25
Aug 09

Help Stop the Netting in Nassau

Ran across this blog from Nassau that talked about illegal netting of bonefish taking place in Nassau.  The author of the post (Nassau Fly Fishing) says that just a few emails will make a difference and so I encourage y’all to do just that… email the Minister of Fisheries and ask that he step up enforcement of illegal netting and poaching.  Encourage him to follow the example of Belize, where gamefish such as Bones, tarpon and permit are catch & release only.

See the whole post and find the email address to mail to here.  http://nassauflyfishing.wordpress.com/2009/01/13/34/

These douchebags are netting bonefish.

So… Go get’em!


25
Aug 09

Providenciales Fly Fishing (self guided) Video

There is a wealth of vids on YouTube for the bonefish fan.  I like this one because it was self-guided and the guy drops a bunch of info.

For those of you who don’t know much (or anything) about Providenciales, it’s an island in the Turks and Caicos.

The island has direct flights from some US Carriers (American, Delta, US Airways).  This is important since it means you might be able to get here on frequent flier miles.

Low end digs at Comfort Suites looks to set you back about $138 a night during the Spring, which is general high season for Bones.

As usual, the flight is the budget killer for the Sub-$1,000 Bonefish Trip… from SFO it will cost about $750, from Boston about $550 (that’s why the frequent flier  miles is a good thing to keep in mind).  CheapCaribbean.com thinks they can get you there and get you lodging for about $1,350.

There are guides on the island… first guy who popped up on Google made that self-guided option look really good.  I have no idea what this guy’s or the island’s economics look like, but a full day of bonefishing with Capt. Darin will set you back $800 (pre-tip).  While this may be totally and outrageously unfair, I’m going to call that Nucking Futs.


24
Aug 09

Happy Holidays Island (ya know… gotta be PC)

Christmas Island is, by all accounts, a really amazing place.

I found this report about a Xmas Island trip… http://tiny.cc/9JuD7

Christmas Island is a place that has everything the bonefishing angler could really want… mainly just a ton of bones with the possibility of a GT thrown in.  However… there are drawbacks… like the 2 days it takes to get there, the charter flight required to get there and cost… yeah, it always comes down to cost for me.  It’s spendy.  If I sold my daughter I could probably do it, but, I’m mighty fond of her.  The girl may only be 2.5, but can already identify a bonefish, tarpon, rooster fish and trout.  She has recently been asking me to tell her fish stories… so… I can’t really sell her off… no one else would listen to my fish stories.

If you make it there, take some pictures, let me know how it went and I’ll throw up a story about it so I can live vicariously through your experience.


24
Aug 09

To Strip or Not to Strip

Shane Kohlbeck is a friend of mine who has fished in more places and with more success than I can really aspire to. He passed along this big of sound advice from the view of the angler and the guide.

It was 2001 and I was on my second ever bonefish trip in Los Roques, Venezuela. As with most foreign destinations, the guides had limited English skills, and I had limited Spanish skills, so communication was not what it could have been.

I was stalking bones on a pancake flat with my guide, when we spotted some tails just out of casting range.   As we tip toed towards them, being careful not to make any noise, we noticed the fish working toward us.  “Stop” the guide quietly said.  As we watched, the fish started working left to right. The guide pointed in the direction the fish were heading and said “Cast”.   So, without knowing how far, I cast.  Ok….maybe a good cast, maybe not. I look to the guide for guidance and he says to me, “Strip Strip Strip.” So I made three long, fast pulls, and watched as the water exploded and the fish turned into mere memories.  What happened ? I did what the guide said to do.

That same day, my fishing partner complained that his guide couldn’t make up his mind. The guide would say “Strip. Strip. Strip.” Followed only by “Stop! Stop!…Strip…STOP!.STOP!..Strip. Strip..STOP!”

The guides knew 4 words for guiding gringos.  Strip, stop, cast, and setdahook.   It was enough to get us into fish that first day, but I wanted more communication. I wanted to learn about the fishing and how to catch them instead of just ‘doing what the guide said to do’.

Four years later, I found myself living on that same tiny atoll in the middle of the South Caribbean, training new guides, and fine-tuning the guides that were already there (some of which had guided me years before).  I believed it was critical that they learned how to communicate better with anglers.

The main problem I found was the excitement level of the guides would affect the angler. A guide saying “Strip, strip, strip” excitingly fast would get the client to strip three times – fast. That would almost always spook the fish, as critters that are hiding from Mr. Bone aren’t going to make three long runs – basically saying “here I am Mr Bone….come eat me”.   The prey hides…or blends in with its surroundings.  You have to be that prey.

While living there, I found that the more I DIDN’T move the fly, the better I did (excluding baitfish imitation flies).

The guides eventually learned how to instruct anglers to make “one very small strip” and to “wait” and to “let it sink”.  It was amazing how much difference it made to the clients who were new to bonefishing.  Being able to understand what’s happening instead of doing what you’re told, is huge.

In general, when I cast, I lead the bonefish. Then I wait until the fish is near the fly before moving it at all. And when I do move it, rarely do I move the fly more than a few inches. If that fish saw the fly move a few inches, you’ll see his body language change. Let him come eat the fly.

If the fish hasn’t seen the fly, I’ll add more movement to ‘catch his attention’.  Once he has interest, it’s very easy to over-strip the fly and spook him.

So next time you’re with a guide, try communicating more.  Strip fast or slow? Long pulls or short pulls?  Cast further, or closer?   Good cast, or do another?

