18
Sep 10

Things learned recently

1.

First, the climate for buying and selling houses is crazy… a house that we bought 6 years ago with zero down and no questions asked is now something that lenders are taking a VERY close look at… one walked away from it, another has agreed to do the deal, about a week late.  We’ll make about… get ready for it… $500.  Luckily we only put in about $30K in improvements.  I’m very glad to be getting out of the real-estate game in Silicon Valley where your half-a-million dollars doesn’t go real far.

Depending on the neighborhood, this could be $500,000 - $1,000,000

2.

It takes a long time to get to Aitutaki… I just did a little Kayak search and it figures it would take about 68 hours to get from SFO to the capital of the Cook Islands (and longer to get to Aitutaki).  Man… I’d love to fish with Butch, but that one is going to have to go on the “next 10 years” list.

2 1/2.

Turns out there is a glitch with the iPad kayak.com app in that it seemed to add about 45 hours to the trip to get to Aitutaki.  It seems entirely possible to get to Aitutaki in something like 15 hours and maybe even less. I had one reader tell me this… which is awesome.

I think your calculations in flying to Aitutaki are a little off…my wife and I have tickets booked in January out of LA on Air New Zealand.  We leave LA on a 9.5hr non-stop to Rorotonga, have a short layover and then 55 minutes to Aitutaki.  The non stop is only available one day each week each direction, but it is available.  Plan on fishing with Butch 4 days while there and the rest on my own.  We’re going for two weeks too!

3.

I have started doing a little contract work (non-fly fishing related, very Silicon Valley related).  Work, as it turns out, gets in the way of writing this blog a bit.  Still, it might actually make it easier for me to enter into negotiations on future trips with the wonderfully beautiful and intelligent woman I conned into marriage I call my wife.

4.

I really like the Trout Underground… especially when I totally agree with him on things like the re-licensing effort on one of my favorite rivers.  I have found that my local fly club has signed up with the lunatic fringe and won’t respond to my questions about why the hell we’d do that.

5.

Frequent Flier miles on Alaska don’t do me a whole lot of good. No (as in zero) flights available for my open travel days to either Puerto  Rico or Belize.  Looks like I’ll be buying my plane ticket with cashish instead of accumulated miles.  To this I say “boooooo.”  However, on a positive note, the “SkyRider” seat has yet to become a reality… I don’t to take my red-eye on one of these satan seats.

No... no thank you.


17
Sep 10

Bahamian Flyfishing Federation (BFF) – Nice

Organizing is a good step in efforts to preserve what the Bahamas has to offer.  I’m hoping the BFF will be a loud voice advocating to preserve bonefish habitat throughout the Islands.

Several bonefish guides from the islands of Abaco, Andros, Eleuthera, Grand Bahama and New Providence have initiated a proposal to start a Bahamian Flyfishing Federation (BFF) that will support the flyfishing industry by forming a national partnership with all industry stakeholders to promote the conservation of bonefish, tarpon, and permit populations as well as the habitats on which they depend. The vision of the BFF is a Bahamas that is the best fly-fishing destination in the world for current and future generations to enjoy.

via Fishing guides propose to start Bahamian Flyfishing Federation (BFF).


12
Sep 10

Bass’n isn’t bonefishing

I got a gifted couple of hours today to hit the local reservoir. I was in search of carp and quickly found them.  Sadly, again, I found them under mats of plant matter, totally unfishable (at least to my meager carping skillz).  So, I started looking for some bass.

Now, I know bonefish are bass are worlds apart.  Still, when the wind picked up I used it as a little time at the practice range.  I worked on the timing of my haul, the tightness of my loops, the accuracy of the cast… some were better than others, but it was good to get some stick time.

A bonus… there are fish at the practice range.

Not a bonefish.

I was thinking about Sandy Moret and his comments about people not putting in the time work on their casting.  I probably need to actually work with an instructor a bit, something I haven’t done for about a decade.  I’m hoping my next trip doesn’t have any forehead smacking casts.


11
Sep 10

Fishing World: An early Christmas

A little story about Christmas Island, which doesn’t sound like too bad a place, really.

