05
Feb 11

Things

OK… things…

Looks like things are maybe not so bleak in Aitutaki and I hope that is the conclusion I’ll have when things are all rolled out…

Bjorn hi

There are detailed criteria, weightings and conditions outlined in the regulations. Much of the vetting and decision making will be the responsibility of the bonefish management committee, including what limits to put on the number of guides (the number recommended was 5). Obviously the regulations  weren’t designed to fit around individuals or the bonefish association but if applied properly it can lead to a fair and sustainable industry for the guides.

The core requirements for guides are (1) CI Boat Master Certificate, (2) Red Cross First Aid Certificate and (3) CI Tourism Accreditation. MMR has funded all these courses and others e.g. guide fishing training and small business management, although just 2 persons have completed the requirements so far.

Regards, Ben

There remain some questions about who exactly is on the committee and how they get there… but, this is a start.

Another thing… I like art… at least when it comes to fishing/fish art.  I’m still wondering how I feel about Bonefish Gyotaku for which, I think, the bonefish likely gave its life.  You can buy this on Etsy.

Bonefish as art

Another thing… speaking of fishing art… there is a new member to my little family… a Lamson Lightspeed 4… destined to tangle with cuda’s and I hope some tarpon, Dorado and other beeg fish swimming out in the ocean.

Isn't she beautiful? Pretty girl.

I’ve never caught a big cuda.  I hope to change that in March down at Andros South and that is the reel I’ll have on… well… a rod to be named later.


03
Feb 11

Life is good – A photo-journey through the world of bonefishing – Global FlyFisher

I like pictures… I like bonefish… I like the Caribbean.  So… it stands to reason that I LOVE pictures of bonefish in the Caribbean.  I found this “A photo-journey through the world of bonefishing.”  Yeah.  I like it.

The flats create an amazing and fascinating world. These areas of seemingly endless shallow water, which are still so abundant with food for the bonefish.

via Life is good – A photo-journey through the world of bonefishing – Global FlyFisher.


20
Jan 11

Special Day

Today is a special day… it is my daughter’s birthday.  I thought this was worthy of a little reflection.

She’s 4 today… one of the tallest 4 year olds you are likely to meet. She has a fascination with crocs and alligators and has informed me that she is no longer interested in being a ballerina, but instead, she’d like to do science with dangerous creatures.  She’d like to be a herpetologist… and let me head you off at the pass there, that means someone who studies reptiles and amphibians.

I approve.

She also will no longer wear pants.  Dresses only.  I accept this, although it makes it tough in colder weather.

She still wants to fish with me and asks me to take her fishing often, although being in San Jose, that is not an easy request to fill.  I hope that she stays interested in fishing (and in me) although I know there will be an age (or decade) where that probably won’t be the case.

She has her own rod… a 2 weight and she’s played fish on it already.

I have a hopeful vision of her that goes like this.  Fast forward 20 years.  In casual conversation she mentions that she is going to go to the Bahamas to go fishing with her dad. Someone asks her how long she’s been fishing and she says “I don’t know, as long as I can remember… it is just something I’ve always done.”

At the aquarium in SF, watching the rays, sharks, pompano and one solitary baby tarpon

Happy Birthday.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVam-fshUgw?fs=1&hl=en_US&rel=0


18
Jan 11

Interview with Tom Rosenbauer from Orvis

Tom Rosenbauer invented fly fishing.  OK… I made that first part up.  It turns out Tom has been a bit all over this thing we call fly fishing for a while  now… mostly at the Orvis Company where he is currently Director of Marketing for Orvis Rod and Tackle. He’s been at the company for 30 years, which is a good amount of time to hold down a job.  He’s also an author of more than a couple fly fishing books.  Tom’s podcast has been around for about as long as podcasts have been around and Orvis in general has been way out in front in the use of new media.  Tom just landed Angler of the Year from Fly, Rod & Reel… the most amazing part of that is that it is for 2011… we are only three weeks into 2011… so… good going Tom!

Tom, 2011.

I read on the Trout Underground that you were Angler of the Year from Fly, Rod & Reel.  What were some of your highlights from 2010?

I was actually Angler of the Year for 2011, so I’m looking forward to my angling highlights.  I hadn’t even read the dates and someone told me, “Hey, you are angler of the for 2011.” So, I have to fish a lot.

