Saturday, April 30, 2011

Hatch browns: The year tubers came early to the lower Madison


No hatch is completely predictable, but the brachycentrus, or Mother’s Day caddis hatch, in the Bear Trap Canyon of Montana’s lower Madison River, at the time, was known to be fairly reliable.
But that year was disappointing. The water temperatures were right and the water was clear, but that one year, most fly fisherman actually spent Mother’s Day with mom.
When the bugs did eventually come off, it was certainly no blizzard, and the trout were particularly skeptical. Chalk it up to the mystery of fly fishing, I guess.
Anyhow, it was pleasant to be outside. Air temps were in range, grass was green, potatoes were drifting along the riverbed, and the sun was warm. But something seemed off.
“Why are there so many cattails on the riverbed?” I wondered to myself. “They must have raised flows enough to knock ‘em down er something.”
When I nearly turned my ankle on one, I decided to have a closer look.
Upon inspection, I realized what wasn't right – it was the potatoes. They shouldn't be there, and there were bushels of them.
Spread throughout every depression and bucket, were many Thanksgivings' worth.
You could actually see them slowly bouncing end over end along the bottom, reminiscent of the Stay Puft marshmallow man.
I recalled that the road that mimics the river had been closed a week prior, so I assume a potato truck had rolled into the river (not an impossible occurrence due to the nearby Dutch farmers and winding canyon roads).
I don’t really know why it tickled me so. There was nothing particularly funny about it.
It’s probably because there were potatoes in the river.
I returned a couple weeks later hoping to find rising trout. I found a few, but nothing terribly exciting. The potatoes were still there.
Bored with fishing, I picked up another tuber. This time, the ends of them were without skin, and they had clearly been chewed on. You'll have to take my word - I promise.
Suddenly, the lack of a Mother’s Day hatch made sense. Both predator and prey had lined up for the buffet, and, amidst this paradise, neglected to live their normal day-to-day.
The fishing sucked, but hey, I like potatoes too.

Monday, April 25, 2011

Blind guys and dry flies


Getting Guided Blind Guy from 406 productions LLC on Vimeo.

The whole time I was dying for the guy to bring a trout to hand - SPOILER ALERT - he does. None of us "seeing" fishermen and women got no excuse no more.
This is the kind of fly fishing television of which I would like to see more. No hot spotting, no hot-shot dip-shit hosts, more than just a guy reeling in fish wailing about how beautiful the fish are and how it doesn't get any better than this, etc. Compelling, interesting, funny - all around entertaining program.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Bully for me

If only I was referring to the Salvelinus confluentus. All the same, I won a pair of Costa del Mar shades from Trout's Fly Fishing fly shop in Denver. They do a weekly "Name that River" contest on Facebook, typically for a $25 gift certificate or a fly line. But as luck would have it, the week I knew the river, it was a $150 pair of Costas - and they fit perfect. They even sent it Fedex Ground to my house, which was probably another $10 or $12. Bully for me - and thanks to Trout's!

Friday, April 15, 2011

Community Service

Tuesday I had the opportunity to help a local 5th grade teacher introduce her students to some aspects of fly fishing. Specifically, I went to help the students identify bugs they found in the Gallatin River, which is about three blocks from the school. 
Buddies Will and Brady joined me. We split up into four groups and looked for bugs to identify, sketch, record what phase of life they were in, what type of water they were in, and other things.
Turns out, these kids know their bugs. To an extent. When we arrived, I got nervous that the kids might actually know more than I - they had bug-identification books, several seines, river boots, fly rods, bugs in vials, and had some tough questions about how to tell insects apart. One young man asked what the difference was between a honey fly and something else is. I responded that one's bigger and different color, having never heard of a honey fly and trying to avoid losing my credibility. When in doubt while streamside, what they'd found was a March brown nymph (although most actually were rhithrogena or baetis). There were some crazy mottled tannish mayfly nymphs that I was unable to ID, but on Tuesday, those were March browns too. We also found a few big stonefly nymphs, some midge larvae, dozens and dozens of cased caddis, a couple free-living caddis, some cranefly larvae, and a couple sculpins, among other myriad bugs.
It was good to connect with my community and its kids. I don't get enough interaction with kids. We might get invited back in a month or two to help them actually fly fish - here's hoping!
With knowledge of what bugs were active, Will and I fished upstream after school. Neither of us had fished that bit before, and it was good.
The March brown emerger (soft-hackled Pheasant Tail) was the fly of the day. Thanks Mrs. Wilson's class!

Monday, April 11, 2011

What do you think? Is Montana no. 5?

