06
Feb 11

Bonefish Art by Stan Harmon

I found this yesterday on-line… I like it… I like it very much.

Nice Stan... very nice.

The artist is Stan Harmon and you can find more of his art on his site.  The site says you should call for the price of the above bit of artistic awesomeness.  Given the beauty and subject matter, I’m going to guess that it is worth $3B… maybe more.


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.


04
Feb 11

News from Aitutaki (that’s in the Cook Islands)

There’s some news about a bonefish management program coming out.

This is an excerpt from the Cook Island News – January 22, 2011

The MMR hopes that the management plan will both sustain the bonefish population and provide incentives for those who catch bonefish for a living to hang up their nets.

It aims to encourage local “netters” to become bonefishing guides, for whose services tourists will pay hundreds of dollars a day – giving Aitutaki the potential to market itself as a sport bonefishing destinations.

“We cannot market our bonefishery for sports-fishing until we have put in place measures to ensure that we have sustainable stocks,” (Ben) Ponia said.

The management plan aims to ban netting in areas where bonefish aggregate; to prohibit the sale or export of bonefish; and to control the number of anglers allowed in certain areas.  It stipulates that all guides are licensed and accredited through MMR and all anglers purchase a license before fishing.

MMR expects that the bonefishery can sustain at least six guides under the new plan, and will support converted net fisherman – a scheme to draw local netters away from hooking bonefish.

That sounds nice… doesn’t it?  There are still a lot of questions folks have about the plan… why anglers are being asked to pay when no one else is… that seems to be a pretty good question.  Exactly how the fees would be collected and how it would work if you want to fish say, two days out of five… who can buy the license, how much they will cost and where you can buy them… ya know… the details.

I have another question that I’m trying to get answered.  The plan states that the fishery could likely support six guides that would be licensed and accredited.  A quick look at the Aitutaki Bonefishing Association (The Association page until recently had pictures of trevalley caught on plugs and 0 pictures of bonefish… it also recently stated that fly fishing was done with silk or horse hair lines… I’m glad they did some work on it) shows “members” and guess what?  There are more than six people listed there.  Someone NOT listed there and not consulted about any of this is Butch Leone… the one guy who has been actively guiding for bonefish on Aitutaki for THIRTEEN YEARS.

Now… if you are making a management plan about, oh, let’s say “bonefish,” I think it would make sense… really good sense, to involve the guy who pretty much pioneered bonefishing on Aitutaki.  That would seem like “Step 1” in the playbook.

That is not how this is playing out.

Six spots available.  A stated preference to convert netters to guides.  Lots of netters.

Now, I could be way off base on this… I could be totally wrong… no one has told me this is going to happen… no one has even told me they think this might be the outcome… however… I am starting to wonder if Butch, ya know… the guy who pioneered bonefishing on Aitutaki… I’m wondering if Butch is going to end up with one of those six “licensed and accredited” bonefish guide slots.

I hope I’m wrong.

I really hope I’m wrong.  Butch has been a champion for Aitutaki bonefish for a long time.  It would be ironic (maddeningly so) for the locals to push him out in the name of saving the fish he’s been advocating for these past 13 years.

Nice fish Butch

Butch with a nice Aitutaki Bonefish


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.


02
Feb 11

Going to Andros

Yeah… I’m not ready for Hollywood, but these little videos are fun.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z6o6vd2bbmY?fs=1&hl=en_US


01
Feb 11

Interview with John Pinto, Mayaguana, Bahamas.

Maybe you’ve heard of Mayaguana, maybe you haven’t.  It’s in the Bahamas but without the acclaim of Andros or the population of Grand Bahama.  It hasn’t been on the TV like Abaco and doesn’t have the DIY repuation of Eleuthra.  The place only has something like 312 people living there, but what it does have is some pretty intriguing bonefishing.  You, a canoe and some double digit bonefish.  Sound interesting?  If it does, you might want to talk to John Pinto who has been fishing there for about 13 years.  I sent John some questions about fishing there and about the bullet that Mayaguana appears to have dodged.  Here are his responses.

John, Mayaguana seems, for me at least, really far away and very hard to get to.  What is the reality of getting to and from Mayaguana and why should the bonefish angler put Mayaguana on their list of places to check out?

Mayaguana is easy to get to/from.  Bahamasair offers three scheduled flights per week (M-W-F) from Nassau to Great Inagua/Mayaguana.  There is a large Morton Salt operation on Great Inagua therefore the American executives need to fly back and forth on a regular basis so Bahamasair looks after that flight.  There will be forty passengers on the flight and 33 get off/on at Great Inagua.  The 7 who get off at Mayaguana is usually my group of anglers.

Mayaguana offers the best wade fishing opportunity for really large bonefish.  It remains the closest thing to real “virgin fishing” left in the Bahamas.  Stalking ten pound tailing bonefish is typically Mayaguanian fishing.  We do it by wading or by canoe.

Is there a fish from Mayaguana that stands out in your memory?

I had an angler from Bakersfield, California there one time and his dream was to catch a tailing bonefish.  He had a week of mishaps, had everything go wrong and I began to think he simply had a black cloud over his head.  He and I went out one morning way before sun-up, the flat was like an oil slick and there were tailing/cruising fish everywhere.  We stopped the canoe and got out, he grabbed his rod, turned around and there was a tailing fish working right to us.  I held the canoe, we knelt down and I told him to put the fly in front of the fish.  By this time the fish had closed to about twenty feet and I’m screaming for him to cast.  From a kneeling position he basically cast nothing but leader, the fly plopped down in front of the oncoming fish and he inhaled it.  This seven pound fish did everything as advertised, made two great runs and really put on a show before surrendering.  I remember this fish because I have never seen an angler so happy about his first bonefish.  At least seventy-five photos then followed the successful landing.

