22
Oct 09

Flight Booked/Hotel Booked – Bahamas, T-61 Days

Booked my trip to Grand Bahama today… January 13-18.  Oh… I can almost taste the Kalik.

UPDATE: I’ve now booked my hotel… for $58/night.  Used Kayak.com.  On the hotel’s website the rate was $89/night.  The whole stay will be about $250 for lodging.  The countdown is 61 days!


22
Oct 09

Flatswalker and Seeing Things

New post from Flatswalker.com about seeing things on the flats… bonefish sometimes and the many other things you see out there.


30
Sep 09

Flatswalker and a storm

Another great post from the Flatswalker blog.  I enjoy his stuff and want to pass it on.

Flatswalker… good prose, good photos.


29
Sep 09

Vieques Angler’s Best Bonefish Ever

Found this nice little story from the Vieques Angler… a blog by a Vieques, Puerto Rico/FL fishing guide that I’ve bookmarked for a while now.  Fun little story.

Sometimes, size doesn’t matter.


22
Sep 09

OK… underwater tarpon fishing

This is amazing.  There is bad language, so, if you show it to your kids (as you should) turn the sound off or do the “ear muffs” routine from Old School.


16
Sep 09

Bonefish and Tarpon Trust + Pirates

Hey look… it’s Aaron Adams, from the Bonefish & Tarpon Trust, talking about the goodness that is Pirates on the Flats.  Seriously… I can’t wait for this show.  High expectations have doomed many a fishing trip, restaurant recommendation and blind date, but I hope this won’t be a case of the let-downs.  This is an interview from Fish Schtick (an audio pod cast that’s new to me).

Here’s an audio podcast from the Fish Schtick folks that also includes Brian Bennett (Moldy Chum contributor and Patagonia Fly Fishing rep).  Bill Klyn is a big Marketing guy at Patagonia, as well as being involved with the Bonefish and Tarpon Trust.  He’s on at about 21:05.  Give it a listen.

Pirates

This show is now set for 12/27/2009!


12
Sep 09

Best Outlook on Worst Trip

Browse the web forums, read the magazines, watch the movies… they are most all variations of stories that end happily ever after.  I got to wondering… while it is easy to find glowing reports, what are the really bad stories?  Looking through several forums and Google searches for “worst trip” I came across the story below.  This is from Flyfishing Forum, although I can’t get a direct link to the post, here is the general site.  The tale of “thing that can go wrong” is from back in 2006.  It is a tale of a honeymoon gone a bit off the rails… however… the author seems made of stern and sunny stuff… the guy has his telescope stuck on the silver lining.  Definitely a half-full guy.  If your next trip starts to go sideways or pear-shaped, just think of this guy and his disposition.

Well,
We made it back alive!!! Our 2 1/2 week do it yourself belize adventure went off with many a trill a lot of high water and more than a few good cocktails!
On our first day I had the horse I was riding try to roll over on me and durring my quick exit I managed to break my ring finger on my stripping hand (left)

After cutting my weddung ring off w/ a rusty hack saw I was able to splint it w/ some clothes pins and get it taped up. It made casting difficult especially the double haul by I learned to cope. Then came the rain every river in the country rose and then flooded so my plan for river Tarpon and snook was shot. To add insult to injury as the rivers entered the ocean it created a 200′ line of brackish muddy water along the whole coast (in Hopkins) so my plan to do some wading and kayaking was scuttled.

The second week we headed for Glovers reef w/ the promise of clearer skies and water unfortunately I contracted some wierd flu and spent the first two days w/ a 102 degree fever shivering in bed. Glovers is increadibly beutiful and the snorkeling was out of this world! The flats were a 3 1/2 mile kayak paddle from our island and after making the trip once I must admit I bairly had the energy to fish (damn flu). the last day one of the owners said they would take me out by boat and pick me up at a latter time. Great!, I could fish the rising tide in the morning this would be my shot!! As we headed for the island we ran over a large green piece of tarp which wraped itself around the prop kicked back the motor and broke the linkage. UGH!!!

Ok it’s been a week maybe those rivers on the mainland have gone down and we’ll just go after snook and tarpon. No such luck, we had to doge trees flowing down the swallon river upon our return. I did get out one morning w/ a local guide and fished the barrier reef. I caught a nice Jack and a permit and missed a bone. Then you guessed it …it started to rain and everything just seemed to shut down. We did manage to find a nice school of bones in deeper water but could not get them to hit.

So there it is not what I had imagined but a great trip all the same mostly because of all the great people we met along the way. Oh and let’s not forget those cocktails while discussing the worst rains in 20 years

I’m off to Alaska in three week I hope the report is a little better!!!!

Wow… how many people would call that a great trip?  I don’t know this guy, but I’d buy him a beer for sure.


09
Sep 09

New Caledonia Bonefish Beasts

There is a place that is slowly becoming synonymous with really big bonefish.  The  rumors are of an average size of 7 pounds with double digit fish a regular sight.  It seems to be similar to Hawaii in that what the fish have in size, they lack in numbers.  Despite being in the middle of nowhere (unless you live there, in which case you are just in the middle of whatever you are doing), the place doesn’t have Christmas Island numbers… but it has size… big ole bones… the tackle busting kind.  This place is called New Caledonia.