There is a fair deal of ethnocentrism about the fishing here in Montana, but I've always been skeptical whether Montana really does have the best fishing, and if the rest of the world sees it that way. I haven't been around enough places to say for sure, but the guys at Field & Stream probably have, and they ranked Montana no. 5 for best fly fishing states. Incidentally, they ranked Bozeman no. 4 in the best fishing towns in America in 2008.

We like to consider Montana, and especially the Bozeman/Livingston area, "mecca", but is it? Or are we over-zealously proud of our fishing? Are they guys at Field & Stream a bunch of crack pots, or are we fooling ourselves?

Here's what I can tell ya - we've got thousands of miles of trout-filled, pristine water, a generous stream-access law, hatches that, as far as I know, rival anywhere in the world, and big, wild trout.

What do you think? Make a case. (I certainly won't be offended if you argue against Montana.)

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Rotenone again

Even after last year's debacle at Cherry Creek (lower Madison trib - see current Montana Sporting Journal for more on that), Montana Fish Wildlife and Parks is proposing to poison three more streams this year to reintroduce Westslope cutthroat trout: Dyce Creek (tributary to Grasshopper Creek which dumps into the Beaverhead), Cherry Creek (near Melrose, tributary to the Big Hole), and McVey Creek (dumps into the Big Hole near Wisdom). The FWP press release.

An article in the Montana Standard by Nick Gevock details this.

My favorite quote from that article: "While projects to remove invasive sport fish including rainbow and brook trout are sometimes controversial, Nelson said FWP has had good success at the efforts. A prime example is a different Cherry Creek located west of Bozeman, where FWP nearly a decade ago conducted a similar poison and plant operation.
Today that creek is thriving with thousands of native cutthroats, he said."

I would actually argue that that's the worst example. The poisoning went awry, and hundreds or thousands more trout died than they intended. Read about that here. If that weren't bad enough, rotenone has been linked to Parkinson's disease, so when it spreads to sections of river that weren't intended for poisoning, we're put at risk.

For more about the dangers of rotenone, click here.

FWP is seeking comment on the poisoning projects for this summer.
 
Send your comments to Lee Nelson: leenelson@mt.gov.

I am not urging anyone one way or the other about whether or not we should restore native cutthroats - you can make that decision yourself. I am urging folks to consider commenting to FWP about finding a better way to do such a thing than using rotenone.

Monday, March 28, 2011

Rules of the Secret

Every once in a 23-inch cutthroat, an angler is blessed with a remarkable fishery about which no one knows. When an angler comes upon a secret, there are rules by which to abide:

  1. If it was shared with you, you do not have the right to share it with ANYONE, nor may you trade it for someone else’s secret. You’re best to not boast about it. Play dumb.
  2. If you unearthed this creek, you can decide with whom to share it. You have the right to trade the information with another “rights holder” for his or her secret. You do not have the rights to the secret for which you bartered (refer to rule 1).
  3. If a road crosses it, and you cross this secret with the uninitiated, start jabbering about something. Fart. Scream. ANYTHING. Don’t give the passenger the opportunity to wonder or ask about it.
  4. If you work in a fly shop, keep your damn-ass mouth shut. If you’re a guide, fish it only on your days off. If you’re a writer, fill your journals with known fisheries. If you're a photographer, crop.
  5. Only share it with someone intrepid enough to potentially fish it. It's pointless to put the word out there for one who will not use it.
  6. Avoid talking about it when unnecessary – even with non-fishers from abroad. It's funny how word travels into wrongdoer's hands.
  7. Park as far away as possible – do not string up your rod or look like a fisher.
  8. Don't browse photos at your local hot spot, because some jagoff will walk by and notice, and you're stammering, studdering reaction will let this wanker know you're hiding something.
  9. If it must be spoken of in public, find a pseudonym. Notellum or Nunya Creek are unacceptable as they give away that you've got a secret. Be generic.
  10. When enlightened to someone else's secret, don't abuse it. Don't go back and back and back and back, like that jackass Bruce on “the riffle”.
  11. When confronted with a secret about which you know not, don't ask about it. Understand that this is something that will be shared with you when you are ready and that pushing for it will only push it away.
  12. If you insist on posting pics of big fish online, find a Photoshop wizard to eliminate the background landscape. Anglers from your area might recognize it, and might not consider your secret so sacred.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

...as the locals call it...

The Raddy, the Maddy, the Stilly, the Stone, the Pan, the Fork, the Yak, the Clack, the Beav, the Gunny, the Poudre, the Lackey, the Lackey (yes, twice in the same state, even), the Big T, the Mo, the Platte, the Platte, the Horn, the East, the Gally, the PM, the Hooch, the Ronde.
Guess what river, listed above, this is.