Getting that in January, does that give you a pass at home?

Oh yeah, at home and at work, I can just fish any time I want. My wife is actually very understanding of my addiction and working at Orvis, we all get a pass more often than folks in other jobs… it is part of our job to stay up on things and to actually walk the walk.  We are lucky, blessed in that regard.

Well, looking back to last year where you weren’t angler of the year, what were some of your angling highlights for 2010 and would your wife be willing to talk to my wife (this was before my wife signed off on my trip to Andros South, so, I think my wife is doing just fine)?

It took me a couple tries to get this one (wife).  It’s a long road, a long and expensive road to find one that will let you go fishing.

I looked at the question and I had a hard time thinking of highlights.  I had a great day brook trout fishing around the corner from the office one day. My annual trip to the Catskills, which I always love.  I go to the Bahamas once or twice a year for what we call the Bonefish Classic where we go with some customers and Aaron Adams is there teaching about bonefish biology and I’m there doing a tackle and rigging seminar and then we go fishing, and that’s always fun. Striped fishing at Cape Cod.  Nothing that I don’t do just about every year.

What was a real highlight was I had really good fishing in my backyard.  I live on a little trout stream with wild brooks, browns and rainbows. The fishing was really good in my backyard and I was able to go down with my wife and dog and six year old and I was able to catch nice fish on dry flies while they were playing on the gravel bar every night. So, that was fun and a highlight.

Bonefishing is an addition for some and a dream for others.  What advice would you give to someone who was maybe a little bit intimidated by bonefishing, but wanted to give it a shot?

Don’t go to the Florida Keys because the fish are incredibly difficult and the guides are very impatient.  So, I’d not go to the Keys for my first time, or maybe my second or third. I’d go to Mexico or Belize or the Bahamas, Venezuela.  Unfortunately, it’s a more expensive tour.

Two things.  Don’t go to the Keys, not for your first time, and practice your casting.  Practice, practice, practice.  I can’t stress that enough.  I mean practice casting to get the fly out there at 40 feet, accurately.  I don’t know if I’ve ever made an 80 foot cast to bonefish and I don’t know that I’d try. People go down there and they spend all this money and they tie all these flies and then they get in the boat and they really, really can’t get the fly out there.  They get a little wind and the game is over.  All it would have taken was some practice.

Bonefishing is not hard. The fish are spooky, yeah, and the casting has to be accurate, but they aren’t that selective, at least in most places.  They eat almost anything and you don’t really need to worry about fly selection and most bonefishing guides are so good at pointing out the fish and telling you where to put your fly, but you have got to be able to put that fly at 40-45 feet and you have to do it in a hurry.  My advice would be to practice your casting.

Tom, Stick in hand

You do the Podcast and Orvis has really been out in front when it comes to Social Media. A lot of the other established players aren’t really even in the game.  The question you hear about Social Media is, “Does it work?”  So… does it?

We don’t know for sure.  We are going on trust.  We have some advantages, we have a big infrastructure behind us that allows us to do these things, but we have a guy names James Hathaway who is our Social Media Guru who has been her for 4-5 years and he’s really pushed us into Social Media.  The owners of the company are totally behind it, so, that has made it easy to get into social media.

Anecdotally, you hear it all the time.  “I bought this rod because of your podcast” or “you’ve really helped me enjoy fishing more” and you have to believe that is good business. The fact they bought a fly rod, that’s fantastic, but that you’ve helped them with their casting or their stream reading or whatever, it has got to put Orvis top of mind next time they go looking for a piece of tackle.

As far as monetizing it, we haven’t figured that out. I don’t think anyone has.  We are going on faith and that’s what you do when a new technology comes out or a new way of reaching out to your customers.  That’s kind of out of character for Orvis because we are a direct marketing company.  We’ve always been a direct marketing company and we measure everything.  If you aren’t measuring it, chances are you aren’t going to get the support of the management here to do it.  But with social media, we’ve taken that jump, we’ve taken that risk.  Anecdotally we see it every day, you see indications that it is working, but as far as monetizing it, figuring out what it is worth to get someone to listen to your podcast, figuring out what it’s worth for a download, looking at the fishing reports, the blog…  we don’t know.