With so few people around, is there anyone on Mayaguana you don’t know?

I’ve been traveling to Mayaguana for over thirteen years now.  I make it a point to meet and greet everyone and like to think I know most of the inhabitants.  I support the island the best I can and I’ll still run into somebody at an island event, gathering or fund raiser who I truly don’t know and they’ll say, “Hi John.  How’s the bonefishin’?”

How often do you run out of Kalik on the island (now that may be the most important question of all!)?

In thirteen years we ran out of Kalik just once.  The mail boat had broken down and the island was rapidly running out of everything including every brand of beer.  Kalik is by far the most popular beer and is my favorite beer in the Bahamas.

There's John with a Mayaguana Bone.

I saw you mention the halting of the Mayaguana Development project.  Over-development seems to be the major threat facing Bahamian Bones these days. Outline what that project would have meant for Mayaguana.

I think the development would have changed the entire face of Mayaguana.  There are not that many Bahamians on Mayaguana to begin with and they could conceivably become outnumbered by white Americans and Europeans in a short time.  The development claimed it would create jobs for the Mayaguanians but I question what kind of jobs and how many.  I think there would have definitely become a major caste system on the island between the locals and the landed gentry had the development been completed as planned.  I was also concerned about the increased number of people who would have built homes there near the beaches and bonefishing areas.  My greatest fear was finding the children of these new islanders racing around Curtis Creek on jet skis and altering the behavioral patterns of the bonefish.

What’s your go-to rod/reel for bonefish these days?

I prefer a 9-ft 8-wt 4-pc Stealth Bomber fly rod which are distributed throughout South Africa by David Levene Agencies.  I use a Bauer M4 fly reel and Sci Angler fly lines.

Is there something you’ve seen on Mayaguana that you haven’t seen anywhere else?

Yes, the behavior of the bonefish in Curtis Creek on  Mayaguana.  Very large bonefish (10 to 12 pounders) will enter the creek system or hang over through the tide change and lay in the seams of the channels perfectly still.  I know this because we almost canoe over them before they spook and scare the hell out of us.  Over the years I know where these “lies” are and carefully work my way to them look for just a glint of a tail or fin.  Very strange behavior that I have not found on any other island.  Makes for some very challenging fishing.

Thanks John… sounds very, very interesting.


31
Jan 11

Chi Wulff Checks out the BTT Journal

Just saw this over at Chi Wulff and it was timely, as I just got the Bonefish & Tarpon Trust Journal and have been reading it as well.  Good stuff… I mean, really, really good.  It’s glossy, but I think that gloss is ad-supported.

While perhaps overly laden with advertising, BTT’s Bonefish and Tarpon Journal 2011 is worth a look today, if just to read Chico’s Looking for Bonefish:  A Beginner’s Guide.

via Chi Wulff — Lying About Fly Fishing Since 2007.

Something they pointed out that I didn’t know is that the journal is available on-line!  Go to their post to get the link.

I’m kind of sad it is available for free… you should support BTT to get to see this thing.  It is pure bonefishy goodness.

I’ll be headed to Andros South here in, oh about 2 months and I BTT is going to send me with a dozen copies of the Jornal to hopefully entice future guests into becoming members.

If you love bonefish, you should join BTT.


30
Jan 11

Reading Mangrove Flats – Aaron Adams via Deneki

Aaron sent us this video about evaluating mangrove flats as bonefish habitat, and we knew we had to pass it on.

In the video, Aaron covers these points and more.

* Evaluating bottom structure.

* The significance of algae growth on the bottom and on mangrove roots.

* Signs of other life on the flats.

via Reading Mangrove Flats | Bonefish Habitat.

Hot damn.  Check it out. Go to the link above.


29
Jan 11

Slipstream Angling Tagging in Cuba

How cool… tagging bonefish for the Bonefish & Tarpon Trust in CUBA!  That sounds kind of awesome.

In mid November I had the opportunity to tag bonefish in Southern Cuba for the Bonefish and Tarpon Trust.

via Slipstreamangling :: Extraordinary Waters Worldwide.

Rich French, from Slipstream Angling is the lucky SOB who got to do the trip… see… he’s Canadian, so he gets health care, sensible gun control AND gets to go to Cuba.  I hope they have as many Canada Geese as we have… that would at least be a mark in the negative box.

Canada doesn’t have any of their own bonefish… I guess that’s a pretty good negative too.  So, maybe it all balances out.

Good on ya Rich

Support BTT


28
Jan 11

South Pacific

It is all a mixture of good and bad news, isn’t it? It is pretty easy to focus on the bad, but don’t forget to look around in the other column ever once in a while.

Butch Leone, who guides and lives in far-flung Aitutaki in the Cook Islands, recently purchased (with his own money) supplies to start tagging bonefish on the small, South Pacific Atoll.  Butch has been guiding for a long time down there and seems to be facing a bit of an up-hill battle with the locals who may, or may-not still be netting bonefish (depending on who you talk to).

I wish I could make it to Aitutaki… it looks to be a magnificent place and the fish seem to be of unusual size.

You’ll likely hear more about Aitutaki in the months to come.

Butch