18
Mar 11

Journey Proud

Prior to my Belize trip in November, someone (that’s you Marlow) mentioned the term “journey proud” to me and it has resonated in my head a bit ever since.

With Andros fast approaching I am indeed, again, Journey Proud.

I had trouble getting to sleep last night thinking about flies and rods and leaders and reels.

I spaced on a commitment for my kid’s pre-school… something I just don’t do.

I have a general buzz in my head that certainly won’t cease until my first bonefish is released and swimming away.  There is certainly a lot to do between now and then… I’m still watching for the UPS guy to show up with a couple of packages (one from Redington and one from Skinny Water Culture). I just made sure my Patagonia pants and my Skinny Water Culture shirt were washed.  I want to make sure I have a little ziplock in my flats pack that has some TP in it… to clean my Costa’s (I’ll be taking a new pair of Fantails – not on their site yet – on their first saltwater trip) when they get a little salt spray on them). There are still a few odds and ends to pick up from the store… but I’m getting there.

The rods for the trip are my new Rise 8 wt. (thanks Amanda) and two loaners from Redington, a 7 and 10 (thanks Kara).  The reels and lines are a little more up in the air, but I expect it all to get sorted by the time next Friday rolls around.

The good news is my two Cliff boxes are pretty much full.  I’m still tying, for some reason.  We have a full house all next week involving two adults and three kids as guests, some of whom will be sleeping in the room I use for tying, so… good thing I’m ahead of the curve on filling up those boxes.

No room at the inn (if the inn were my fly boxes)

 

Get some Rise


26
Feb 11

I kinda want to do that last post again today

Really, I’m not lazy… but it was just really interesting to see where folks are making an effort to get to in terms of bonefish destinations.

It isn’t too late… if you haven’t taken the poll, you can do that just below.

Here are some things I found surprising looking at the results…

  • Andros was a pretty good winner at 18 people saying that is a place they are trying to get to.  I’m headed there in ONE MONTH, so I’m excited.
  • Belize was second, with 16.  I was just there in November and I can understand why folks want to go there.  What a special place and the diversity of species there is fantastic.
  • There was a tie for third between Florida, Mexico and the Seychelles… Florida… our good old American favorite came in Third with 13… I just thought there would be way more folks looking to fish Florida… Mexico is understandable, but to see the Seychelles up so high… that’s a place that is hard and expensive to get to.  Nice.
  • Cuba came in with 12, meaning we either have a lot of Canadians (or other non-Americans) or a bunch of criminals! (kidding)
  • Hawaii has been in all the magazines for a while now and has really been catching on as a destination, but only 7 of the 170 votes were looking to head to Hawaii.
  • No one in the poll was looking to go to Australia.  I’ll tell you, looking at that True Blue Bones site has me at least thinking about it… but the flight is LONG and $$$ and maybe that’s why it showed up with a goose egg in this very limited poll.
  • Bimini also had a goose egg, despite the new lodge out there that has gotten a lot of ink lately.
  • If you added up all the places in the Bahamas you have about 45 trips being planned or plotted, which all of a sudden crushes all other destinations.  In real life I think FL wins, but with this group… you folks want to go to the Bahamas.

It isn’t too late.  If you haven’t taken the poll, please do so.  I can’t wait to see where this all ends up.


21
Feb 11

Better in the Bahamas – Unaccomplished Angler

A post on Unaccomplished Angler details a trip to Eleuthera.

Is it really better in the Bahamas? That is a hard question to answer as the frequency from “Mrs. Better in the Bahamas” didn’t seem to suggest that it was, but that is another part of the story all together.

via Unaccomplished Angler.

Looks pretty nice, I must say.

Eleuthera is one of those places that is known for DIY and also has a reputation for being a bit tough due to all the DIY pressure.  I had a good friend who fished it recommend that I never go there.  I know there have to be some uneducated fish there somewhere, but it has slid down on my list of places to get to.

Still… I think anywhere in the Bahamas is likely a place I’d like to be a bit more than San Jose (even if San Jose really is a pretty nice place to be).


20
Feb 11

So… Abaco looks nice too.

So many places look soooooo good.  Here’s another…


18
Feb 11

Deneki Outdoors – the Moon and Bonefish

So… maybe I shouldn’t worry about the moon phase on my trip to Andros South.

There are many variables in bonefishing much more important than the phase of the moon – weather being the biggest. We think planning your bonefishing trip to avoid a full moon is a little bit silly.

via Deneki – Andros South.

Good… cuz… We Like The Moon… just say’n.


17
Feb 11

Acklins… Semi-DIY

Maybe you want to head to the Bahamas but want less than a lodge experience but more than a dirt-bag-esque DIY trip.

Well… there are options.

One of those options is Acklins and Salina Point. The deal is this… you won’t be guided, but you will get pointed toward the right, un-pressured flats at the right tides. You’ll get set up for success, you’ll just have to spot your own fish.  Some people prefer it that way.

If you want a guide, you can get one for about $300 (which is pretty awesome).

You can book through Reel Action Fly Fishing, a week of fishing, unguided, for $1,600 (with a special running right now for $1,460).

The fishing seems… inspired.

I’ve heard about Salina Point for a while now and the prices are right.  Once I run through some of the other places I want to fish (Andros, Aitutaki, Culebra, Florida), I may just make this the next trip.


15
Feb 11

The Return of FIBFest – Andros South

I don’t really know how many people have been reading the blog consistently over the past year, but I’d bet not that many of you.  Last year, when FIBFest was going on down at Andros South I was only getting about 90 readers a day.  These days I get about 225 or so.  For new readers all you need to know is that I got the invite to Andros South last year as part of a fly fishing blogger boondoggle and couldn’t do it… life got in the way… a move, a home sale, a 3 year old.  I just couldn’t make it happen, which was kind of crushing.

This year, things have fallen in my favor.  Deneki is announcing today the official line-up for FIBFest II down in South Andros and I’ll be there.

My mug will be in these shots soon.

One aspect I’m particularly excited about is the prospect of tagging some bonefish for the Bonefish & Tarpon Trust.  I asked Andrew if that were a possibility and he said “Hell yeah!”

This is going to be one heck of a trip and I’ll take readers along as much as is possible (which is through the blog, in case anyone was reaching for a passport there).

The hunting grounds of Andros South.

The other FIBers (Fly Industry Bloggers) are chiming in as well…

Like Michael Gracie

And… Kyle Perkins over at Complete Thought


09
Feb 11

TheFin.com: Andros

The Fin just got back from a few days in Andros… yeah… Andros.  He put up one heck of a report about it with lots of nuggets of information.  Check it out.

Day 2: On day 2 we all agreed that we would try the famous West side of Andros in hopes of not only finding lots of bonefish, but big ones.

via TheFin.com: Andros Island Fishing & Trip Report – Andros Island Bonefish Club.


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.