20
Aug 10

Fiberglass for Bones

(First, just a note, you can be entered to win some Skinny Water Culture gear by emailing me the account of your first bonefish. bonefishonthebrain@gmail.com)

The Fiberglass Manifesto put up a great little story  about fishing glass for bonefish.  It is worth a read.

Old School

You can catch bones with this rig.

The first fly rod I ever cast was a Fenwick 9 weight.  I had no idea what I was doing.  I bounced a Silver Hilton off the back of my head several times.  How I didn’t hook myself, I have no idea. No steelhead were harmed in that first foray into fly fishing, despite a good effort.

Now, I fish the fast stuff.  However, I really appreciate a guy reminding us all that you can catch a fish on a rod as old as I am and a reel whose design hasn’t changed since WW II (WW I?).


18
Aug 10

Interview with Vaughn Cochran

Vaughn Cochran is owner of Black Fly Outfitter, connected to the Black Fly Bonefish Club and an artist specializing in saltwater scenes. His art is fantastic and his place out in Abaco looks nice… so very nice.

Preach It!

Vaugn's art is awesome.

Is there something in your art, when you are doing a bonefish, that you are trying to capture?

I work in so many different styles that is usually the medium I’m working in that determines the fish is going to look like, which is  kind of the reverse of how most people would approach it.  If I’m using pencil, to me, drawing a bonefish is like drawing an ear of corn because you have all those damn little scales and it’s all the same little thing… it’s very monotonous to do it, but those scales and those lines, that’s what makes it work. If I do it in acrylic, which I did in the “Bright” series, bonefish were part of that series, I used colored lines.  One of my most successful bonefish paintings was a paining I call “Lean Green Fighting Machine,” it was an underwater painting. I rarely do stuff like that because everyone else does it, and that usually means I don’t do it.  I painted it to show everyone that I could do it and it was the last one of those I ever did.  If there is anything I try to capture, I’d say I look more at the formal aspects like lines, shape, color and form, all those kinds of things.  They are more important to me than trying to capture the mood of the fish.

With the Black Fly Bonefishing Club in Abaco, it seems you are really tied to Abaco.  What’s your history with Abaco?  How long have you been fishing it?

I got started with my friend Clint Kemp, who was a guide and now my business partner, and I didn’t fish Abaco until maybe 3-4 years ago.  Clint introduced me to Abaco when we did a fly fishing assessment for the project of Schooner Bay, which we are now a part of. That was my first experience, and what an experience it was.  I had never seen bonefishing like that before.  It was outrageous.  At the end of that trip we were sitting on the balcony of one of the little hotels there, drinking rum and smoking Cuban cigars and just remarking about what an incredible trip it had been and how the fishing had been so good it was almost impossible not to sign on to the Bonefish Club… we were wondering how we could not do it at that point.  It was the perfect situation for us.

Some nice looking water

Vaughn hunting some fish in Abaco.

Have you seen a lot of increased interest in Abaco since The Pirates of the Flats was filmed there?

I think the Pirates was a result of the increased interest in Abaco in general.  The Abaco Lodge coming in there was a big deal.  There are very few lodges in Abaco, it is unlike Andros… someone told me that there were 40 lodges in Andros, I believe it, but in Abaco they are trying to restrict the number of lodges that can be there.  Really, there are only so many lodges that can physically be there because of the geography and the water.  I don’t think it will ever be as populated as Andros and I think it will remain a very viable fishery for many, many years.

A good place to be

Abaco...

I’ve seen that Schooner Bay is being held up as a model of sustainable development.  What are some of the things that are happening there that give it that  label?

I think that just the selection of the site alone was key. They took an area that had been repeatedly damaged by hurricanes over the years and they took out the damaged stuff and they kept the good stuff and they didn’t tear down trees to build houses, they put in a harbor, a good 30% of the land is going to be devoted organic farming, the idea of smaller houses and using reverse geo-thermal air conditioning.  They are going to capture water.  They just dug two huge pits because they needed some dirt and those pits are going to used to create a one million gallon venetian well type of thing, they’ll line those pits, put sand on them and then put plants on top of it and then they’ll take the water that is naturally filtered and put that to a central processing facility where it will be pressurized and sent to the houses. They have all sorts of things they’ve done like that.  The community is a bicycle or golf cart community with no cars.  It will be a walking community that is a sustainable  and simple, small fishing village along the lines of other small fishing villages around the Bahamas.