There are places with big bonefish and places with a lot of bonefish.  If you had to choose between the two, which way would you go?

That’s a tough one.  Big bonefish can be kind of boring with long dry periods.  Places with a lot of bonefish get a little too easy and you get bored… not that I ever get really bored with bonefish. Can I split the difference?  My favorite place would be a place with a number of moderate sized bonefish with a few big ones thrown in. The Bahamas fits that bill better than any place.

I’ve seen 20 pound bonefish there.  I’ve seen bonefish that Aaron Adams of Bonefish & Tarpon Trust said was a 20 pound bonefish. The average fish is usually 3-4 pounds, but the big ones are there.  That’s kind of my ideal would be to split the difference.  I don’t care if I don’t catch a 12 pound bonefish.  A 6 to 8 pound bonefish I’d consider a really good day.  I’d have to split the difference.

I may have a good idea what your favorite rod and reel is, but why don’t you tell me anyway.

It is hard to beat those Helios rods.  They do everything you ask them to do. They are light and they are pretty.  The Mirage reel that Steve developed… the Helios and the Mirage is really hard to beat.  Luckily, we have an employee loaner program here so we can get these things, any model we want, at any time.  I can fish any Orvis outfit I want.

Do you have one bonefish that you remember more than others?

I remember a day of bonefishing I had that really stands out.  I was staying on a place on Abaco and there’s a place called Cherokee Sound with lots of white sand and ocean going bonefish, they are bigger bonefish, tougher fish, almost like Keys fish because they get fished kind of hard. One day I said to the guide, just leave me on a key for a day.  He said “what?” I said, yeah, take me out there and leave me there and then come back at 5.  You go have a smoke or drink a six pack, whatever you want and come and get me at 5.  He left me on this little key and I fished all around.  I caught some 8-9 pound bonefish and just had a wonderful day.

Another one recently, was a bonefish I was fishing with a customer during the Bonefish Classic and it was my turn on the bow and there was a bonefish way up in a mucky bay and we couldn’t poll to him. So, I asked the guide if I could get out and stalk it and he said “yeah.” I was able to sneak up and stalk that fish and I caught it. That’s always cool.  It wasn’t a huge bonefish, but it was challenging.  It was fun.

Do you have a “one that got away” story?

I don’t think so.  I don’t think I’ve ever hooked a really, really big bonefish.  Maybe 11 pounds is the biggest fish I’ve ever hooked, but it didn’t get away.  I don’t think I’ve ever had a really giant bonefish.  I don’t know if I’ve ever even had a shot at a really giant bonefish.  That 20 pounder Aaron was casting to it, not me.

I have a good tarpon that got away story from El Pescador.  This story involved a broken rod and a broken reel and diving in after the fish and being left treading water while the guide chased the fish with my rod dragging behind it.  The tarpon that got away story is the only good one I have.  They are still talking about it at El Pescador.

Thanks Tom.  Appreciate the time.


13
Jan 11

New Players, New Approaches

There are a lot of players in the fly fishing marketplace.  Really… a lot.  There are the folks that everyone knows… Sage, Ross, Tibor, Orvis, St. Croix, Patagonia and a whole lot of other gear makers.  Given how crowded the field is, you’d think there wouldn’t be room for new gear makers, but there are new gear makers emerging.  One thing I think is notable is how these new gear makers are engaging with potential consumers.  They are embracing social media in a way that most of the big players just aren’t.

Maybe they are more nimble or maybe it has to do with not having the cash to run spots in all the fly fishing periodicals.  Who knows how they’ll end up doing… I’d imagine it is a tough marketplace out there… crowded, low margins, small and shrinking market… we’ll have to see.

Rise Fishing Co.

These guys generated a huge buzz before they had even shipped their first rod and it was almost entirely due to social media.  The newest business endeavor of the bunch, Rise is focused on rods and conservation (which is kind of cool). They are rocking a blog, a Facebook profile (879 thus far) and twitter.  Basically, they are all over.  This is a buy-direct endeavor.  You want one of these rods, you’ll be buying one on-line.

