28
Jul 11

Sarah’s first bonefish

Now, Sarah has a leg up on most folks starting out trying to find their own bonefish.  Her husband is one of the best anglers I know, my friend Shane.  She’s had a pretty good teacher and that can really reduce the learning curve, but it is still an accomplishment to score your first bonefish.

Nice bonefish Sarah!

 

Here’s Sarah’s story in her own words:

I’ve been on seven bonefishing trips in the last several years. I’m grateful when I realize
that’s twice (oaky maybe 7 times) as may as most anglers dream about…in a lifetime. A
couple of those trips I didn’t even get any follows. During the earlier trips, my husband
and guide, Shane was slowing teaching me the ways of the ghost of the flats. What to
look for, how to spot them, how to cast into the wind, how to clear your line when the
fish takes off, how not to lose a finger while they run…About four years ago (with the
help of husband guide by my side) I was able to spot, cast to, and land my first fish and
then my second the same day. It was a huge accomplishment. And those two bonefish
remain the biggest I’ve landed since then. We weren’t married yet at the time, but I
secretly think that’s when he starting thinking about making me his wife.

As any bonefish angler knows, when chasing the elusive flats dweller, Murphy’s Law
truly applies. I’ve done it all wrong, many many times. I’ve seen a large school, gotten
excited only to cast and find out the hard way that my line is wrapped around my foot.
I’ve cast to a bonefish shaped clump of turtle grass only to be frustrated when it didn’t
try to eat my fly. Then, there’s casting in the wind. I’ve stared at objects “that could
be a fish” so long with the hopes of using my jeti mind skills to somehow will it into
becoming a bonefish. Not so much. I’ve made the most beautiful casts only to plop the
tiny fly down on the fish’s head so as to spook him so bad he tells all his buddies to steer
clear of that flat for the rest of the day. I’ve tried to make casts into the wind only to have
my line fall in a jumbled mess a few feet away. I’ve broke fish off because I didn’t “let
him run.” Did I mention the wind? What can go wrong will go wrong when bonefishing.

But, once in a great while, the fish gods smile down upon you and everything goes right.
Today was that day. Husband guide dropped me off to walk a flat by myself while he
walked the boat a ways away. He was a good 200 yards away when I spotted 6 fish
coming at me on my right side about 80 feet away. Wind and sun at my back. (“That’s
when all the conditions are right for a good time.” – Alan Jackson) So, my heart starts
thumping and I make my cast…about 50-60 feet. One cast. Three strips. Fish on. Big
smile, giggles out loud. I had done it all…all by myself!! All is right in my little world
today.


07
Jul 11

A little fishing over the 4th

Even when it isn’t good, it is still pretty good.

Over the 4th we had a pretty hard night with the little girl.  She’s been a really good sleeper most of her life, but ever since I went back to work… well, not so much.  I think she finally fell asleep on top of me around 4:00 AM.  Could have been later.

The next morning I got the day to go fishing.  Great.

I got on the road and figured I better put a call in to the Tahoe Fly Fishing Outfitters. “Any chance the East Carson is fishable.”

“No way, man.  It’s high and muddy. Totally unfishable.”

Bummer.

So, I started heading to the East Walker.  The river that was slightly fishable was 1.5 hours away at that point, but I went for it.  The math would say the drive there and back would be equal to the time I’d get to fish. I’d drive 3 hours (total) to fish for 3 hours.

pretty drive.

The water was high, but not muddy.  The fishing was so-so, but it was good to be out there again.  I threw streamers because I wanted to throw streamers and I saw a few nice fish come and take a look, only to turn away. When I got desperate for the tug, I put on some nymphs and took off the indicator. Fish followed. I ended up landing about 5. One nice looking brown. Four rougher looking bows (I’d call these hatchery fish).

Nice.

I needed that.

There is a whole lot of water up in them there hills.  Pretty amazing to see all that snow up there in July.

No one is going to go thirsty this year.


06
Jul 11

The Humble Jack

Jacks often are looked down upon.  I’m not sure why that is.  I think they are kind of awesome.  They pull HARD.  They can be taken on poppers and plugs and clousers and pretty much anything else that gets in their way.  My biggest saltwater fish to-date is a Jack and I enjoyed every minute of that fish, including several before it was hooked and a great number of minutes after.