When is that slated to open?

They should finish the harbor around the first of the year or early Spring.  The are looking at 2012 to have businesses running and small houses.  It’s interesting because they are building a town, not a condo project where everything has to be built before you open.  They want to get a few businesses in and a few homes in and let it grow. The economic engine of any project like that, or any Bahamian town, is the harbor.  Once the harbor is done then the boat traffic will come in, the sports fishing boats will come in.  It will really change the village and the harbor will be the heart of the village.

Is there something you’ve seen out there that stands out as being unique?

I had an encounter with a water spout that was pretty interesting, but, ya know, as an artist every day is an experience.  I see colors and shapes and events and sharks eating things and, ya know, life… big fish eating little fish, I carried my camera with me all the time in Abaco… seeing a tarpon daisy chain, seeing a bonefish daisy chain, seeing 500 bonefish going around in a circle is a pretty interesting thing to see.  For an artist, a photographer, a blue sky is the last thing you want to see. You want to see clouds and atmosphere, those are the things that give a scene its dimension.  A thunderstorm coming across the water… nothing better than that for a painter. Those are the things I look at every day. I did a paining called Turtle Grass and it was as if you were standing on the front of the boat and looking down in the water.  The water is clear and so you are just seeing the pattern of the grass in the water.  I took several  pictures of that image and worked off the photos to paint the photo, but it took me 8 months to paint the painting.  It was pretty complicated, but it was a great piece.

Vaughn is pretty good at this.

What reel and rod to you prefer for your fishing at the moment?

Being someone that sells fishing equipment for a living, I love to fish all sorts of different equipment, different rods, different reels. I like to try new equipment.  My current favorite is a Loomis GLX 9 wt.  I prefer that rod because you can really lift a lot of line off the water with it.  If you do happen to get lucky and get a 10 or 12 pound bonefish you have the tackle to do it. I use the 9 wt. because it’s windy, a lot, and that is a rod you can throw in the wind.

I got a chance to cast the new Hardy, the one that Andy Mill designed.  It’s a 9 wt. That’s an equal rod, easily.  I tried that again on my last trip and I thought it was a good rod.  I’m looking forward to seeing the new Loomis (NRX) to see what that’s like. It’s a great time to be testing rods because there are so many good choices out there.

I have quite a collection of reels and I use different reels all the time.  I bought my wife an Abel that’s anti-reverse.  She’s a great angler but she doesn’t fish that much and sometimes she forget to take her hand off the reel handle. I started to use her reel and found out I really liked that anti-reverse, even for bonefish, so I guess right now my favorite reel would be that or my equal choice would be the Nautilus, either the NV or the CCF. That’s a great, great reel.  They are equal as far as I’m concerned.

Vaughn, a bonefish and a Nautilus

Do you have a particularly memorable bonefish?

We were doing a show this past year called Hooked on the Fly.  We had been fishing for a couple of days and I hadn’t been fishing much because the host was fishing and we had some other people there.  Finally on the last day the camera man said “OK Vaughn, we need you to catch a fish for the show.”  I said “OK, I’ll do my best.” I was with Paul Pinder and George Clark, the camera man. We were working along the edges of one of the flats at Moore’s Island, which is one of the places we go to out of lodge, about an 18 mile trip.  I had made a couple of shots at some awfully big fish and Moore’s Island is one of those places that is known for big fish and it is really a special place.  Every fish I threw at had run, immediately.  Here came this fish, I could tell it was a big fish. I didn’t know how big, but it was big. I threw a fly at the fish, he spooked, made a big circle and came back and ate the fly. It was a huge surprise, I’d never seen that. Once they spook they are gone.  This fish took off and I turned to the guide and I said “This is the biggest bonefish I’ve ever caught, I’m sure.”  Actually, I thought I hadn’t adjusted my drag properly so when the fish finally stopped running and my backing was almost gone, I checked it and it was set where it should have been and I knew it was a fish of a lifetime.  We got the fish in, the camera man was there with an underwater camera.  It was amazing because, not only was it the biggest bonefish I’ve ever caught, but it was recorded on film.  That show is out in January, I think, but that was my most memorable fish.  People estimated it was 12 pounds.  A 12 pound fish and the whole thing captured on film.  That was amazing.