There they be... Rise Rods

Allen & Co. Fly Fishing

Maybe they Allen & Co. have been around for a while, but I had certainly never heard of them until a few months back.  Today, they are running banner ads on The Trout Underground, they have a profile on Facebook with 4,371 “friends,” they just launched a blog and are even tweeting (although, with 4 tweets thus far, I’d say twitter is not a big push).  Now, I think it is pretty clear that not all of their 4,371 “friends” has bought a piece of Allen gear… they’d hardly be bit players if that were the case.  Still… it is pretty cool that 4,731 people have taken the time to friend them… that’s gotta turn into at least a couple sales.  Allen is bypassing the shop route… you by direct.  They sell a LOT of different items… from reels to lines to hooks and very, very soon they’ll be selling rods as well.  Who knew?

That there's an Allen Reel

That's on the TU... the world's most popular fishing blog.

Red Truck Fly Fishing

This is the gear arm of Leland Fly Fishing Outfitters (or somehow connected and/or related to them), Red Truck started offering their own brand of fishing rods in 2010 and they have fully engaged the Social Media universe with a blog, a ton of YouTube content, and Leland has the Facebook profile (1,013 followers at this point).  I’ve yet to see one of these rods, but since they are a hop-skip-jump from where I live, it is entirely possible I will in the not too distant future.  Since they are a fly shop, you don’t bypass the fly shop altogether, you just can only get it from one fly shop, or on-line… at least as I understand it.

One thing that seems clear is that all of these newer companies are really driven by one or two individuals, so the social media-izing is really up to them… there is no stable of marketing guys/gals to implement a big campaign.  That should probably make the big players a little concerned that folks with little or no market share seem to be getting some real traction with potential consumers and they are doing so with marketing tools the big players have basically forsaken/overlooked/ignored.

A look at some of the big player websites and what that tells us about their use of social media…

Sage – no facebook link, no blog, no twitter. They do HAVE a Facebook page, but they don’t link to it from their website, at least not clearly (2,192 followers).

G. Loomis – no facebook or twitter link, no blog. Again, they HAVE a Facebook page with 2,535 friends, but no link from the website.

Scott Rods – well… look at that… they actually link to their FB Page… amazing. They count 2,177 FBers as followers and posted on FB 10 hours ago. Still, no blog, no twitter, although they do have a newsletter (that I’m now signed up for).

We’ll see where this all goes… if the new players are able to establish themselves and if the old guard can maintain their market share in a world where there will be fewer fly anglers next year than there are this year.  Should be interesting to watch and read about for sure.


12
Jan 11

Interview with Mike Michalak from The Fly Shop

Mike Michalak makes the third person from The Fly Shop that I’ve interviewed.  It isn’t really hard to see why… I used to live in Redding (at least for a couple of years) and in Northern California, The Fly Shop is a dominant presence for fly anglers.  In fact, The Fly Shop is the world’s largest fly shop, in terms of revenue.  They’ve been in the international travel game for about thirty years and played a roll in opening many fly fishing destinations that  anglers dream about.  Mike is the owner of The Fly Shop and he has a passion for bonefish and has traveled the world in pursuit of the Gray Ghosts.

As owner of The Fly Shop in Redding you’ve been in the fly fishing game for a long time and you’ve kicked around the globe a fair bit. Do you think there are still bonefish fisheries yet to be discovered?

Good question.  Ya know, our travel company has been in business for over 30 years and for a great part of that my one dimensional focus was bonefishing.  We were the first licensed anglers and the first people to really fish Los Roques legally in 1988.  We helped open up Christmas Island with the Frontiers team and Bob and Carol Faro (sp), but honestly I don’t think there are any bonefisheries yet to be discovered. I do think that there are probably three or four (parts of Cuba, the South Pacific, New Caledonia, French Polynesia, maybe one archipelago in South America, some of the coast line of Venezuela) that are yet to be fully explored and fully developed as bonefisheries.  Having said that, I don’t think there is anything left to be discovered. Lefty Kreh in his book Saltwater Fly Fishing made the comment once that there are no bonefish found south of a particular latitude.  I don’t want to be that definitive because I’d probably be, and I hope I would be, proved wrong. I hope that someone finds something really great, but I don’t think they will. I think that the best of it has been discovered.  I don’t think the best of it has been completely explored or understood.