For many years, stalking bonefish over brilliant white sand flats and crystal clear shin deep water was something I’d daydreamed about, along with fishing for those bucket mouthed tarpon of the Bahamas and Florida Keys. Thankfully I can now say I’ve done the former, and it was worth the wait.

via Fishing World: An early Christmas.

On a side note, this is September 11th… a day that has thrust itself from the  calendar at us since that morning back in 2001. I was living in Redding, CA at the time, working at the Shasta Regional Community Foundation.  I had just left my apartment and was on my way to work when I turned on my radio, NPR was on.  I had the immediate sense that I was listening to something akin to War of the Worlds.  I kept waiting for someone to say “And that is what could happen if we aren’t vigilant.” I got to the office and went straight to the conference room TV and turned on the news… every channel was the news that day. What a shock that was.

I was talking to someone years later who had been living abroad at the time and couldn’t understand what had really shifted in this country in the “post 9-11” world.  It was hard to put into words.  Something has changed, for sure.

It was no coincidence that soon after 9-11 I went fishing. When you are out fishing, be it on a flat, lake or river, you either give yourself over to the moment or your fishing suffers.  You can’t contemplate life’s many injustices (large or small) while fishing. You have to push all of that out of your mind and focus totally on what you are doing, trying to get into the head of a fish.  Fishing is solace.


07
Sep 10

Interview with Sandy Moret

Sandy Moret has been at it for a long  time in the US Bonefish Capital, Islamorada, Florida.  He runs the Florida Keys Outfitters and some of the biggest names in saltwater fly fishing have come through his shop.  If you want to jump-start your saltwater game, you can even sign up for his Florida Keys Fly Fishing School.

It seems like you are heavily associated with Islamorada.  What is it that has kept you there for so many years?

I’ve lived here since ’85.  It’s a great place to live.  Lots of good fishing opportunities, lot of different species.  The bonefish… we’ve got some pretty big bonefish here.  One thing about this area that is charming to me is that every day you go out fishing, and you don’t see them as often as you used to, but you have a chance to catch an honest 12 pound bonefish.

PIG

Not Sandy's fish, but the largest he's seen a pic of from around Islamorada.

I’ve seen that you are associated with a lot of tournaments.  As a West Coast trout guy, tournaments are a new concept for me. It seems like the tournament scene is its own little world.  What’s the profile of a tournament angler?

Tournaments are an opportunity to get together with like minded people and fish for bonefish and test and compare techniques.  The equipment and techniques we use today developed through tournament fishing to a large degree.  The rods, reels, better flies and better techniques have come from tournament fishing.  I don’t fish any tournaments anymore, although I used to fish quite a few. We run several tournaments here at the shop. We took on the operation of the Inshore World Championship from the IGFA several years ago. They have forty or so qualifying events around the world.  If an angler wins one of those events, we’ll send him an invitation to come and fish here in July. That’s a five species tournament; tarpon, redfish, snook, permit and bonefish.

There’s a fall bonefish tournament coming up in a couple weeks in about it’s thirtieth year.  I’d venture to say it will have some of the top bonefish anglers around the planet.

There’s really no way to measure the effectiveness of your technique unless you compare it to others.  You have a forum with a control group.  It’s the same people that win these things because they’ve developed a technique that is superior.

It kind of implies that luck is taken out of the equation if the same people are winning over and over again.

Yes.  It means that they know the formulas for the leaders, the sink rates of the flies, they know several presentations and stripping methods that work in different situations. I find it pretty fascinating.

Nice fish Sandy!

Florida Guides have a reputation for being a bit intimidating and demanding.  Do you think that is a deserved reputation or is that just part of the lore surrounding Florida fishing?

I think some of it is well deserved and some of it is not.  When you have something you have to do in a short amount of time and a limited opportunity to do it… a lot of people misinterpret  getting yelled at. The guide is just trying to get you to do something that has to happen in a hurry.  I see all the time where people misinterpret that as they are being abused.  The guides want you to catch fish.  It’s one thing for a guide to point a fish out to you and let you see the fish and catch it. That’s about you catching the fish.  It is another for the guide not to care about that and to say “give me a cast over there” and not even try to  show you where the fish was.  I don’t even care to cast to a fish if I can’t see it.  When someone just tells you  to cast somewhere, that’s not even bonefishing in my mind

Guides vary all over the world but I’d say they have a very good cadre of guides here.