Thanks Vaughn.


15
Aug 10

Marquesas video

More mining from Youtube found this recent post from the Keys of Florida.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=80ztN9Y-Qus?fs=1&hl=en_US


14
Aug 10

Babine, the book… totally not bonefish related.

This book brings to life more than 50 years in the history of the Babine River, one of the most famous of all British Columbia’s highly regarded sports fishing destinations. The idea for the book was sealed with a handshake on the bank of the river with the two men agreeing from the outset that the story of the Babine had to be something more that just another ‘how to catch them, where to fish’ manual.

via Amazon.com: Babine (9781571884626): Pierce Clegg, Peter McMullan: Books.

A book is about to be released that has a bit of family history in it.  The Babine is one of the  best steelhead rivers in the world.  It just is.  It is a beautiful and wild place.  It is also a place my grandfather, C.A. “Strom” Stromsness fished for many years.  He befriended owner of Norlakes Lodge, Ejnar Madsen, and for something like 17 years he spent a week or more on the Babine.  There is even a hole on the upper river named “Strom’s Pool.”  Some of his letters and recollections make it into the book, as does mention of my daughter with her unique middle name… Babine.

I managed one trip up there with my dad (and thanks to my dad). I don’t recall exactly how many steelhead I managed.  Somewhere between 9 and 12 with my largest being this 18 pounder caught on a skating dry fly… an image that will stay with me forever.

There's my biggest steelhead.

My dad is done being a regular up there.  The wading and long days just got to be too much.  However, his last year up there, in one day, he landed a 20# and 25# fish.  They were just about the only fish he caught all week, but what a high note to end on.

Here is “Strom” from those early days on the Babine.  Sadly, the C&R ethic hadn’t much caught hold (or caught hold at all).  Somewhere my dad still has one of his father’s steelhead mounts… it is called “Good Grief.”

Strom is on the left.


13
Aug 10

Turks & Caicos Bonefishing Trip via MidCurrent

IN ALL DIRECTIONS around me I can see nothing but an endless world of blue and green — water, mangroves, sky. There are no other boats or people, nothing but the wind blowing notes through my rod guides.

via Fly Fishing Trip: Turks & Caicos Bonefish – MidCurrent.

Sounds good doesn’t it?  Check out the whole story on the MidCurrent site.


10
Aug 10

Interview with Kristen Mustad – Nautilus Reels

I have not fished a Nautilus Reel… yet… but on my next trip to some warm and beautiful bit of salty water, I just might borrow one of Kristen’s reels and give it a go.  I already have one of his reels on my phone.

You have a Norwegian background?

Norwegian born, in Oslo.

So, what’s your strategy for not getting skin cancer being a Norwegian in Miami?

I use Buffs.  I was hating them, thinking people looked like fools wearing them and then I wore one and it’s the most amazing product ever. No other product comes close to it.  There are a bunch of other guys that make similar products, but they don’t work as well.

You see fishing guides smoking through them, drinking through them, it’s pretty crazy.  I’ll tell you something, when you are out there on the flats, I always used to wear long sleeves, cotton, because the soak up a little sweat and they keep you cool, and even when I wear technical stuff, I wear a cotton shirt under it just to get a little cool on it because it gets really hot here in the summer when there’s no wind.  But when you wear a Buff you don’t get a hang-over, you get a hang-over from the sun just because you are dehydrated, just like when you drink.

Nice

Tell me a little bit about Nautilus Reels.  What makes you guys unique or special, what’s the value proposition?