Also in foreign countries, knowing a few words in their language is a big help.  Slow, fast, deep, shallow, long, short, left and right.  8 words that can help to make or break a guided trip.  That and “mas cerveza por favor”.

That’s good advice, right there!


24
Aug 09

Objectum – Skinny Water T-Shirt

I’ve been on the hunt for a good bonefish t-shirt.  There are a couple I’ve found that have bones on them… one from Patagonia, one from the Bonefish and Tarpon Trust, but both have Tarpon and Bones.  My fixation is centered on bones, so I kept looking.  I’m glad I kept looking because I found exactly what I was looking for… a shirt that is… simply… bad-ass.  This shirt comes from an outfit called Skinny Water Culture… check them out and buy a shirt… they = ruling.

Cool threads

 

This shirt isn’t available anymore, but check with them and see what new threads they have… always something worth looking at.


22
Aug 09

Bonefish and San Francisco

With global warming a fact of our modern world, it could very well be that bonefish will some day be cast to on the mud flats off Sausalito.  Don’t rush out and haul that flats skiff from the Keys just yet.  I’m sure there is a lot of food fit for a bonefish in the Bay, but the water is, in a word… cold.   Bonefish don’t love cold water (78 is their ideal) and that Bay water is frigid (gets as warm as 73 in spots, but as cold as  46… which is fatal), as is the water along the coast extending down most of the length of California.

I have been bemused to see several sources list the northern range of bones on the West Coast as extending up to SF Bay.  One of these sources is the website of the Florida Museum of Natural History Ichthyology Department.  Some months ago I set out to discover the source of this statement of fact.

Turns out there is a bonefish in the CA Academy of Sciences collection that was caught off Sausalito back in about 1914 or so.  How that fish got there, I have no idea.  If you look at catch reports from piers, party boats and other anglers it is very clear that no bonefish are, or have been, taken in the Bay in the 90 or so years since then (or at least no one has talked about it).

There have been whales up the Sacramento River, but I wouldn’t include the Sac in the stated range of those whales.

Basically… I’m calling BS.  Bones do inhabit some of the back bays in San Diego, but not really any further than that.  Californians are just going to have to wait a few hundred or thousand years to find bones in SF Bay… sorry.


21
Aug 09

Silly Priced Bonefish Rods

In my search to be as cheap a bastard as I possibly can, I’ve been intrigued by the Albright Fishing Company.  They have a rod (the GP series) that they are selling for about $80.  The one I have looking at is a split weight rod… 8/9, 4 piece.  I have not been a fan of split weight rods, but, at $80… my interest has been piqued.  It was for that reason that I asked my bro for that very rod for my birthday.  I have been informed that it will be making it’s way to the Bonefish Fantasy Capital of the world, here in the Sierra Foothills.

There are other great cheap rod companies out there.  Echo and TFO spring to mind.  The both have very serviceable rods for under $200.  The $200 threshold seems very reasonable, really and I’m sure that they compete well with the $500-$800 rods that sprinkle the pages of glossy ff magazines.  Breaking the $100 barrier seems excessively cheap… but that’s the kind of guy I am.

I’ll be taking the Albright Rod with me, I hope, when I go to the Bahamas in the Spring (2010).

Update:
In the end, I think it is important to remember that what is or isn’t a bonefishing rod is largely up to you.  An $80 rod will likely be slower than a $800 rod, the components will be lower quality, but remember that folks have caught bonefish on all manner of rods.  With modern graphite rods, you know they’ll work to a point.  If you are fishing in the Keys and are an excellent caster, you might get 20% more out of a really high end rod, I’d imagine.  For the masses in most situations, I don’t think it matters.

I ended up buying two new TFO rods for my trip and bringing the Albright GP along.  I only cast the GP a little bit, but one of those instances was casting a 1/0 popper with a wire leader and… the rod did very well… I was impressed.

I doubt I’ll own another $700 rod.  Personally, I don’t see the value there and I hate being charged for the label… that’s my impression/belief and I’m sticking to it.


21
Aug 09

Tips on wading for Bones

A little tutorial about wading for bones from Deneki Outdoors.  Deneki… well, I had not heard of them until recently, but their blog is just full of really useful tid-bits.  If I were you, I’d bookmark their page.  Knowledge streams from their… um… fingers??, like… ya know… things that stream.


21
Aug 09

The quest… bones under $1K

I recently stumbled (and by stumbled I mean “found after searching for hours”) upon what sounded like my ideal trip for Bahamas Bonefish.  The island is Mayaguana, toward the tail end of the Bahamas.  The lodge, if it could be called that, doesn’t offer anything fancy.  Fancy would be code for “guide.”  They give you a place to lay your head, food and a canoe and point you toward a likely place.  I like the DIY mentality, mostly because it conforms nicely to my NEM (Not Enough Money) financial philosophy.

I could hardly wait to get to the bit where my dreams of a bonefishing trip for under $1,000 would spring from my overactive imagination and into my future reality.  The pricetag for a week of bed, grub and people propelled floatation… $1,495 a week… airfare not included.

Really?

Thusly, the search goes on.


21
Aug 09

Somewhere

They say you have to start somewhere… I guess this is somewhere.

As I scheme and plot my next bonefish outing, my mind is on a near continual loop as I see bonefish in my dreams, read about bonefish from books, scan magazines and ezines, message boards and glory shots.

For the purposes of posterity I should point out that when it comes to bonefishing there are a few things you should know:

  1. I’ve done very little of it
  2. I’m cheap
  3. I’m a stay-at-home dad with an active fantasy life (in this case, centered around bonefish).