16
Oct 10

Tying

I guess if I can’t be fishing, tying is a weak compromise.  I do enjoy it… which is kind of odd.   I’m not exactly a detail oriented person and fly tying certainly has that kind of feeling.  It mystifies my wife how I can sit there for a couple of hours and just wrap thread around variously sized bits of wire.

Tying Central... important that it closes up so small fingers don't get ahold of pointy things.

For the most part I am a self taught tier.  I never took a class, but I did spend a summer as a guide at Clearwater House (now Clearwater Lodge) and after the fishing was done the guides all sat around in the guide shack and tied.  I picked up more than a couple pointers in that setting.  I also used to go down to the Golden Gate Angling and Casting Club and sit around and tie with some of the old guys. This was about a decade ago, maybe a little longer… I certainly learned some things there.

I do wish I had the time to take some classes though… I’ve never had to learn a dubbing loop and that is coming back to bite me in the arse as I’m trying to put together some Black Death’s for Belize.  There is no dubbing loop required in a #20 zebra midge or a #16 bead head flash back PT.  That kind of tying requires little skill and values speed and numerical output over precision and detail.  A messy tie in a #16 still looks pretty close to a good tie in a #16.  A sloppy tie in a 3/0 looks like a frigging disaster.

Not totally ready for prime time Tarpon Flies

I find that by the time I get in a groove when I’m tying it is usually time to close up shop for the night so I can get a good enough night’s sleep to keep up with the whirlwind of activity that is my 3 3/4 year old.

I am starting to like the way my merkins (legged and legless) are looking, so at least there is that.

Leggless Merkins with weed guards (weed guards are new to me)

See you at the vice.


11
Oct 10

Every Christmas is unique

I was looking at the many variations of the Christmas Island Special.  Now, there isn’t a whole lot TO a Christmas Island Special, but still… on a fly as sparse this, there still seems to be room for everyone to tie it differently. Seems that there are many variations on the theme with a couple of key hallmarks.

1. Big eyes

2. Lots of flash

Beyond that… some have calf-tail, some have flashabou and others crystal flash, some have craft fur.

I guess there is a standard…  I mean… if Kaufmann tied it and Umpqua has his name on it… that’s probably it, isn’t it?

From the Umpqua gallery.

Other variations…

Same fly, different tail from Black Fly Outfitter

This one from Black Fly comes with a weed guard, that looks like calf tail on the wing and crystal over. The interesting thing to me is that the tail is actually straight flashabou… in pearl by the look of it… I have that at my tying desk and love the material.

Same fly, from Cabela’s.

Cabela's... I dont' shop there.

I’m going to call that Craft Fur & Crystal under the fur.

So… here is what I think is the lesson… tie it how you want… if you want to tweak your fly, tweak it.  Throw out the step-by-step. Tie how you want… it will probably catch fish as long as the eyes are on straight and the colors aren’t out of place.


20
Sep 10

Fly Fishing for Giant Bonefish – MidCurrent

I was looking for bonefishing leader formulas and found this story from MidCurrent which was just a delightful find.  Really good stuff if you are interested in tournament fishing or pursuing big bones.

Think chasing giant bonefish is the same as throwing to schools of hundreds on the white sands of the Bahamas? Think again. Renowned tournament fisherman Tim Mahaffey shares some secrets on fly selection, gear choice and mental preparation in pursuing double-digit bonefish.

via Fly Fishing for Giant Bonefish – MidCurrent.

PS – 59 days until Belize.


22
Aug 10

Cermele: The Sexiest Fly in the Bahamas

Some goodness from Field and Stream… a place I’m learning to find some really good content.

Today’s fish were spooky, snobby, finicky, and loved to tease. They tracked my flies all day, turning away at the last second. But all that changed when guide Rick Sawyer broke out the sexiest bonefish fly I’ve ever seen.

via Cermele: The Sexiest Fly in the Bahamas | Field & Stream.

I wonder what's behind that...

Any guesses?


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?).


27
Jul 10

Interview with Scott Heywood

Scott Heywood is one of the founders of Angling Destinations, a fishing travel company that books trips to just about every place I want to go, including a few places they don’t even advertise.  It is nice to see that Scott still gets excited about fishing, whether that is chasing a bonefish in the Bahamas or fishing his home waters around Sheridan, WY.

That's no carp.

Nice

Being in Sheridan, Wyoming, did you start your company to get away from the winters?