Right now, it is the lightness of the reel.  We hit it big with the CCF line, which, today in my book is a heavy reel, but we still sell a pile of them.  That’s an 8.7 ounce 8 wt. reel and when it was first launched was one of the lighter big game reels out there. Now, we’ve got the NV line, which is just way lighter, it’s higher dollar, but not as high dollar as some of the reels out there.

Another advantage we have is we are young guys, we are always out there looking for the new stuff; components, materials, cutting tools, software – you name it. Also, it’s our attention to detail: it is not all about functionality: Looks matter a lot, so does ease of assembly and manufacturing time. It is all a balance that affects your costs, so every time we run a part, we make changes to it, every time. Most of them are not visible to the end user, it is all to get better efficiencies in the factory and in the end, to make a better product without impacting the guy who bought one last year and wants to buy a replacement spool.  It’s going to fit.

The new NV, the NV-G series are really large arbor. For the NV 11-12, an 8.5 ounce 12 weight reel, which is about half the weight of the next comparable 12 wt. reel (ours or anyone else’s), we make the G-9 spool.  It has a huge arbor. We used to call it the Über-Arbors. You can put an 8, 9 or 10 wt. line on it and you’ve got 8.2 ounce 8 wt. reel that picks up line like the devil. A 4.5” 8 wt. reel… it’s a lot of fun

You’ve got to be out there making new products. When we got into this, we looked around and folks were changing their products every 5, 6, 7 years and the changes were  cosmetic. We made it a point to bring in a new model every year. People change their cars every 3-4 years, yet keep an outdated reel for 15!  People are still fishing cork. Cork was invented generations ago.  The main reason we use it in our CCF reel ( it’s cork and carbon fiber, that’s what the CCF stands for) is for marketing purposes. Carbon fiber is way superior to cork, but the whole big game crowd was so into cork because it is “so forgiving, compressible, has memory…” so we said, OK, let’s include cork so the big game guys can see that and say, “Hey, it’s got cork, it’s gotta be OK.”

Kristen with a bone.

Joe said he uses the featherweight.

That’s our little trout reel, and we built it big.  The featherweight soon will have a stronger drag and we’ll put cork in there so people will be satisfied, but it is a 4.5 ounce little reel, but that’s what Joe uses all the time.  You don’t need more.

I saw your Traveler’s Program (where you lend reels to folks to bring on their next trip).  That sounds awesome.  Are people taking advantage of that?

They are, but I’ll tell you it’s frustrating.  They borrow the reel, and then they don’t send it back for three months and then they don’t send a picture.  You tell them, “Guys, can you send a picture of the fish?”  They say, “No, we didn’t catch any.”  Just tell me a story, tell me about the guy that fell over the case of beer. Tell me anything. You end up with no stories half the time.

That does suck.  I’d think there would be so many people that would jump at it.

It’s an awesome program and it is non-threatening to the dealer because there is only one of each (reel model/weight).  Each gets engraved with every destination.  I’ll tell you, the 10/11 traveler is gone.  The 8/9 traveler is gone. They just never returned them.  They get charged, but they just don’t return them sometimes.  We need to find a way to get this to work better.  It’s frustrating to the guys that want the reels and can’t get them.  It’s frustrating to us. We need to put a GPS tracker on those things to get them back.

How much do you fish for bones?  Biscayne Bay is right there.

I probably get a couple days a month.  When I bonefish, I fish in Key Biscayne. Most of my bonefishing I did in Los Roques.  I lived in Venezuela for four years.  I had some buddies that fished and had little planes and we’d go out there on weekends and fish for two or three days.  You go out there on your own and you’ll catch three fish on a weekend, and you go back when you have a little more money and you hire a guide and you catch 15 fish in a morning.

Do you have a most memorable bonefish?

I invented a patentable way to tie a fly that works well in certain applications.  I tie a lot with big rabbit strips.  I was fishing with some of the guys from Kauffmans down here and we were casting… the way you tie this fly, it’s tied on the weed guard, and what was happening was I was using too light a weedguard and the fish would suck in the rabbit and the hook would stay outside its mouth.  We had two different fish eat this fly four times and they’d pick it up, the angler would come tight and clear the line and then the fly would just come out.  It happened again and again.  The guy said “This fly sucks, can we change it?”  I picked up the fly, put the hook right through the rabbit strip and I said “Cast again.”  Sure enough, he stuck the fish on the first cast. That concept didn’t work, but it was a very memorable experience.

