09
Jun 10

Taking my girl fishing

Ever since we got up here to Dunsmuir, my 3.5 year old daughter has been asking to go feed the fish at the hatchery.  So… we did that today.  Lots of bows, a few browns and concrete pens with twenty-five cent fists of pellets.

This is where truck trout come from.

After we ran though our change, we went to check out the spillway at Siskiyou Reservoir, where the Upper Sacramento officially begins.  It is spilling over the top of the dam at Box Canyon and it is pretty clear where the high water is coming from.

This is where the high water comes from

As we left the dam  I asked my dad if he knew of any bluegill ponds.  He said sure, we just passed one.  We turned around to check it out.  I love getting my little girl on some bluegill and thought it would be a good way to spend some of the morning.

Pretty as a little pond can get.

I had my 4 wt. in the car so went to  break it out… turns out it wasn’t my 4 wt., but my 10 foot 9 weight.  Well… you fish with the rod you have, I suppose, so I put a 5 wt. line on it and made do.  It worked just fine.

Simply, this is awesome.

We were surprised when the first fish to come in wasn’t a bluegill or little bass, but a rainbow trout.  That fish threw the hook before my daughter could get to it, but the next few fish she got to hold the rod and bring it in the last 4 feet.  She loved looking at them in the net, touching them in the water.  She had a great time, which was the point.

Her first brown.

At some point in the future, maybe 20 years from now, when someone asks her, “How long have you been fishing?” it is my hope that she’ll simply say “I don’t know… I’ve just always done it.”

Sometimes, being a parent is pretty wonderful.


08
Jun 10

High Water Home Water

I managed a few hours of fishing today while my daughter was either napping.

The water continues to be just silly-high.  Places I’ve had locked for high water were under water.  Drifts I’ve come to depend on in difficult times were nowhere to be had.

This willow normally isn't 2 feet under water...

This usually isn't under water in June either.

On a day like this you are forced to look at the river through fresh eyes and let go of the mental map you have of the river.  I don’t think it was a coincidence that as soon as I came to that conclusion I caught the first fish of the day.

Lip hooked with a Mercer Stone.

Purdy.

Dunsmuir Tail

On the journey along the tracks I also took maybe the best picture I’ve ever taken of the Upper Sac.  This particular vantage shows my favorite water on earth.  It isn’t a bonefish flat.  It is my home water.  To the left, I caught my first trout on a fly by myself.  To the right, my favorite riffle.  Of course, there is about 3-4 feet more water in the river right now, but this water is just dear to me.  I want to share this spot with as many people as I can.

 

This is where my fly fishing life started.

I don’t think I’m going to be getting out on the water tomorrow, but that’s OK.  My dad and I have a day on some private water on Thursday before we head back South.  The weather is supposed to turn with showers showing up on the weather outlook.  I noticed snow still under the trees as we went over the summit to McCloud this evening.  There is a lot of water still to come down.

These are classic rainbows in their native range.

I ended up landing 6 fish today, losing a handful of others.  That is probably about as much as I could hope for and probably better than most would expect, given the rather challenging conditions.  Still… you go fishing in the river you have, not the river as you might want it to be.


08
Jun 10

Interview with Chris Goldmark

Puerto Rico is not one of the first places you probably think of when words like “bonefish” or “tarpon” are bandied about.  However, there are bonefish there and there is a history of bonefishing that many are not aware of.  One guy who knows a bit about the fishery there is local guide/gringo Chris Goldmark.  He’s been guiding the waters of Culebra (one of the islands of Puerto Rico) sine 1991… meaning I was still in High School when he started.

Chris, doing what he does in Culebra.

Chris, Puerto Rico and bonefish… can you give a lay of the land in terms of where they are and what the fishery is like?

Bone fish populations in PR are largely limited to the two eastern islands of Culebra and Vieques with a few scattered pockets of fish around the “Big“ island. This was not always the case. The flats of La Parguera on the south west coast of PR once hosted one of the largest and healthiest populations of Bone fish found anywhere in the entire Caribbean basin. These flats were for the most part gill netted to extinction in the 80’s and early 90’s when the demand for Bone fish for bait was at an all time high.

Today both Culebra and Vieques have healthy populations of Bones although not in the great numbers of years past. Culebra still boasts  of having some of the largest fish in the Caribbean.

How did you end up in PR as a bonefishing guide?  Seems an unlikely landing spot.