No, you know, I always tell people we started this company purely legitimately, we started booking trips for one little resort on Abaco in order to get a free week of bonefishing every year, so we started with the purest of motivations.

It kind of blossomed from there.  We’ve been doing this a long time since the late 80’s, early 90’s and there wasn’t a lot going on with bonefishing then. It became quickly apparent that there was a real need for people with good information about where to go and the company grew very quickly and has grown every year and it has been a really interesting thing.  We haven’t gone “mainstream,” we don’t do the glossy brochures and all that stuff, we just deal with a very dedicated group of anglers and we are kind of like your blog, we are for the dedicated.

We have four customers in Wyoming. There are 400,000 people that live in the State and we don’t have that many bonefisherman in Wyoming.  We love living here, its great fishing and a beautiful place, but it does mean you have to take longer flights to get to the bonefishing, but we all bonefish 6, 7, 8 times a year, so we are traveling a lot.

Do you have one bonefish that really stands out in your mind?

I was thinking about that and it’s a really difficult question because there has been so many weird and strange moments in bonefishing.  I’ve actually been bonefishing since my early teens, so almost 50 years of bonefishing and when you get to fish some of these places when there has never been anyone fish it you get some weird things happen.  The place that comes to mind immediately is the Seychelles because I was lucky enough to get to go there in the mid 90’s before anyone had really been there and I got to go to St. Francoise when we were the 6th, 7th and 8th people ever to get out there to bonefish.  This was before Larry Dahlberg did his TV shows and we were lucky to get out there to see it.  We had so many strange things happen with bonefish… we could get close enough to bonefish to tap them on the tail with our rods, we could catch them on grasshopper flies, but one series of fish really stands out.  We were walking around the island and the bonefish would tail up into the surf to chase crabs and you could actually cast your fly on dry land in the surf and you could pull bonefish up out of the water, up to about their anal fin, they would chase these crabs up out of the water and get them.  That just sticks in my mind.  When  you do anything long enough in fishing you see some truly odd behavior and if you’ve ever seen the nature shows where you see the Orcas surf in to get the seal pups, that’s what it was like to see these bonefish come in, charge in, and try and get these crabs right off the beach. Our goal was to catch a bonefish without ever getting the fly in the water and we were actually able to do it.  The bonefish would sort of nip at the crab and they would grab a little section of it and they would pull it back into the water and then they’d pin it and eat it.  That was a pretty cool experience.

That could also be the second question too, which is something odd or unique that you’ve seen out there.

I don’t even have to go that far back for that one.  I spent a week doing one of our DX trips and we had two very, very strange things happen.  You know, I’ve watched bonefish on the backs of just about every conceivable animal from dolphins to rays to sharks, bonefish I think are prone to follow other animals around because they can turn around and veer of if something turns around to try and eat them.  In one day I watched bonefish do two really weird things. One was, we saw a cormorant colony and the bonefish would wait below the colony and when the cormorants would fly off their nests and swim on the flats the bonefish would follow the birds and when they’d put their big webbed feet would puff up a bunch of marl on the bottom the bonefish would get in there and see if anything came out.  So when we found a cormorant that day we’d follow the cormorant and without having to wait very long, we’d find a bonefish on the cormorant’s tail. They’d follow the cormorants and we’d just cast off the tail of the cormorant and the bonefish, often 8, 9, 10 pound bonefish, would eat our flies in a heartbeat, just suck them right up and we caught a few fish right on the backs of these cormorants, which was really cool.  The only thing that the bonefish would veer off the cormorants to do would be to follow a mangrove leaf. We’d watch them leave the cormorants and go over to these leaves and eat them and we were very confused as to what was happening, why a bonefish was eating a leaf. You’d see the leaf go in the mouth of the bonefish and a second later it would be spit back out and we finally went over and picked up some of these mangrove leaves and there were little tiny crabs that were clinging to the leaves as they got blown out of the mangroves and these little crabs were just hanging on.  These bonefish had learned to pick up the leaves, crush the little crabs, swallow the crabs and spit out the leaves.  That’s pretty memorable.  You don’t forget that soon.

Some of those DX trips seem not for the faint of heart… off the grid, off the map… away from room service and gourmet meals.  What are some of the trade offs when you head out there.