Another FL bonefish

What rod do you pair with your Nautilus reel?

I use whatever the newest Nautilus reel is.  Right now, I’m fishing the G9’s. That’s the one I like best.  For rods, I’ll use pretty much anything US Made.  I use a lot of different rods.  On my last trip, I used a Scott S4S in a 9 weight.

I saw you actually have a section on your website called “pipeline.”  Is there anything coming down the pipeline you are particularly excited about?

The Featherweight’s are changing to a spool that looks like the G spool.  The G spool, when it has line on it, the backing sits higher than it looks like it should sit, so it looks like it floats. It promotes backing drying faster, but they also look really good.

Do you  have any parting thoughts?

Here’s my message… take a buddy fishing.  That’s the best thing you can do.  Every day we lose kids and adults from this sport.  When I go out fishing, I don’t take the hard core guy, I take the guy that doesn’t get out, the guy who hasn’t done this before.  The guy finds a new hobby he loves, the guide gets a new client, everyone wins.  There are so many guys that just do offshore fishing, but the flats fishing, its full contact… you are there in 12 inches of water and there’s a 200 pound shark that comes up and noses the propeller.  You can’t beat that.  I take my kid out, he’s 9, I’ve been taking him out since he was 1 ½ and he’ll spend the whole day on a flats boat soaking a crab and he just loves it.  It doesn’t have to be fly fishing.  Just take someone out there.

Thanks Kristen!


08
Aug 10

Aussie Bone Vid

Everything sounds a bit more interesting with an Aussie accent, mate.  This is with True Blue Bones out of Exmouth in Western Australia.  It is the show’s host’s first bonefish and he’s pretty excited about it, which I like.  He had that fish out of water for a hell of a long time, which I didn’t like (air exposure = bad news for bonefish).  Everyone has to learn at some point, I guess.  I didn’t know my first trip out either.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nT2chkSa0FM&hl=en_US&fs=1

I doubt I’ll ever get there.  The cost is prohibitive both in terms of travel and guiding.  The fishing looks kind of amazing with the possibility of crossing off several pretty interesting species if you have one of those lists.


06
Aug 10

Fly Angler’s OnLine Bahamas 1998

Retro for the Friday, a story about Grand Bahama from 1998

Our site this week features fishing the Bahamas for bonefish. Or as the terrific G Loomis advertisement a while back said, “And you have an appointment with Mr. Bonefish.” Remember the ad? It had a line of guys in 3-piece suits at an airline terminal and one guy in a tropic shirt and shorts? We have an appointment with Mr. Bonefish. The first week in February, 1998.

via Fly Angler’s OnLine “World Wide Fishing, “Bahamas – Bonefish”.


05
Aug 10

Long Beach Bonefish from gazettes.com

California has a lot going for it… Disneyland, Tahoe, gay marriage, wine, Hollywood and more.  Bonefish, however, are a little scarce.  Many have heard about bonefish in San Diego Bay even sometimes north of there (although not in San Francisco Bay).  A kids fishing event in Long Beach has, in past years, turned up bonefish.  I’m guessing they were not record-setting bones, but still good to know.

About 30 different species of fish were snagged during the catch-and-release event last year, Scott said, and the battle for most strange or unusual fish always turns up some oddities. In years past he said he’d seen a lobster, starfish, bonefish, midshipman and even a barnacle-clad fishing pole “some angler must have lost years ago,” be unearthed from the sea.

via Fishing Rodeo Reels In Youngsters – gazettes.com: Lifestyle.

You could bonefish and hit Disneyland in the same day!

Yeah, that's California there.


03
Aug 10

Interview with Butch Leone

How about living on a remote atoll in the middle of the South Pacific?  Sounds intriguing, no?  That’s exactly what Butch Leone does on the atoll of Aitutaki in the Cook Islands where he guides anglers to some really big bonefish. Atoll life sounds pretty interesting.

