25
Mar 10

Join Orvis and the Bonefish and Tarpon Trust – April 4, 2010

Have you been wanting to go on an Orvis trip?  Have you been wanting to go to Belize?  Have you been wanting to be a part of the Bonefish and Tarpon Trust‘s Traveling Angler Program?  If you answered “yes” to, well, any of the above question, I may have the skinny on just the trip for you.  Right now there are only TWO spots left.

April 4th is the date for an Orvis trip as part of BTT’s Traveling Angler Program.  Details can be found here.

You’ll even get some new gear out of it…

To make the experience even more fun, Orvis will provide each angler with a brand new Helios rod and Battenkill Large Arbor reel to help them catch as many “research subjects” as possible.

The lodge is El Pescador, which seems like a  pretty fantastic operation, and you can expect Dr. Aaron Adams to be there as well.  Here is what they say about the trip:

Proceeds from this trip will go to help Bonefish & Tarpon Trust conduct valuable research and education programs, ensuring that bonefish and tarpon will be on the flats for many years to come. An important part of BTT’s research includes collecting fin clippings for genetic analysis and tagging fish to learn more about their life cycle and migration patterns. Participating anglers will work closely with Aaron J. Adams, Ph.D., Director of Operations and Research, Bonefish & Tarpon Trust. You will help conduct valuable research while at the same time enjoying a fantastic bonefishing vacation. We chose El Pescador Lodge because it is the perfect place to experience quality bonefishing at this time of year and there is something for everyone in the family to enjoy.

Now… doesn’t that sound like a good time?  It is about $5K, putting not on the cheap side of things (I could do about 5 trips for that much cashish), but the experience is bound to be very special.

Orvis + El Pescador + BTT


24
Mar 10

Tag Ends – 3/24/10

Bits and pieces from around the blogosphere:

  • I saw that the Fly Fish Chick made it to Exuma recently… and that seems like a very good place to be.
  • Even the Trout Underground is getting in on the action, finding the Louis Cahill photo gallery of Andros South.
  • Flatswalker has been talking Tarpon.
  • Life on the Cay has a first bonefishing lesson in Belize.

23
Mar 10

Interview with Craig Matthews

Craig Matthews has a life that many of us might aspire to.  He started and runs Blue Ribbon Flies in West Yellowstone.  He’s written books, put out fishing videos and has fished all over the world.  While wadding out chest deep in the fly fishing industry, he’s also been a real force for conservation, co-founding 1% for the Planet with Patagonia’s Yvon Chouinard (see them talking about 3 Dollar Bridge here).

Craig, just back from Mexico

There are big fish and numbers of fish.  Would you rather have a day full of bonefish or a few shots at the real monsters?

I like to have the opportunity to see a bunch of bones during the course of the day. This gives me the chance to observe their behavior; feeding, cruising, sleeping, milling, etc. I like observe and then do what the fish tell me to do. If they are feeding I try to imitate what they are feeding on. This comes from spending a lot of time snorkeling with them, etc. I carry fins and snorkel when fishing. If the fish are sleeping, which I find many of them are when tailing, I like to wake them up with a cast into them to watch what they do. Often once woke up they will grab most anything. I could go on and on here but with lots of fish and as much time as I spend fishing, observing and snorkeling with them, I can learn more with every minute I spend with bones. If I have but a few to fish it does not allow me this opportunity. Don’t get me wrong here though, I like big bones too!

I watched your instructional video a while back about bonefishing.  Since that was made are there new nuggets of information you wish you had been able to include?

Take snorkel and spend time with the fish. they might let you into them if you quietly snorkel and you can learn so much in such a short time underwater, in their world. Do what the fish tell you to do…they read like an open book!

I have read that you were behind Pop’s Bonefish Bitter.  In recent times there have been a slew of alternatives to epoxy that have been rising in popularity.  Have you started to migrate away from epoxy at all?

Myself and guide Pops Cabral from Turneffe Flats lodge in Belize came up with the Bitters in 1991 after much time spent searching what bones feed on. I still fish the Bitters and am a fan more of hot glue than epoxy but I find myself tying more and more patterns with soft materials like natural and synthetic dubbing blends, polar bear, etc.