Closer to Australia than to Hawaii (by a long, long  way), New Caledonia sits in the South Pacific and looks to be a pretty interesting place.  The lux lodges are not around just yet… as one report said, this is not a place for folks that need hand holding.  The action isn’t hot and hectic, it is measured and tense… eyes looking for those truly large fish.

Seems in  2007 a group of anglers that included Charles Rangeley-Wilson (one of our bonefish addict faves) and Peter Morse hit the island in search of some of the giants.  They both have write ups about this trip.

The price on offer… big bones.

Peter Morse describes the trip…

As always the weather in New Cal makes it a challenge, this is not the place for anyone who needs to have their hand held, you require a level of experience that at the least means choosing flies, tying knots, and making decisions. The fish aren’t particularly spooky most of the time, but seeing them, and dealing with the wind and cloud becomes a test of patience and skill. This is not a place for Christmas island cricket score numbers, it’s a place for quality, a few very, very, good fish that will really last in your memory.

Certainly sounds like an interesting place, not a place I’m ready for, but something to aspire to.  Charles uses a bit more style in his article from Gray’s Sporting Journal

What little I’d discovered about bonefish in New Caledonia told me only two things: that they are very hard to find, and that if you find one, it will be very, very large. It’s the latter more than the former that dragged me here. There are many species of bonefish worldwide—Morsie gave us an expert tutorial in this—but while the physical differences may be subtle, all bonefish are paranoid, skittish, morphing ghosts that mess with your mind, your eyesight, and your sanity. And in New Caledonia, so the international fish-whispering goes, these fish become truly massive. The biggest rush, the biggest wave.

I found a report at Fishing International that said this of the fish and fish size…

We weighed all our fish using a “Bocagrip”* and we released fish from 6 up to 10 pounds. Both of us saw larger fish that were out of reach. I estimate the largest fish I saw at about 15+ pounds, but it is difficult to be certain. The average size of the fish we released was 6.5 to 7 pounds. It was obvious that there are some very large fish around. How large? Our guide Antoine landed a 9 kgs. (19.80 pounds) fish using bait, the week before we got there. Can you take them with a fly rod? Claude Nickrass’s party from France hooked and lost some of these large fish in December 2000 using a fly rod. The next world record bonefish could certainly be caught in New Caledonia.

OK… that sounds pretty interesting, no?  Even if I could catch a 19 pound bonefish in New Caledonia, I won’t be going any time soon.  See, a quick look at Kayak.com for flights puts a price tag for a flight from SFO to New Caledonia at about $2,750. The trip there is about 24 hours, the journey back is about 30… 30 hours… like, over a day.  Now, I’m not accustomed to travel to Australia or Singapore, so that sort of  travel is enough to make me think “Andros has some big bones too… Hawaii has big bones and air conditioning!”

Still… New Caledonia sounds like a fascinating place… a place where “Elk outnumber inhabitants” and 19 pound bonefish have been caught (even if on bait).  The  next world record just might come from this little chain of islands in the South Pacific.  Watch this space!

*Bocagrips are generally discouraged for handling bonefish. Don’t do it.


07
Sep 09

Bonefish on a Shoestring a la Charles

Found a great little article in The Field (a British sporting mag).  The cliff note version of the article is this… cheap bonefish.  The author is a Brit, which makes me like him just for the high probability we could talk soccer/football (oh Newcastle, hope you make it back on the bounce).  The article is great, the writing is grand and the author seems like a guy you’d like to cast a line with.

This particular angler is Charles Rangeley-Wilson, an angler and writer of some reputation and maybe even a bit of fame over there in England (maybe even other places, as far as I know).  Awfully British of him to go by Charles… no Charlie, no Chuck… but Brits are Brits and he even packed chocolate biscuits with him on a shoestring trans-Atlantic bonefish expedition… something here about “you can take the angler out of Briton but you can’t take the Briton out of the angler.”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W8u9bygLV50&hl=en&fs=1&rel=0&color1=0x006699&color2=0x54abd6

Turns out Charles has an addiction I can sympathize with…

All the time-bomb tension of the previous few seconds, the held breath, the frozen body, the eyes straining for information, is suddenly released when a bonefish takes. I doubt there is anything else in sport to rival that uncoiling rush. It’s like a drug and I for one am addicted to it. (from The Field article linked above)

Charles with a bonefish

Charles has made a movie about his obsession called “Bonefish: A Fishing Odyssey.” Now, I’d like to see this movie… I’d like to see it very much.  However, still stinging from the American Revolution, the dvd is not yet for sale in an American-friendly dvd format (although this is coming, and coming soon, as I understand it).  Keep an eye out for it, or, just check here and I’ll let you know when  you too can get your copy.


02
Sep 09

Flatswalker bonefishing memories

Found this cool little story from the Flatswalker blog brought back from the depths of 2000.  Just a little reminder that there is always a beginning to one’s bonefishing life and that there are plenty of lessons we all have to learn.  At this point, almost all of the lessons are still lessons I have to learn, which makes me appreciate stories like this.

The Flatswalker blog is the product of Grand Cayman Island bonefish guide and glass sculptor Davin Ebanks.  Worth a read, worth a bookmark.

UPDATE: The Flatswalker blog seems to be down at the moment.