These are some of the reasons I’m happy to see the good folks over at Skinny Water Culture devote a shirt to the good fish… we’ll see how long they sell it before the C&D letter arrives.  My suggestion would be to order soon.

Cool.

I really like Jack’s.

Beeg. Caught out of El Pescador in Belize.


28
Jun 11

More from TRIW

Good stuff from a good blog.

Hours may pass without notice. When you see a fish, (somehow your brain indicates immediately that the shape and shadow that looks identical to the hundred other similarly shaped shadows around you is not a bottom feature, it is alive.) your body reacts.

via This River is Wild.: Turn on, tune in, hook up..

 

 


18
May 11

Abiconian Goodness

I’ve been in touch with Johan for a little while… folks that love the same things tend to cluster.  Turns out my friend Shane met Johan in a bar out that way recently.  I just found this little vid on Vimeo from Johan.  Johan is Norwegian, which is a good thing to be.  1/4th of my genetic make-up comes from there and while I understand it to be beautiful country, I can only imagine my ancestors left for the same reason Johan was down in the Bahamas… there are no Norwegian Bonefish.

 

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17
May 11

Ten Tips for Belize from Orvis and El Pescador

The good folks at Orvis recently posted up a list of ten tips to help your experience be all that you want it to be when you head down to El Pescador.  The list comes from Ali… who we’ve met and interviewed in this VERY BLOG!

Ah… Belize… it’s been sooooo long (actually, just in November, but sooooo much has gone on since then).  El Pescador was good to me… a grand slam on my first tarpon and permit?  Seriously?  That’s just silly.

Here’s my list of 5 things I can think of to help make your Belize/El Pescador trip all it can be…

  1. Bring lots of #8 gotcha’s in various colors… don’t do what I did and have a couple that I only had one color of.
  2. Put weed guards on the good stuff.
  3. Have your box organized so you know which flies have weed guards and which don’t.
  4. Strip fast for the permit, but feed the tarpon.
  5. Leave the 8 at home… 7 for the bones, 9 for the permit, 10-11 for the poons.

Other things I think of when I think of that trip… the beers are less than 12.oz and that means you need to keep track of how many of those things you drink… we had a beer tab of just shy of $400… for three days.

There are places with bigger bonefish, for sure.  There are probably places with bigger tarpon at times of year.  However… if you are looking for a grand slam… there probably isn’t a better place to get it done… anywhere.

Permit. Not a world record, but a frigging permit!

Not a big tarpon, but a tarpon.

Bone

 

Get some Rise


15
May 11

Skinny Water Culture Vid

Pretty cool little vid over at the Skinny Water Culture blog.

Needless to say… I like it.


12
May 11

Rise in Acklins

The good folks from Rise went to do a little stick waving down in Acklins with Cattaraugus Creek Outfitters, owned by Vince Tobia, who has been interviewed here a while back.

My trips to Acklins Island was an interesting trip to say the least. Acklins is known for its “Do It Yourself” aspect. There are lodges to stay at but we decided to do it on our own and stay at Ivel’s B and B. Which I have to say is above and beyond anything you would expect. We booked through Cattaraugus Creek Outfitters owned by Vince Tobia. I highly recommend using them. He gives you maps and great instructions that even a novice fly fisher could use to catch fish.

via Rise Matters Blog.

 

 


06
May 11

Big HI Bone

Yeah… they get kind of big out there.

I want to catch a fish that big.  I can’t really comprehend what that pull must be like.

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04
May 11

Slipstreamangling – Cuba Travels

Rich French, from Slipstream Angling, recounts his recent travels to and from Cuba (he’s Canadian, that lucky SOB).  You can read his stories on the Slipstream blog.

I spent two days fishing the flats at Cayo Coco and while I caught some nice fish, the entire time I was fishing was a real battle due to the hard, ever present 25-30 mile an hour winds I was dealing with the whole time. It made conditions really tough and the guide had to work overtime just to get me into fish.

via Slipstreamangling :: Extraordinary Waters Worldwide.