An example, we found some phenomenal fishing in French Polynesia, but it was in the middle of the summer.  It wasn’t when anyone would think of going there. It was incredibly consistent int he middle of the summer.  What we were told was that if we thought it was nice then, we should really see it in January, February, March, April, when everyone wants to come to French Polynesia. So, we promoted the hell out of it and fell flat on our face because what happens is that the waters were entirely too warm in French Polynesia, but we didn’t know it.  We put out a lot of effort and Polynesia got a bad rap because of it and because of us. We hadn’t done enough due diligence.

Cuba is hardly new, hardly undiscovered, but it has yet to be developed and anyone with a brain in their head is sitting on their hands instead of going to Cuba and they are waiting for normalization of relationships.

If you fly the coastline of Venezuela, it is just incredible. It looks like an exponential map of Florida, but it is totally undeveloped as a fishery.

Another question there is why would anyone want to go there?  To go two-thirds of the way around the world when there is fantastic fishing within a single day’s flight.  Whether it’s Christmas Island to the west or going to the Bahamas to the East.  It just isn’t necessary to go to the other side of the world to have great fishing.

Think about your favorite bonefishing flat.  What makes that place a special place for you?

For me the best of bonefishing is the chance to wade, the chance to do it on your own without some guide peering over your shoulder and saying “Bonefish at 11:00, mon.” It is the wading experience.  In my mind’s eye, there are those evenings walking some flat in the middle of nowhere, especially in the early days when we were at Los Roques and seeing schools of 4, 5, 7, 10,000 fish.  Tails that look like gillions of pieces of cellophane that stretch to the horizon. Those were the best of the best days I’ve ever had.  On foot.

Do you remember your first bonefish?

Absolutely.  You remember your first trout?

I don’t know if I remember my first trout, really.  That was a long time ago.

I remember my first trout.  I remember first bonefish and my second and third and forth.  Years ago I took my wife on vacation to the Inn of the Sun on the island of Guanaja of the coast of Honduras.  What an incredible place that has long since changed.  It was an absolutely breathtaking resort.  A country boy like me, I’d never been treated like that. It was just incredibly historic. It was where Columbus had made landfall on his second voyage. Tiny little island about 50 miles off the coast of Honduras.  I could definitely remember my first bonefish.  It wasn’t very big.  It was on foot, all wading.

I’m more than a fisherman, I don’t want to say that, being a fisherman is enough, but I absolutely enjoy the hunting experience.  I don’t entirely enjoy the killing experience.  I enjoy the hunting experience, I enjoy the shooting experience.  Bonefishing is hunting.  Wing shooting ducks, leading bonefishing, bonefishing encapsulates every skill as a hunter and as an outdoorsman.  It is something primal.

In bonefishing there is the 80/20 rule. In bonefishing it is easy, really, when you do it right.  If you do it right you’ll have an 80% chance of success on your first cast.  You have a 20% chance of success on your second cast.

I can remember the first time I saw a fish before the guide. That was almost as much fun as catching the fish.  We opened up Nettie Symonette’s on Abaco when she opened up the Marls.  We went down as her guests and I took down a couple dozen pairs of cheap sunglasses because they were all just getting started. The guides were all excellent “waterman” as they say down in the Bahamas, but they didn’t know anything about guiding.  Netti laughed and she said the guides would never wear them because the head guide, the guy they respect the most, Donny, doesn’t’ wear them. He thinks they aren’t necessary.  I said “give me Donny the first day.”  I said “Donny, your tip today is $100,” and Donny said “Wow, that’s great Mr. Mike.”  I told him, “But wait… there is a caveat.  Every bonefish you see before me I’m going to give you another $5.  Every bonefish I see before you, I’m going to subtract $5 from the $100.”  At lunch time he said “give me a pair of those glasses.”  There he was, up on the platform, he had the advantage.  Experience isn’t all of it… it’s tackle and everything else.

Throughout our fishing lives we often meet people that have a particularly big influence on us.  Can you think of someone who has really influenced your bonefishing?

Easy question.  The two people, it wasn’t so much that they influences my bonefishing, but they influenced the whole idea of travel.  Before I opened The Fly Shop as a single and reasonably successful young man, I used to spend the vast majority of my disposable cash traveling to fish. I did it because Bob Nauheim and Frank Bertaina, who owned Fishing International, gave me a love of travel.  They got my juices going about fishing travel.  I spent every cent I had on travel. They were huge and got me pumped up to go places.

