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
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
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.
Dick Brown is a guy who knows a lot about bonefish. His book, Fly Fishing for Bonefish, is fantastic. Not only is it full of deep bonefish knowledge, it is simply beautifully written.
Dick agreed to do an interview, which is much appreciated.
Dick, I really enjoyed your book on bonefishing. I thought it was really well written with passages that bordered on poetry (to me, anyway). Are there things you’ve learned since writing that book that you wish you could have put in there?
I’ve learned a lot since I wrote the original edition of Fly Fishing for Bonefish, both from others and from my own time on the flats. In fact when, Lyons Press asked me to do the new 2008 edition of the book, one of the primary goals was to update it with the most important new skill enhancements I had learned over the years. If I had to pick the top ones, I guess I’d say learning to handle wind and clouds better and learning to see fish more accurately and read their demeanor. To this day one of the most telling traits of a really good bonefish angler is how well he can read when to strike a fish—knowing how to interpret its body language to determine when it actually has the fly. And the other thing about seeing bones better is you not only see more targets, you present to them better and strip your fly more effectively when you can see the fish’s reactions.
Is there a particular bonefish that stands out in your memory?
There was a fish that nearly ran me out of backing twice that had more will and stamina than any bone I’ve ever encountered. He wasn’t all that big–maybe nine pounds at most–but he had an enormous will to live. And he fought that way to the bitter end, still struggling all the way to the boat . And just as my friend Joe Cleare was about to scoop him into a net, he turned his big head and the fly dropped into the water with the quietest little plip you ever heard, and he faded off into the turquoise glare reflecting off the surface as the great ghost he truly was. I still dream about that fish.
If you are out in nature longer than the average person you see things the average person just doesn’t see. Have you seen something out there, on the flats, in the tropics, that was strange, unusual, frightening bizarre?
I remember once when I was fishing the Abaco Marls with Donnie Sawyer, we saw a stand-off between a big blue crab and a sizeable bonefish. The crab kept backing away from the bone in an exaggerated defense stance with its claws held out in front of it and the bone kept lunging at the crab. Just as the crab looked like he was going to skitter sideways into the mangroves, the bone charged him and ripped his right claw off. The crab darted for cover, and the bone turned and headed for deeper water with his prize claw between his crusher plates.
When it comes down to it, how much of it is presentation as opposed to fly selection?
Funny you should ask—I was just writing about that very question for a new edition of my second book Bonefish Fly Patterns book that Lyons Press will release next spring. There are days when one dominates over the other, but over the long haul you have to get them both right with this fish. Clearly if you find dumb bones on remote flats, you can throw most any pattern you want at them and you can likely get away with some sloppy presentations too. But if you want to catch smart fish or spooky fish or fish that have keyed on the dominant prey du jour, you want to perform your very best at both presentation and fly selection. If I HAD to chose one though, I’d pick presentation—but I would sure feel compromised if I were limited to a single fly.
The bonefish world seems to be divided fairly well between places with big fish and places with lots of fish. Given the choice, would you rather have a lot of shots or a few for really big fish?
I guess I have reached a place in life where I’m just happy being on any bonefish flat with fish on it. Catching a big fish is always an extraordinary thrill, but this species has so much heart that even the smaller ones make for one heck of a thrilling day of fishing. And the excitement of the hunt and of watching a stalked fish detect and engulf your fly is about as good as it gets in fishing–regardless of whether it’s a four pounder or a ten.
When I think of bonefishing I also think of cracked conch and a cold Kalik. Are there any non-bonefish associations you make when thinking of pursuing bones?
Your question reminds me of a day when Carol and I were fishing with Ricardo Burrows out of Sandy Point on the southern tip of Abaco. We’d had a spectacular day fishing out at Moore’s Island capped by landing a 20lb permit on the edge of the bonefish flats. When we got back to Pete and Gay’s lodge where we were staying, there was Stanley White the lodge manager standing on the dock with two cold Kaliks and a bowl of conch fritters. It was one of those died and gone to heaven moments.
Thanks for your time Dick, and thanks for your book, which I treasure.