We do so many types of DX trips, everything from nice hotel accommodations to camping on the beach, but generally the two things you sacrifice doing a DX trip, you lose the amenities, be it good food or nice accommodations, especially if you are doing a camping trip where you are sleeping in a tent and cooking on the beach, and there can be bugs and it can be hot.  We always try to have a cooler of cold beer, because who can live without that, but generally, that’s what you give up.  Second, and this isn’t always true, but when you go to really remote places, places where there isn’t a lot of mainstream bonefish activity, there often aren’t qualified guides and the guides that are there are often just local fisherman and they don’t have the skills to be bonefishing guides.  Guides get good by guiding and if they aren’t guiding, they are just local fisherman. I’ve always said I’d trade good guides for stupid bonefish any day.  That’s generally the trade off.

The Ritz it ain't.

Camping + Bonefishing

Those DX trips sound so fascinating.  Are there really that many places out there left to be discovered?  In this age of Google Earth it feels like everything that can be discovered has been.  Are there places out there truly off the map?

There are places that are still very hard to get to, or they are not serviced by existing operations. Let’s say there’s an area 30 miles from an existing lodge, that’s not a realistic place to fish every day for those lodges and it might be a small area, it might be a small fishery, it might not take the impact well of a full season of bonefishing, but a couple of weeks a year it can be a fantastic fishery.  The logistics of getting to it can be difficult.  That’s what we do with our DX trips, we either go to areas that are tough to get to or smaller areas that aren’t often fished and couldn’t handle consistent lodge pressure and do them only for a short period of time. For the people that are the real die-hard bonefisherman, they are willing to make that sacrifice to get into those areas. This isn’t to denigrate anyone that does the traditional bonefish trips, I do them myself, everyone does them, but there are limitations to traditional trips.  Often times, traditional trips just can’t get into those remote areas.

We don’t really do our DX trips as money makers.  They are a labor of love. We do them with people we know and clients we’ve had for a long time and they are just a lot of fun.  They are really invigorating and very cool. They are for hardy souls.  If you don’t like bugs and like air conditioning, they probably aren’t for you. But if you live and breathe wild places, they are really fun trips.

Do you have one fly that you never leave without?  When you go some place that is seldom fished, does it even matter what you throw?

No, probably not. I have to admit, a Crazy Legged Gotcha is probably my number one fly.  I’ve caught bonefish all over the world on that fly.  You can tie it more flashy or less flashy, but it is a pretty good pattern.  Sometimes I tie it reversed with the eyes in back because most of the prey species face the animal they are trying to get away from.  If I had to have one fly, it would probably be a  light, small crab, just a generic tan crab, or a silly legs Gotcha.  If you asked about Los Roques, I’d give you a different answer.   Then you get to those islands in the South Pacific where all the fish eat is worms and you can throw a Gotcha all day and it won’t work.

Are you personally looking for big fish or do you like days with a lot of fish?

I think the answer to that question is that I love the classic bonefishing moments. Certainly, big fish get your heart going much more than a 3 pound bonefish. When you start to see fish in singles and doubles… that is certainly a lot more enthralling that throwing to a lot of school fish.  What I like is when you tier the skills you’ve worked so hard to acquire, from finding the fish and hunting them to making a good cast and then good presentation, making a good enticing strip and then a good strip set.  That’s what I seek are those moments.  You can go and catch 20 fish in a day and then you catch one and you think “That was cool,” and you know, that is what you are going to remember. That’s what I look for.  Many times I’ve walked away from schooling fish to head to a place that looked promising for a bigger tailing fish, but a bigger fish isn’t the end result I’m looking for, it’s those really cool moments.

What’s your favorite reel/rod right now?

I use an Able Super 8, that I really like. My rod of choice is a Loomis GLX.  Loomis was kind enough to give me a new GLX after my old GLX kept breaking and they gave me a Crosscurrent, the same one that Shane had in his interview. That’s my rod of choice and I love my Able.  It’s so easy to service, you can take some parts with you and totally repair them in the field.  You don’t have that issue with the closed drag that starts to squeak where you have to come back and send it in, but you can’t fix it in the field, so that would be my choice.  The old standard, heavy weight Able Super 8.  I’ve taken it all over. Take a couple springs and a couple spare parts and you can fix it and make it work anywhere in the world.  The Loomis GLX is a great rod as well.

The Super

Since you travel so much… what are some things folks should consider when it comes to what to put in their luggage?