Nice fish Butch

Butch with a nice Aitutaki Bonefish

Aitataki is a long way from anything.  How did you find yourself living there pursuing bonefish?

I first came to Aitutaki 13 years ago and just fell in love with the place.  How I decided to come to the Cook Islands is a bit funny.  I was just a kid and just spun the globe and put my finger down.  It landed on the Cook Islands so I figured that someday I would go there.  It took 30 some years to make the trip but it was certainly worth the wait.  When I was planning my trip here for the first time I saw all the sand flats and thought there must be bonefish in the lagoon.  I tried to do some research on the subject but nothing was written about bonefishing on Aitutaki at that time.  I just came down with a 9wt rod and started throwing flies at everything with fins.  I loved it.  Once I got back to where I lived in Bend, Oregon I booked another trip and was back on Aitutaki 6 months later.

What’s the most difficult part of living somewhere that is so isolated?

People ask me all the time what I miss most while I am down here.  I have to tell them honestly, “nothing.”   My lovely wife and little daughter supply everything I could want in life on the island.  With modern technology and the internet I can stay in close contact with my family and friends in the US.

Do you have a particularly memorable bonefish?

If I had to choose a memorable bonefish I would have to say “my last one.”  They are all just so much fun to have run my backing out that it is hard to choose which would be my most memorable.  I guess if I had to pick one it would be my 37 inch bonefish caught in the main channel in town while I was fishing for trevally.  It was quite a surprise to hook a big bonefish on a fly that was just under the surface of the water while stripping as fast as I could.  All I saw when it hit the fly was a slab of silver and I figured it was just a big trevally.  As soon as it started to come back at me after the first massive run I had an idea it wasn’t a trevally.  The size of the thing had me shaking in wading sandals.  I haven’t landed another one that large but seen them plenty of times.

I would imagine that you don’t have a lot of fly shops there, how do you get gear and flies?  Does the remoteness of your circumstances force you to be more careful with your gear?

If you lose gear here you better have back ups because you can’t just run down to your local fly shop and restock.  I have most of my fly tying materials sent in from The Patient Angler Fly Shop in Bend.  Peter Bowers, the owner has been more than accommodating sending my supplies.  For my leaders I just get big spools of the stuff as I go thru so much of it.  I use the RIO Saltwater F/I lines and order right from RIO.  They also have been great and have taken care of me on numerous occasions.  No I am not cautious with my gear.  I’ll toss to anything.  If you get cautious you don’t take the chances that can land a great fish.  My gear is meant to be used and I use it and put it to the test as often as I can.

Do you have a favorite rod/reel these days?

Right now my rod of choice is a 9wt Pieroway rod from Pieroway Rod Company of Calgary Canada.  It is probably the smoothest casting rod I have ever used.  It offers great finesse on short shots and has plenty of power for the long shots.   I would put it up against any of the top rated rods that are much more expensive.  It has helped me land many bonefish in all kinds of conditions.  I also use a 9wt TFO TiCrX that I like and have landed plenty of great fish on.

Pieroway

A Pieroway rod and Cook Bonefish

When you are out on the water a lot you get the opportunity to see things that other people simply will never see.  You see unique things, funny things, frightening things.  Is there something you’ve seen out on the flats that is memorable like that?

I guess the strangest thing I have ever seen out here on the lagoon has to do with a bonefish that we saw one day.  As we were poling along the edge of one of the little islands in the lagoon looking for bonefish, we saw this fish snapping at the tail of an eel.  We poled up close and saw that it was a bonefish and it was just nipping at the eel’s tail end.  This was up on the surface of the water.  My friend Mark and I just kind of looked at each other not sure what we were seeing.  We kept trying to put a fly between the bonefish and the eel but the fish wanted nothing but the eel.  Finally the eel got under a rock and that was the end of it.  These bonefish here are a different fish not only are they big but they just don’t act like normal bonefish, what ever that is.  I know people here that have picked up bonefish trolling.  These fish have the brain the size of a breadcrumb but they still outsmart me all the time.

Working the boat

Butch poling along the atoll.

Thanks Butch.  Hope you enjoy Aitutaki.  Sounds like a special place.