Saw this on the simply named Fly Fishing blog. This pattern, called the 90 Percenter, was created by Oliver Owens out of Hawaii. Fox Fur is the active ingredient and it looks like a fish getter.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZUieJnQfokc&hl=en_US&fs=1&
Oliver has been guiding out in the islands since 1999 and he’s fished or guided all the Hawaiian islands except Nihihu. I’d bet he has one or two interesting stories.
I’ve been tying at the vice, putting together some clousers for my old fly shop, Off the Hook. It is fun to play around with materials and the clouser is pretty much ideal for throwing in a different material here or there. I tied up this and I nearly bit the thing myself. I’m hardly the first person to throw some bunny in a clouser, but damn… I think they look good, even if they aren’t really bonefish fare.
I’m not a detail oriented person, which makes fly tying an odd hobby for me. Still… there is something contemplative about it and something… well… almost fun about it. Now, I’m not a commercial tyer and if I had to tie a couple hundred of a single pattern I’d probably want to set my tying desk on fire, but as is… it’s nice.
I’m looking forward to this…
With most of my tying materials semi-organized in those binders, and a desk that can simply be closed up, as opposed to taken out to the garage, I’m thinking I’m entering a new era in my personal fly tying history.
Sweetness.
At Frank’s suggestion, I’m putting up my old fly tying station… I’ll call it the Fly Tying Station Sub-Alpha.
Now you can see exactly why I’m so up on this upgrade.
I’m trying to round off my fly selection for the upcoming Bahamas trip. Gotchas are flies I have in spades… with bunny, with rubber legs, with calf tail… have some velcro crabs, have some bone crushers. So… what else? How about the Mini Puff… seems a popular pattern and, like a lot of bonefish flies, it doesn’t take a PhD. to tie.
Fly Angler Online has this version. This seems to be one of those patterns that everyone does in their own style. On some, the wing lays down flat, others have it angled upward, like this version at The Fly Shop.
I’ve read this fly described as a “good searching pattern” or a fly for fish with lock-jaw. Another tool in the toolbox.
I am, really, a novice at all things bonefish (sadly, interest level does not equate to experience). Still, it makes me feel a bit retro to be tying up one of the “early” bonefish patterns, The Horror.
The guide I ended up booking for my one day of guided fishing in Grand Bahama, Captain Perry, has the Horror on his list of flies to have in your box. I read in Chico’s book (read the Midcurrent.com review) that he still likes the pattern as well. Doesn’t require a lot of materials (brown buck tail, chenille, thread). Sounds good.
So, I sat down and tied some. Man… these have to be the easiest flies to tie since the Sweet Earnies!
I found this little history of the fly, which makes for an interesting read.
Looks like the upcoming episode of Pirates of the Flats is going to look at predators and bonefish mortality. Good stuff. ESPN… set your DVR.
1/10/2010
A look at the sharks that prey upon bonefish, and how anglers can increase the odds of bonefish survival after catch & release. A veteran fisherman casts at a bonefish of a liefetime, estimated at 15 pounds. Biography on author Thomas McGuane.
I am in the home stretch for my Grand Bahama trip… I have run out of #6 and #4 hooks. Waiting for my new order of hooks to come in. Still a lot of tying to be done. Tying up some Horrors… man… that has to be one of the easiest flies ever created.
It looks like I may follow up my Jan. Grand Bahama trip with a trip this summer to Belize with my dad. We’ll see.
Brought some new gotcha’s into the world tonight, birthed them from my vice. I continue to amaze myself with my inability to stay focused on tying the same pattern more than once. I started tying some gotcha’s with two-tone bodies… Bonefish Tan/Pearl.
Here’s the thing… I don’t know if there is some reason I shouldn’t do this or if this is a good idea. I don’t have the salt context to evaluate this little tweak. Moreover, I don’t know what situation would prompt me to use these flies as opposed, to, say, a regular tan gotcha. Some day… some day I’ll be able to call upon some on-the-flats experience, some bit of genuine lived-through memory that will inform my choices at the vice. Until then… I’ll tinker.
At this rate, I should have about 200 or so flies with me when I finally get back to standing calf deep on a Bahamian flat. I imagine I’ll be paralyzed by indecision. We’ll find out.