What do you think the state of the fishery is down there in the keys.  Do you feel optimistic or pessimistic about what the future holds.

I don’t feel optimistic about any fishery on the planet.  The fishing pressure, the degradation.  In the Pacific you’ve got places where they are consistently eating the bonefish and netting them up in some atoll in the South Pacific.

Aitutaki?

Yeah, that’s it. You’ve got that going on all over the world.  I don’t know how to be optimistic about it.  Bonefishing is great when they are there.  Hopefully they’ll be some preservation and people are becoming more aware of the importance of the species, but it’s like pulling teeth.  If you win 12 battles and lose 1, you’ve lost the war. There’s a lot of that going on.

If you have someone fairly green coming down to the Keys, what do they need to be successful?

They need casting skills.  I find that to be the biggest limiting factor for people.  People for some reason are hesitant to put in the time to develop the casting skills to catch these fish.  They are demanding and they may be a bit more difficult that others, but some days they are dumb as stumps. You do have to bring the casting skills anywhere you go in the salt.

When you say “casting skills” are you talking 90’ in a bucket,  70’ in a 20 mph wind?

40’-60’ in the wind.  I don’t even know if I can cast 80’. There are a lot of great casters in the world.  More than there have ever been.  Still, a lot of people don’t devote the energy to fine tune it.  The cast is a really huge part of catching these fish.

Do you have a favorite rod or reel for bonefish?

Right now I use the Sage Xi3. I think it is a great rod.  I’m using a Tibor Everglades for bonefish.  I’d say, the reason I use the reel is it is bullet-proof. Being on the flats is not a time to worry about equipment failure.  Here at the shop we see a lot equipment and we never, as in never, see issues with Tibor products.

You can tell, Sandy still gets excited about bonefish.

The technology on rod development continues to change and peoples casts continues to change.  If I pick up a rod and use it for 4-5 years I pick up a new rod and say “How could I ever have lived without this?”

Thanks Sandy.


06
Sep 10

Hawaii Bonefish Video from Mike Hennessy

A little video of a Hawaiian bonefish shot by Mike Hennessy.  Notice the wind… a near constant companion when fishing in Hawaii and a reason many recommend up-weighting to a 9 wt. for O’io.


05
Sep 10

Bahamas Bonefish Video: Andros Island – RA Baettie and Mike Mazur

Oh my goodness… this should get you going… a nice bit by RA Beattie via Field & Stream (and Fly  Fishing in Salt Waters).  They are out in Andros at Tiamo.  Along with RA Beattie is Mike Mazur from Fly Fishing in Salt Waters (a magazine I subscribe to).

RA Beattie’s new short with Mike Mazur from Fly Fishing in Saltwaters should cure what ails you.

via (Go to this link to see the clip) More Bahamas Bonefish Video: Andros Island | Field & Stream.

Nice x100


03
Sep 10

Deneki post by Fishing Jones

A great guest post on the Deneki blog by FIBFester Pete McDonald, who writes the Fishing Jones blog.

The drink is called sky juice and it’s a mixture of condensed milk, coconut rum, gin, and whatever other bottles are open at the time. Torrie Bevans mixed it up at the Slack Tide on what happened to be my last night at Andros South and it made the start proper.

via Lessons Learned on South Andros by Pete McDonald.


01
Sep 10

A BVI First Bonefish Vid

Thanks Youtube for this little gem.  The sound track is disabled (Youtube, that sucks).  This is a first bonefish, unguided, after days of effort.  That feels about right.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=74noKYZ_Uk4?fs=1&hl=en_US

As an aside, my little girl starts pre-school today.


30
Aug 10

Lost bonefish from BVI

“Thoughts from the Flats,” a blog from BVI.  A good read.

Then on the way back to the kayak only ten feet from the missus, who was looking at me and taking photos, I saw a huge bone, at least 8 pounds.

via Thoughts from the flats….: Lost bonefish and very spooky permit.