Here are some things I think are critical to have.  I first look at e things you can’t afford not to have. Those are, beyond the obvious, you’ve got to have good sunglasses and you’ve got to have good wading shoes that are broken in and you know will not chew your feet up.  If you are going to do trips where there’s a lot of wading and your are going to be on your feet all day, I’ve watched people get a new pair of boots and their feet are just a little different and they end up with horrible blisters and they are in pain the whole time, so I’d say that is the number one thing you’ve got to have.  Other than that, the things I’ve seen people forget are a good day pack or fanny pack and a rain coat.  I’m amazed how many people I’ve seen go fishing on the flats without a rain coat. You’ve never been so cold and you’ve been in a good thunderstorm if you don’t have a rain coat.  It’s really important.

The one thing I thought of that I’ve watched more people ruin trips over is when you get that little chaffing between your legs. The number one thing I’d recommend to people would be to get some anti-chaffing cream, I think Vaseline makes some, and to put it on the first day of your trip so you don’t ever get that started.  I’ve literally watched people walk frog style across flats where they have to put their legs about four feet apart because they have that chaffing from the salt water between their legs.  That is what first came to mind.  If I can give someone a good hint, if you are going to do a trip with a lot of wading, put it on early, before you have a problem, and you’ll never have to deal with it.

Ya know, I’ve had that experience down in Mexico and what I found that works, because I travel with a small child, is Desitin, for diaper rash.  It works well.

Being that you’ve traveled all over the world in search of bonefish… what’s the craziest thing you’ve had to eat?

Oh man… I have had some odd, odd things.  I was on one atoll in French Polynesia that they served a mollusk that was kind of like a cross between blubber and petroleum jelly.  It wasn’t so much that the taste was horrible as much as the consistency and they literally gave me a serving that was the size of a 20 ounce porterhouse steak. There was a huge amount to eat and of course it is bad form not to clean your plate and… I am not a finicky eater, but honestly, I couldn’t eat it.  It was like eating floor wax.  I tried… but it is the only thing that has made me gag.

Mmmmmmm.... beer....

Kalik, beer of the Bahamas.

Great interview Scott. Thanks.


16
Jul 10

I love nap time

Being a stay-at-home-dad (SAHD) has many drawbacks and many benefits.  I can’t pick up and head off to, say, South Andros, when an opportunity comes up, but I also get to watch my little girl grow/learn/play.  Beyond the fact that I got to watch just about every World Cup match (GO USA), I also get a bit of free time, sometimes, in the middle of the day.   This is called “nap time.”

Today, I sat down at the vice.  I tied a couple of green masses that I hope resemble some sort of plant matter the carp in Los Gatos Creek might eat.  I also tried my hand at tying some Merkins… again.

I had a little bit of a breakthrough on the Merkin front… I’ve been over-thinking this pattern, it seems, putting too many steps in, putting too many wraps in too many places.  I’m happy to say I’ll be adding Merkins to my fly boxes for my next saltwater trip… whenever that may be.


29
Jun 10

Four eyes

Barrett from The Caddis Fly ties up a four-eyed gotcha.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ljEM5QcLrWI&hl=en_US&fs=1&color1=0x006699&color2=0x54abd6


22
Jun 10

Interview with Aaron Adams, Bonefish Guru

There probably isn’t anyone that knows as much about bonefish as Dr. Aaron Adams.  As Director of Operations for the Bonefish & Tarpon Trust, Aaron is at the heart of the body of knowledge being built on bonefish.  He’s an author, a TV Star (kidding, but he was in Pirates of the Flats) and an angler.  Aaron agreed to answer some questions about bonefish.  These questions were given to Dr. Adams before the BP Oil Spill, so there are no spill related questions included here, although you can keep up to date on the spill at BTT’s oil spill news page.

(you can follow Dr. Adams on Twitter and he has his own website, A Fisherman’s Coast)

Aaron, as Director of Operations for the Bonefish & Tarpon Trust, you have a really unique perspective on the state of Bonefish. What does the big picture look like?

Well, we are working hard with others to make sure it is a good outlook. Some areas have seen a reduction in the numbers of bonefish, and at least some of this looks to be the result of habitat loss or degradation. We are working hard to obtain the information needed by resource management agencies to come up with effective conservation plans. It is encouraging to see that countries like Belize see the big picture, and have taken actions such as making bonefish, tarpon, and permit catch and release only. Now we need to help them find funds for enforcement and education. We definitely need to do a better job of getting the fishing industry involved, after all, their business depends on healthy fisheries. It will be a long-term, and ongoing effort, but overall I think things look good as long as we able to keep up the momentum we’ve developed. I think one of the keys is that we have developed Research Frameworks that help guide our efforts, focus funding, and be proactive.

http://www.tarbone.org/research-programs/research-frameworks.html

Pirates of the Flats was a great program. Do you have a favorite memory from that experience?