I can remember going to a cocktail party in Pacifica.  I’m going and doing a lot of travel and I’m at this party and I’m listening to Frank Bertaina talk about this bonefishing trip.  He’s standing behind me and I’m holding a margarita trying to listen to his conversation. He’s got me all jacked up and I’m trying to pay attention to the conversation in front of me and I’m listening to his conversation and then I realize… wait… I’ve already been there! And it was nothing like how he was describing it!  He had such a great way of painting a picture and getting you juiced up about things.  They were wonderful about that because of their own passion for angling.

When you are out on the water a lot, you see things that others just don’t see. Is there something you’ve seen out there on the flats that stands out?

I used to lease a yacht off the coast of Belize for six or seven weeks a year and I’d invite down friends and we’d just bonefish and permit fish and dive.  From San Pedro down to the Honduras boarder.  One day we had gotten out of the skiff, probably around the Turneffe archipelago, and the guide runs over to this great, big bale of marijuana. It was the size of a kitchen table. It was all wrapped in plastic and had floated up against this island.  The guide said “Mr. Mike, would you mind if I take some of this?” and I told him I didn’t care.  He cut a great big x on the top of this thing and he dug down in it.  This was a long time ago.  It was all full of seeds, really low grade dope. He took the skiff and went back to the boat and came back with a big black garbage bag of his own.  We had this guy on the trip, I won’t give his name, but I was a kid at the time and we had this middle aged ex-marine along.  When the guide had gone back to get his bag the guy came up to me and asked what was going on.  I told him “put your nose down into that.  Don’t you know what that is?”  There was this big hole of marijuana where the guide had dug down inside to make sure it was all dry. The guy said “I don’t know man. It smells like my kid’s room.”  That might be the most memorable thing.

When you are out there, it is the other things in nature, besides the bonefish, that you remember.  It’s the 80 gillion little bait-fish jumping out of the water right by your boat and the backdrop is perfect.  The more you fish, the more you get them.  I’m lucky enough to have seen a lot.

What rod and reel is your go-to right now for bonefish?

Easy question. Winston BIImx and a Nautilus. It’s just an incredible powerhouse, a great rod that lets me deliver flies out at distance.  One thing I do that might be different from a lot of the answers you get is that I tend to use a 6 or 7 weight rod.  Even when I’m in Andros or the Keys, fishing for larger bonefish, I think it’s the reel. Delivering the fly is important, but once you’ve hooked the fish the reel takes on an awful lot more importance than the rod.  There are a lot of good reels out there.

I like Nautilus reels too.

So many of these reels are so much better than what you need, but I say “So what?”  I don’t fill my nose with coke for pleasure.  I spend my money on things that give me real pleasure and equipment is part of it.  I like the Hatch.  I love these Nautilus reels.  Flawless.

People make a big deal about weight, but you aren’t making a thousand casts.  Weight isn’t important. You need an incredibly reliable drag with enough capacity.

Thanks Mike.


31
Dec 10

Happy NYE and Photos by Jim Klug

Some great images by Jim Klug to wrap up your 2010.  I wish you all a Happy New Years Eve and I hope you all give the keys over to someone sober.  See you in 2011.

Bahamas – Andros Island Bonefishing Photos – Klug Photos – Outdoor and Fly Fishing Photography.


30
Dec 10

A look ahead to 2011

2010’s days are numbered.  Not much, good or bad, is going to happen in these last few days.  So, I’m thinking about what 2011 will hold.

Bonefishing Prospects

This year I don’t have a big trip on the calendar.  I think this is going to be sort of catch-as-catch can in terms of bonefishing.  I may try to get to Florida in the next few months thanks to either cheap air-fare or frequent flier miles.  Now… I don’t know if I’m going to pull that off, but it is something I’m going to try to pull off.

In July we may get to Hawaii for a wedding and if we do get there, I’m gonna do some fish’n.  Oahu is not a really easy place to be on your own, from what I’ve read and from the folks I’ve talked to.  I am not 100% if we are going to get there or not, but it is in pencil on the calendar.

So… Florida and Hawaii mean that even if I do a couple trips this year it is entirely possible that I might not even catch a bonefish… after all, these are not easy places with complacent and accommodating fish.  Once, when I asked someone about bonefishing in Florida they told me I should fish for barracuda instead. Doesn’t inspire confidence.