We have such affection for our favorite rivers that nicknames were inevitable. Here are some that I could think of -  what am I missing? What's your home water's nickname?

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

309 is (almost) dead

Hot off the press from Billings Senator Kendall Van Dyke: "DING DONG HB 309 is tabled!!!" As of 5 p.m. on Tuesday March 22, 2011, we potentially have averted crisis.

But be vigilant fellow fishermen. It will happen again, maybe yet this session. 

Go fish.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Fisherman's camera

It wasn't that long ago that I was saying that all I really want in a camera is a big sensor and a pocketable body, so I can fish with a camera that takes good images without lugging around a backpack. HD video and a big zoom would be nice, too, but not necessary. Lo and behold it's been around the whole time. Sony's NEX cameras are about the size of a pack of cigarettes (lens excluded), have the APS-C sensor, and shoot HD video.
The lenses aren't tiny, but should still fit into most fishing-jacket pockets. They take 14.2-megapixel images, which is more than I'd need, but that's okay. I bought one that should arrive tomorrow. I even bought a lens adapter that is supposed mount my Canon lenses, which kind of defeats the purpose of having a small body, but now I can (assuming I like the new one), sell the old DSLR and still make use of the macro and 70-300mm lenses when I want to (there are literally only three lenses currently available for this camera, so far).
I have 15 days to decide if I like it - if so, the old Canon goes on the market. I think I'll like it...

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Pinch me

Am I the last fly angler pinching his or her barbs? I've been talking to some fishing buddies lately and they said they either rarely or never pinch their barbs. I always do, and I often lose my biggest fish when they do that whole-body-flail-back-and-forth maneuver that big fish do. Some say that barbless hooks penetrate deeper, so they keep more fish on. Others say that barbed hooks are more humane, for the same reason. So I'll give it a shot...
 Maybe I'd have lost those other big ones anyway, but my first trip out with barbs yielded my biggest fish since awhile back. I'm thinking I'll keep my barbs on, for now anyway.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Should vegetarians tie flies?

A buddy and I got to wondering where fly-tying animal parts come from - he happens to be vegetarian, so the question came up whether or not he wanted to use animal parts in fly-tying.
Pat Neuner from Wapsi said this: "The natural materials we sell come from various sources. Many items such as waterfowl feathers are harvested as a result of hunting. Some items such as deer skins as purchased from taxidermists. Most of the natural fur products come from furriers although some items (rabbit is a good example) are raised for food production and we source the product from the food producers."

Facebook friend John Newbury added this: "many are left over from the fur industry and recycled from old fur coats. Many are from hunters. here is company that does both: http://www.hideandfur.com"

Of course, it makes a difference what a vegetarian's reason is for being vegetarian, but I think he's gonna keep tying as long as the animals aren't being killed specifically for tying flies.

UPDATE 6-5-11: This, from a Yahoo.com article about the feather hair extension craze:
"...They come from roosters that are genetically bred and raised for their plumage. In most cases, the birds do not survive the plucking.
At Whiting Farms, Inc., in western Colorado, one of the world's largest producers of fly tying feathers, the roosters live about a year while their saddle feathers — the ones on the bird's backside and the most popular for hair extensions — grow as long as possible. Then the animal is euthanized."

So some animals do die for fly tying material.  No more buggers or dry flies for my vegetarian friends.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

The scene

Testament of a fisherman, by Robert Traver:
I fish because I...hate the environs where crowds of people are found, which are invariably ugly; because of all the television commercials, cocktail parties, and assorted social posturing I thus escape; because, in a world where most men seem to spend their lives doing things they hate, my fishing is at once an endless source of delight and an act of small rebellion...

So I am going to take the great Mr. Traver's advice and skip the Fly Fishing Film Tour this year. In my opinion, it's an obnoxious event. A scene at which to be seen, full of bright new trucker hats, "passion" and "lifestyle". Yes, you're all very cool and into fly fishing. I'm happy for ya.

The films and interest in them are great for the industry, and many of the movies are very good, but I abhor the event.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Montana Fly Fishing Report

January 28, 2011: Good.
February 19, 2011: Still good.



Simple flies in fishy holes leads to dunked indicators and fish to hand. Lots. It's relatively easy right now - that is why many folks around here prefer winter fishing. Yes, prefer. I'm not quite there yet, but I understand.
Take your Hare's Ears, Copper Johns Girdle Bugs, Serendipities and Woolly Buggers to any moving water that's legally open, tie them on, clip on a good amount of weight, set your indicator, find a deep, fishy hole, and pull 'em in.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

KVD on 309

This, from 111 Degrees West's (and Montana Sporting Journal, and MacKenzie River Pizza Co.) Will Jordan:

"I served a pizza to KVD this weekend, and had a chance to talk to him about 309. He said he's very confident that they can put a stop to it in the senate. And he said if it came down to it, he has no doubt that Schweitzer would veto it. If it were to pass, he said it's unlikely that it would make rivers private in and of itself - but it would set the stage for landowners to take the issue to court on a case by case (river by river) basis and make their argument for privatization of a particular waterway."