I’m glad you like the series. They did a fantastic job with it, especially incorporating the conservation message in a low-key way. I hope that the success of Pirates will serve to change the way other fishing shows are produced. A second season is being shot this summer, to air on the Outdoor Channel in early 2011. Stay tuned to www.tarbone.org for updates.

While filming, two things made the show work – the easygoing nature of the celebs and the amazing professionalism of the camera crew. The celebs were fantastic at getting the message across without being overbearing, and were great in dealing with the camera crews. Each fishing boat had two anglers, and was shadowed by a second flats boat that had two camera guys. At times, a camera guy transferred to the fishing boat to get close-ups. As you know, stealth on the flats is essential, but the camera guys were so good that this was never a problem. It was also nice that the weather during the filming days was perfect.

I really enjoyed the fishing on the Abaco marls. Although the fish are not typically large, they do come through in schools, as tailers, as singles and pairs. So they provide perfect opportunities for sight fishing. It was common to get double hookups, or be tagging a fish as the guide says to hurry up because more fish are coming.

As I’m sure you saw on the Pirates series, my blown shot at a huge bonefish was caught on tape. I was hopeful that they wouldn’t include that in the final cut, but they did, so now everyone knows about the big one that got away. At least I have witnesses.

Aaron as a Pirate of the Flats

I’ve found your book on saltwater prey very helpful for fly tying. Out of all the prey species in your book, what would you say is the most overlooked?

I don’t know that any particular prey species is overlooked, but rather the connection between prey species and habitat is not well understood by many anglers. For example, there are enough mantis shrimp patterns on the market now that people know that bonefish eat mantis shrimp, and many anglers have mantis shrimp patterns in their fly box. But many anglers tie on a mantis shrimp pattern without taking a look around to see if the flat they are fishing might be good mantis shrimp habitat.

When fishing on a sand flat, for example, a quick scan of the bottom will tell you if mantis shrimp are present – mantis shrimp make those perfectly round, quarter-size holes in the bottom. Whenever I see those burrows, I tie on a mantis shrimp pattern. Similarly, those ski mogul-type mounds on some sand flats are made by various species of shrimps commonly called ghost shrimp. A tan mantis shrimp imitation will be close enough to a ghost shrimp to fool a bonefish.

Another overlooked aspect to fly selection to imitate prey is the local or regional difference. For example, in the Florida Keys large bonefish really seem to prefer toadfish, yet very few anglers who head to the Keys have any toadfish patterns in their fly box. As a matter of fact, at various times fly distributors have carried toadfish patterns in their collections, but have discontinued the patterns because they didn’t sell. When fishing seagrass beds in the Keys, I often start with a toadfish pattern.

The list goes on, but the key here is that a big part of matching the hatch for bonefish is to understand the interaction between habitat and prey. I’ve covered this to a great extent in my two books Fisherman’s Coast and Fly Fishermans’ Guide to Saltwater Prey (http://www.fishermanscoast.com/books/books2a.html), but I see a need for a third book that goes into even more detail and specifics. The work for that book is underway.

What is the next big issue in bonefish conservation on the horizon?

I see two big issues – habitat protection and responsible fishing.

Regarding habitat protection, there are intense and growing pressures on coastal habitats in many locations where bonefish are found. In Belize, for example, multinational companies are working on plans to develop coastal areas, including (believe it or not) offshore mangrove cays. Development of the offshore cays requires the sand from surrounding flats to be dredged and used as fill to provide sufficient land for buildings on the cays. This not only destroys the habitat provided by the mangroves, but the surrounding flats as well. To their credit, the current Belize government is working toward a nation-wide conservation plan to address this. Similarly, the development pressures for The Bahamas are increasing at a rapid pace. Rumor has it that there are many new developments in the planning stages, some of which will directly impact bonefish habitats.

One of the challenges with this is that in many locations we don’t have sufficient data on the bonefish fishery or on essential habitats. This is why things like juvenile habitat identification are so high on our priority list. This is also why we recently funded a study on the economic value of the bonefish fishery in The Bahamas, so that the fishery is given a fair shake in evaluations of development impacts/benefits.

From an angler’s perspective, we are eventually going to run out of new hotspots to travel in pursuit of bonefish. Already, there are locations where the bonefish fishing is not as good as it was because of habitat degradation. As I often say, either we get involved now in fisheries conservation or whine about the loss of the good ol’ days later.