Is there one bonefish that stands out in your memory above others?

One bone, a female over 8 lbs, Pops and I fished for over an hour as it circled and fed around a small caye at Turneffe. We finally fooled this fish on a #10 olive Bitters. When it was landed the hook had penetrated behind the upper crushers and died on us. I have not had this happen since. We opened it up and checked stomach contents and it was full of tiny olive crabs, size #10. One important lesson where fly pattern can really make a difference!

OK, not a bone, but from his most recent flats trip.

Do you find yourself returning to the same places year after year or do you go looking for the up-and-coming locations, new environments?

I like to fish the same venues a lot as you can learn so much from visiting the same flats and reef yearly rather than hit and miss. Too, Turneffe Flats presents some of the toughest bones anywhere in the world to fool so I like fishing there each year. I also like some places in southern Mexico’s Yucatan with lots of fish and so many places to snorkel with them.

If you are able to answer this, what is your favorite bonefish rig?

I like a 9 foot Winston B2x 8 wt rod, Able Super 8 Reel, Rio Bonefish line,. Rio 12 foot bonefish leader tapered to .012 and I add at least 4 feet of 1 or 2x fluoro tippet

Being out on the water a lot you have a chance to see unusual/unique things.  What’s the most unusual thing you’ve seen out on the flats in your fishing life?

What I believe to be spawning, pre-spawning bones. I snorkel into them and watch as they rise to the surface with mouths open and quiver and shudder.

Thanks Craig and keep up the good work!


22
Mar 10

Xcalak Bonefishing

Xcalak  (I have no idea how to pronounce that) is waaaay down there in Mexico… past Cancun, past Ascencion Bay, almost to Belize.  On spectrum of cost, Xcalak is on the low end for lodges and guides, although its location makes it a little difficult to get to.  I found this video fresh off the internets.

This trip was with Bahia Blanca.


21
Mar 10

TFO Clouser 8 wt., a Review

The giving season last year gave me a gift certificate to my local fly shop (thanks hon, just my size).  With that new found wealth I sought to pick up a true and pure bonefishing rod, an 8 weight, that I could cherish and love and make part of the family.  After some discussion with Frank, I opted for the Temple Fork Outfitter Clouser, an 8’9″ 4 pc. 8 wt.   I read some reviews and gear thoughts from a couple of message boards and went ahead and made the purchase.

Being a stay-at-home dad with a wife that travels means I simply didn’t have time to get this rod out on a grassy field or body of water before I went to Grand Bahama in January.  I brought the Clouser, untested, along with two other virgin rods.  This wasn’t an ideal scenario, I’ll admit.  Someone once said you go to battle with the army you have, not the army you may want and I wasn’t totally sure if I’d be making due or if I’d be confidently assured.

The rod in action

From reviews I knew a few things… first, others said the rod cast very well, was fairly fast on the spectrum and that no one who  had cast it missed the three inches that kept the rod from being a true 9 footer.  I know one of the reviewers and if he said it cast well, I believed him.

I had paired the rod with a TFO Large Arbor 375 reel and a Bruce Chard 8 wt. line.  My first casts with the rod felt great and my first fish on the rod, about a 3-4 pound bonefish, satisfied me that the rod had the backbone I needed.  In the end, I fished that rod pretty much the whole time and every fish landed was on that rod.  I even cast in the face of a pretty stiff wind and the rod did the trick.  I left the Bahamas impressed and it clearly had established itself as my go to stick for the salt.

On a recent trip to Mexico (Vallarta, primarily a family trip) I brought the Clouser 8 and another TFO 7 wt (Axiom).  I had the Clouser set up with the TFO LA 375 and a 9 wt. clear intermediate sink, although who the manufacturer of the line is I have no idea.

After casting the 7 a bit, I switched to the 8 just to get a little more distance and again, I was impressed with the rod’s ability to throw line.  I think this rod would do very well with shooting heads or sinking lines.  My biggest fish of the trip, about a 4 pound Jack Crevalle, felt great on the rod (and the reel). Again, I’m a happy camper.