HB 309 would make waters with irrigation equipment on them gray areas in the eyes of the stream access law.

So, in my opinion, it just adds more gray to an already-gray law. Which is funny, since the bill is designed to "clarify". It'll make for more on-stream confrontations between land-owner and river-user, with no clear correct answer. Sheriffs will be called, and they will use their discretion on whether or not anglers can fish there.

Incidentally, Kendall Van Dyke is the man - visit his website here. I cannot vote for him, but I hope those who can, will continue to.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

HB 309 - onto the Senate

Montana House Bill 309 passed third reading in the house - it even picked up a couple votes this go-round passing 57-43. It's up to the senate now, but my man Kendall Van Dyke thinks he can rally support to end it. Here's hoping - in the meantime, e-mail your senators! Find yours here.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

HB 309 (limiting stream access) passes House


Montana House Bill 309 (redefining irrigation ditches, or limiting stream access) passed the house of representatives this afternoon by a 55-44 vote. I'm not totally sure (didn't pay attention to my school house rock) but I think from here it goes to the senate, then to the governor. My representative, whom I e-mailed more than once, voted yes. He will be getting another e-mail.

For more on the details, read this Montana Standard (Butte, Mont.) article.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

HB 309-Limiting Stream Access (Here we go again)

So the 2011 attempt by Montana legislators to limit/remove stream access is here  - HB 309.

Click here for the pdf of the bill.

More details: 
http://www.missoulademocrats.org/HB%20309

Chi Wulff

They keep trying and they keep failing. But they will always try so those in favor of our current stream access law must remain vigilant.

Rock'n'roll

If casting dries to trout is classical music, shooting big streamers to saltwater fish is rock 'n' roll.

Trout, hatches, mountains and cold rivers, are all wonderful, but I want more rock'n'roll.
It was time to plan the next trip as soon I arrived home from Costa Rica. The first mention of petty politics on the radio or television is terribly disheartening. The first stroll through the supermarket is completely heartbreaking - back to the grind.
We're tentatively planning on the Bahamas for bonefish next February. It's not totally shooting big streamers, but it's still awfully rock'n'roll, using 6 to 8 weights for two- to 12-pound fish. From Wikipedia (the world's foremost fly fishing authority): "The bonefish, also known as 'phantom' or 'gray ghost', is probably pound for pound the strongest and fastest moving animal of any salt-water fish."
Until then, Rocky Mountain trout will have to get me by.

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Mayfly photos

Male western March brown dun


Female callibaetis spinner
Male gray drake dun
Male blue-winged olive dun
Male flav? Not sure...
Female flav? I should tie some half flies.
Female brown drake dun.

Male fall drake (hecuba)
Female. No idea what mayfly, but I've seen quite a few.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

More from Costa Rica

More pics from my Costa Rica trip. Enjoy!


The runway in Quepos where my flight from San Jose landed.
Ribs, plantain and yucca at Coki's. Delish. It used to have a dirt floor, leaf roof, and the meat was cooked on a bed spring over a fire pit. You'll need to ask a local how to get there, though.
Some kind of crazy spider. I think it's called a spiny orb-weaver.
About ready to zip down the line....

Zip-line canopy tour.
Rio Canas, two days before we fished it. Good shape.
Rio Canas, two days before we fished it.
Rio Canas, after a night's rain, the day we fished it.
Rio Canas, after a night's rain, the day we fished it.
There are bugs in Costa Rican rivers.
Leaf-cutter ants.
Ever hear of a Daihatsu BeGo? The roof leaked profusely when it rained.
One of the many stray dogs around Quepos.
Great kiskadee. Far from the prettiest bird in Costa Rica, but not bad.

Groove-billed ani?

Brown pelican

Brown pelican, feeding.
Ghost crab on the beach at Manuel Antonio.

Ghost crab on the beach at Manuel Antonio.
Squirrel monkeys raiding a construction truck for some sort of unidentified food.

Squirrel monkeys

Squirrel monkeys
The best sangria in Costa Rica can be had at Ronny's.
The view from Ronny's. It's apparently a great place to go to catch a sunset, but it was cloudy both times I ate there. Odd for the dry season.
A beach at Manuel Antonio.
Three-toed sloth.
Two-toed sloth.

Female iguana, Manuel Antonio

One of the Costa Rican-brewed beers. My favorite.