The odds of me getting to fish with Chris Goldmark in Puerto Rico are low… as are the odds of me getting to Aitutaki to fish with Butch… both things I really want to do. I have to look at 2012 for one of those two trips, probably, maybe, hopefully.

Writing Project

One potentially interesting project is a writing project that I’m involved in that could spawn something worth reading… but we are probably a couple months away from really having something to announce on that with confidence.

Addition to the Family

For my folks… no, not a child.  I’m almost certainly getting a Galvan Torque 10 for things like Dorado and Tarpon and I look forward to putting that into the mix along with my bonefishing reels.  I loved the Nautilus NV, but I got gift certs to my buddies fly shop… so… I’m getting a Galvan and I’m happy about that.

The Blog Itself

It has been fun watching the blog grow over the last year and I look forward to seeing what happens in 2011.  This still isn’t a job, it’s a hobby I do in addition to my duties as a stay-at-home dad.  At some point, maybe even a point this coming year, I’m going to have to get some sort of j-o-b again, a thought that inspires something akin to a slightly premature mid-life crisis… which is nice.

Basically, I’m going to stick with it with the whole “post-a-day” thing I’ve been doing for the last while.  We’ll see where we end up and where the year takes us.

Thanks for reading.


28
Dec 10

2010 – The year in review

2010 was an interesting year and marked the first full year of this little blog being around. Thanks for sticking with me.

I managed two trips in 2010, bookending the year.  My first trip was in January to Grand Bahama and the last was a trip to Belize in November.  The two trips were very different from one another with the GBI trip being a solo trip with lots of DIY, a day of guiding, a cheap hotel and meals mostly comprised of peanuts and gummy worms.  The Belize trip was with a good friend and saw a grand slam, a first rate lodge with wonderful meals (think lobster) and camaraderie.  Both were fantastic experiences.

GBI Self Portrait. Almost no fish were harmed in the making of my DIY fishing.

Fish, meet stick, stick, meet fish. Belize Jack - 25 pounds.

I tied a lot over the past year and generally improved my saltwater tying a great deal.

I got to cast some loaner rods… from Sage, the Xi3 in a 7 and 10 and from Orvis the Helios, Hydros and Access. I also got to play with a Mirage reel from Orvis and the lovely NV from Nautilus.  They all pretty much rocked.

I did A LOT of interviews.  In fact, all 31 interviews I’ve done were done this year.  The interviews, I think, are my best contribution to the wider world of bonefishing since all the interviews are original content.  So much of what I do is finding the gems and nuggets from around the web, but the interviews are my own products thanks to the generosity of those interviewed.  There are some great stories in there… I hope you enjoy them.

Fish I caught for the first time this year… carp, striper, permit, tarpon.

I had some good freshwater trips this year, including a nice few days on the Metolius up in Oregon.  The Metolius is just more beautiful than is reasonable.  Fishing with my dad was a special bonus.

Dad and I walking through paradise.

I also had some days on the Upper Sacramento, some Sierra creeks, the CA Surf, South Bay reservoirs and other ponds.  Oddly, I probably fished less this year than in just about any year for the past decade.  Having a 3 year old does that to ya.

On the personal front I moved from the Sierra Foothills back to Silicon Valley.  My little girl started pre-school and landed her first trout.  I continue to be a stay-at-home dad, although that is a limited time contract with about a year left to go… after that… I’m going to have to find a regular job again.  Should be interesting.

Thanks for being a reader and sharing your comments and stories over the last year.


25
Dec 10

What Santa Brought Me (and Santa’s name is Bob)

So… my dad went in to the local fly shop and it turns out someone had come in recently and given Bob (the owner) a big box of saltwater flies.  Bob is more into prince nymphs and BWO’s and he just gave my dad the whole box to give to me.

I did the count last night… 1,048 flies… cockroaches, bendbacks, clousers, bonefish critters, bendbacks… dozens and dozens and dozens.

That there is a lot of flies... a LOT of flies.

I have a feeling I’ll be giving a fair number away to you good folks, but if someone wants a couple hundred flies in exchange for an old Galvan Torque or Nautilus… well… just say’n.

Hope Santa got you some nice gear, or, better yet, some air travel vouchers so you can go visit Butch, or Lori-Ann or Andrew.