A second aspect is the behavior of anglers. Catch and release is a very effective conservation strategy for bonefish (and tarpon and permit), but only if it is practiced correctly. Treating fish poorly greatly decreases their chance of survival. You can download a pdf of the BTT Best Practices for Bonefish Catch and Release here:

http://www.tarbone.org/images/stories/bonefish_brochure-inside.pdf

The bonefish tagging program revealed at least one bonefish crossing the Gulf Stream. Have there been other tags that have given surprising information?

At last check, the Florida Keys bonefish tagging program (run by the University of Miami) had tagged over 7,000 bonefish and recaptured over 300. Of these, two were recaptured on North Andros, Bahamas. The extent that these recaptures reflect a common occurrence or were outliers is unclear. Bonefish are certainly capable of migrating long distances (length of the Keys, for example, or across North Andros multiple times), but these other long distance migrations were made over shallow habitats, not deep open ocean. We have learned in the past year that bonefish spawn offshore at night, near full and/or new moons, so perhaps in rough weather some fish get lost and end up in another location? So far, it looks like, the majority of tagged bonefish are recaptured near where they were tagged, but that there are some long-distance movers.

The question then becomes – are these long distance movements associated with spawning, do some fish just have the wander-lust gene? We are now tagging in multiple locations in The Bahamas and Belize, so in the next few years we should have a better idea of typical bonefish movement patterns.

Tagged Bone

One of my favorite questions… since you are out on the water a lot you have more opportunities to see things that others just don’t… odd things, strange things, frightening things. Is there one thing you’ve seen out there on the flats that might fit into one of those categories?

Hmmm. Loaded question. Some memorable sights:

– two hammerhead sharks more than 12’ long, chasing something (never saw the object of their pursuit) on a shallow flat. The water was so shallow that their backs were exposed. We were fishing for bonefish (from a boat, fortunately), but stopped to watch the show for about 5 minutes before the sharks headed to deeper water.

– A couple days later, just back in the boat after wading for the afternoon, we saw a 9’ tiger shark cruising up onto the flat.

– On a trip to an undisclosed destination, I woke up one morning to dark skies, rain, some thunder and lighting. The lightning subsided, so I decided to go fishing. Walking sand flats with the darkest skies in the background, I was able to see pretty well. It ended up being the best fishing of the trip.

– I once caught a 7 pound bonefish that had a scar that was the perfect shape of a large barracuda. The barracuda had grabbed the bonefish from the top. The scar was old enough that scales had grown over it, but was still pretty obvious. Talk about a lucky fish!

– Large bonefish (=>7 pounds) chasing crabs in water so shallow they had to almost crawl across the flats to get to the crabs, the fish’s bodies were half exposed. Better yet, they ate flies! Amazing sight.

– some more ramblings on fishing here:

http://www.fishermanscoast.com/writing/Writing1.html

What’s your favorite bonefish rig?

I typically throw a 9’, 8 weight rod with a floating line. I start with a 9’ leader, and add on a longer tippet if the bonefish are spooky. For tailing bonefish, I typically start with unweighted crab patterns. For cruising bonefish I use flies weighted with beadchain, and then add the lead eyes for deeper running fish. You can see my standard selection of bonefish flies here:

http://www.fishermanscoast.com/flies/bonefish_fly_selection.html

Overall, I prefer a rod that I can feel load. Too many rods are too stiff (fast), and although they can shoot line they are kind of impersonal for casting. For rods, I use either a St. Croix Legend Elite or an Orvis Helios.

For reels, it’s tough to beat the Lamson Litespeed for best bang for the buck, and I was pleased with the Orvis Mirage when I recently tried one.

For fly lines, I typically use SA bonefish or tropical core lines, or similar models of Cortland lines.

A lot of people speculate about where the first 20 pounder will come from.  Do you have any thoughts about the contenders and the likelihood the record will fall in 2010?

I’m not going to fall for that one! I’ve seen some very large bonefish, but never one at 20 pounds, but I’m still not giving up my favorite big bonefish spot. If it comes on a fly, it will mean that absolutely everything went right.


05
Jun 10

Bonecrusher – Larry Dahlberg

I’ve been directed toward Larry Dahlberg’s Bonecrusher a few times.  I watched it catch fish on one of Larry’s “Hunt for Big Fish” shows and have been thinking of that fly for a while.

I couldn’t find any videos of the Bonecrusher being tied, but I did find a message board with an email from Larry himself.  Worth a look.

"more of a concept than a fly"