folks.

Juan De Fuca

The next day was the end-of-season coho derby and we joined the armada of boats at dawn, headed out of Clallam Bay toward Canada.

I’m no expert at salmon trolling, but somehow Julian and I both hooked up with two of the biggest coho salmon I’d seen taken that week. Julian trolled this bastardized rig – kind of a hodge podge of stuff I found at Two Brothers Tackle with a pink hoochie on the back. I just trolled the pink hoochie on my ten-weight with a sinking head. The proprietor of our motel told us we had fish we could be proud of, but we’d have had to have been trolling our hooks backwards to get skunked out there on Saturday.

Juan De Fuca

After lunch we decided to put our salmon on ice and to chase rockfish close to home. We found some kelp greenling on a rocky point and picked up some nice specimens on purple and white clouser minnows. The bright red fish held close to the kelp forests and it paid to drop a fly down into pockets in the kelp. We had about an hour of hot action, then nada till dinner.

Juan De Fuca

Day two was such a bonanza, we thought we couldn’t lose on Day Three. But it’s easy to go buzzing out of the marina like King Kong and come back with your tail between your legs.

Juan De Fuca

The swell was big in the morning, but manageable. I’d guess it at 8-feet, but smooth rolling waves coming from the west. We trolled out into the maelstrom of boats with our hoochies dancing behind us. But things got hairy fast.

For one, we really couldn’t control the line we were trying to stay on for a troll. We would lose track of big boats in the troughs of the waves, and find out we were right on top of each other. On top of that, some really big tan-colored objects were flying underneath the boat, occasionally smacking Julian’s rig. These were apparently, giant Humboldt Squid.

Juan De Fuca

To top it off, the wind kicked up out of the east and we had wind-waves hitting us from the other direction, stacking up on top of the already huge swells. At a certain point, it looked like the swells were going to swamp the boat, coming over the low, wide bow. And I could tell from looking at our vessel, the only thing keeping it afloat was surface tension. Five gallons of water over the side and we’d have gone down like the Titanic.

The fear got up on top of me again. This time worse than before. I wasn’t sure if it was smarter to haul ass in before things got any worse, or take it easy and get in safe. Eventually fear won out and we tore-ass in with hundreds of feet of fly line and diver rigs braided together, hanging off our rods out the back of the boat. Apparently lots of other boaters had the same idea and the wakes from the dozens of fleeing boats nearly swamped us in the marina.

We’d only spent a few hours out there, but I was done with Curley’s Fiberglass Pig. We hung it up by midmorning and took Curley back his key.

After that, we decided to drive to Neah Bay, to see the town, a Makah Village on the tip of the Peninsula. The Wikipedia write up on Neah Bay mentions that it had 792 residents in the 2000 census and it is a bustling bottom fishing destination in the summer. It doesn’t mention the soul-crushing look of the place, the gutted and abandoned buildings, rusting junk piles.

We pulled in and the town looked dead. The bottom fishing season had wrapped up the week before apparently and not a soul stirred in the marina or road through town. About three-quarters of the way down the main drag, we came across the huge and bloody body of a Humboldt Squid, splayed out in the road with its giant eye looking up at us. The scene was very David Lynch – and the squid’s eye the size of a baseball felt like a warning. So we turned tail and left Neah Bay behind.

-MS

Posted in Fly Fishing Travel, Oregon Saltwater Fishing | 4 Comments

Tungsten Ice Prince joins “Local Hall of Fame” Ranks with Possie Bugger, Mega Prince

 Black Ice prince

 

The Tungsten Ice Prince  nymph pattern has been a tremendous fish catching fly this late summer fall season. It  employs a Tungsten Bead and Hareline Dubbin’s best selling dubbing Ice Dub. It is a simple twist on a standard pattern that has been slaying fish for decades. Learn to tie it here.

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Some fly patterns just nail the size relative to weight  perfect and the fly is able to sink at a high rate while maintaining it’s buggy yet imitative state. Most anglers have fished the standard Prince Nymph and know how successful it can be.  Using Ice Dub instead of peacock in the Ice Prince adds durability and density.  Both the black and peacock Tungsten Ice Prince have fished great for me, Blue Steelie is another great looking Ice Dub that one could use when tying their own patterns. Larger sizes of the Tungsten Ice Prince have caught adult and  Half Pounder steelhead on the Rogue River. These larger sizes will also work great with egg patterns when nymphing behind spawning salmon.–CD

Posted in Fly Fishing Gear Review, Fly Tying | Leave a comment

Oregon’s Alpine Lakes last hurrah

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Timing is everything and there are far to many places to be, and fish to catch this time of year. Barrett chose a short walk into a beautiful Alpine Lake with his family and was handsomely rewarded with several large fish (over 20 in.)

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He was using a clear intermediate line and 3x Seagar Fluorocarbon and an Olive Wooly Bugger.–CD

Posted in Fishing Reports | 10 Comments

Fly Tying UNIBOBBERS Have Arrived

ubobbermasterb

Having trouble keeping your fly afloat? The Unibbober is the answer! How many times did a fish come up to your indicator this year and clobber it, leaving you wishing it had a hook in it. Again the Unibobber is the answer. How about and emerger pattern you can actually track when fishing it dead drift. The Unibobber has endless possibilities.

From the guys who created the Thingamabobber the Unibobber is 1/4″ and comes in colors Chartreuse, Fire Red, Glow in the dark and White. –CD

Posted in Fly Fishing Gear Review, Fly Tying | 2 Comments