At $250, this rod is a great value.  I know others swear by some of the more expensive sticks, but I need every dollar to stretch as far as it can.  With some of the more elite rods on the market for $700-$800… if you can find a good, quality rod  for a quarter of that price it seems kind of crazy to me to opt for the more  expensive option.

The Clouser 8 wt. is now a true part of the family and will remain my go-to saltwater stick for the foreseeable future, barring fire or theft.

The guys at Three Amigos like the Clouser rods too.


19
Mar 10

Want to Explore?

The Google Alert brought up an interesting story about a  fishing exploration trip to the Andaman Islands in the Bay of Bengal.  Yeah… I had never heard of them either.  The blog is saltwaterflyfisher.com.  Not sure if it is my browser or what, but the blog comes out all crazy looking and doesn’t load well.

They didn’t even go bonefishing… but here’s what he said:

Bonefish??
The first time I wondered down to the beach on Havelock , my jaw dropped. I was greeted with miles of electric blue flats. I actually said out loud ‘’ Theres got to be’. I had a brief chance to wade the flats before the fever and temperature had me limping back to base to lie down. I made enquires and it was confirmed to me that divers see bonefish close to Havelock all the time. The Andamans are 11 degrees north of the equator and well within the Bonefish band that circles the globe. The flats on Havelock do become rather deep on the high tide with that in mind I would be inclined to fish early into flooding spring tides. I found this fascinating and sufficient reason to return. Anyone visiting Havelock would do well to pack an 8 weight rod and wade those flats. There must be a couple of big shoals of Bonefish that visit those flats most days. Im not saying that this is a new bonefish mecca as yet undiscovered but I would gladly take a bet and devote a few days out of a trip to investigate further.

So… that sounds interesting enough.

Looks nice enough too.



18
Mar 10

Black Fly in Abaco

Black Fly Bonefish Club in Abaco looks like a place I’d like to visit.  One of the handful of places that has really embraced social/on-line media, Blackfly also has a blog, a Facebook page and a Twitter account… not including Youtube efforts like the one below.

Abaco, the Bahamian island just north east of Grand Bahama, was the site of Pirates of the Flats, so if you’ve watched that (and I have), you have an idea of what the water looks like there.  It doesn’t suck.


09
Mar 10

Familiar Waters Lost in Hawaii

Found this little nugget… the guy who plays Sawyer (Josh Holloway) on Lost out fishing in Hawaii with the Familiar Waters crew… nice.

Hawaii doesn’t suck.  I love Hawaii, although we go to Mexico these days when we are looking for tropical climes… but we’ll be back to Hawaii… and I’ll bring along a 9 wt. and some heavy tippet and at least a day carved out in the schedule to allow me to go get humiliated by those big, educated bones of the Aloha State.

Lost... is that still on?


07
Mar 10

Ever been to Exuma?

I’ll bet you’ll want to after seeing this…


06
Mar 10

This is Fly… and it is.

The most recent issue of This is Fly is out and not only is it their longest yet, all full of fishy goodness, but it has two, COUNT ‘EM, TWO, stories on bonefish.

This, of course, meets with my approval.

The first story is about Coach Duff and those big, huge, massive, unreasonably large bones of the Aloha State.  You can find that story here.

Richard from Seattle with a 10.8 pound bonefish, caught with Coach Duff

The second story was by one of the guys behind This is Fly, Paris Fleezanis.  This story takes the TIF crew to Andros and Kamalame Cay.

This, I believe, is Paris from another TIF

Kamalame is a place that has shown up on Bones on the Brain before.

TIF, I salute you.  Keep putting out the good stuff.  They remain the leading edge of the e-zine revolution.  A lot was made of the fact that Catch Magazine came out on the same day, but they really are different fish, even if they are both fly fishing-centric.  TIF is for those who read the stories and Catch is for those that like the pictures more than the text (I like Catch, even saw some places I’ve fished in this recent episode).   TIF adds the crazy art… none of which I’d want in my home, in the homes of my friends, on the walls of my friends’ friends, but, ya know… different strokes.

To keep the paper still circulating, I recently subscribed to two magazines… physical magazines… Fly Fishing in Salt Waters and Fly Rod and Reel.  I’m doing my part… ya know, mostly.