Back in the late 80’s,  I was visiting Mike Vergis  the founding father of the famous tarpon fishery in San Juan .  We ended up, after a few drinks and a ferry ride, in a bar in Culebra. I fell in love with the island and brought  my wife with me for a weeks visit the following year. Half way through our stay she informed me that she had taken a job and that I could stay or leave but she was definitely not going home.  Apparently in the early stages of a marriage common sense seems to hover on the fringes of that  pink zone….I stayed, No regrets.

Nice PR Bonefish

What’s the oddest or most interesting thing you’ve seen out on the flats of PR?

The Puerto Ricans are a serious party culture. I say this totally respectfully.  I was guiding a gentleman back in the early nineties during a major Puerto Rican holiday in Culebra, something I rarely do today because of excessive boat traffic etc. We were wading one of the major flats and came upon a family who had set up beach chairs in a semi circle on the sand and marl complete with coolers ,umbrellas and a boom box. My client and I skirted the party but upon looking back I noticed a Bone fish pop a tail 10 feet from a drunk passed out in a beach chair.  Suddenly six more tails popped up and I instructed my man to cast appropriately. Hooked up!! The fish, about an 8 lb Bone goes completely insane . The drunks start chasing the fish, the fly line becomes snagged on a cooler, three party goers fall face down on the flat and of course the fish breaks off.  So much for stealth. Salude!

Gillnets are still present in PR waters.  Can you give an idea of the impact those nets are having and what needs to happen to get the nets out of the water?

Bone fish are not normally targeted specifically by gill netters but they  often become a significant by catch when fishermen set on schools of Bar Jacks  and Chapin (box fish) which inhabit a lot of the same areas as the Bones.  PR needs to recognize the value of Bone fish, Permit and Tarpon to the tourist economy. They haven’t come to grips with that yet. Myself and one of PR,s most famous Tarpon guides, Francisco Rosario from Boqueron on the west coast, as well as Fernando Monllor one of the top fly fishers in Puerto Rico have done the usual lobbying, petitioning ,the whole thing. We keep pointing to Belize and saying when are you guys going to get it!! Things move very slowly in Puerto Rico. There are a lot of holidays.

Not being one of the better known fisheries, do you get people coming to PR specifically for the bonefishing or do you more have people who are doing it as part of a family vacation?

Both. I have many clients who come to specifically to target the big Bones Culebra is famous for. I also have a lot of first time clients who are just down on  vacation and want to learn how to fly fish and experience what the flats are all about.

Are there any fly shops in PR or are you forced to rely on internet shopping?

There are no fly shops in PR. I tie all my own and  buy off  the internet  or  from the “compleat Angler” in Darien ,CT.

You have a favorite place to eat?  A place to recommend to traveling anglers for cheap and decent lodging?

“Mamacitas” my wife has been the  dinner chef there for 19 years also for lunch “El Batay” owned and operated by one of my best friends and soon to be Mayor, Tomas Ayala.   Lodging..Villa Boheme  and Jim

Galasso for rentals 787 742 6752

What’s your favorite rod/reel at the moment?

My favorite rod is a 7 wt Gatti or any Gatti or Sage blank finished by master rod builder George Costa. www.fathammy.com …..Reels. I am the connoisseur of  cheep reels. My favorites  the Okuma SLV and the Pflueger Trion. Both are around $100 and will handle double digit Bone Fish as well as any  reel built by a Hungarian, That’s a tough one too.  I’m half Hungarian.

Think PR will, at some point, be the 51st State?

Not likely any time soon. The first thing you learn living in Puerto Rico especially as a Norte Americano is to be very careful discussing politicas. I believe I have answered the question.

Could that be a bone from our 51st State??? Chris isn't saying!

Thanks Chris!


07
Jun 10

Upper Sac Trout and HIGH Waters

I headed off North today with my 3.5 year old and dog.  My wife was on her way to NYC for business, so I went to go spend some time with Grandma and Grandpa.

The drive… well… there was a lot of screaming…

Yelling... a lot of yelling (see the flies in the back corner?)

Eventually, she got tired of screaming and let herself go to sleep.  Luckily, she only screamed for about 2 of the 5 hours.

We’ve had a really wet winter/spring here in Northern California and we needed it.  Driving over Shasta Reservoir and seeing all that water made me happy.  There should be some water left over for salmon and steelhead this year.

A full lake = happy fish

Always love this sight…

Mt. Shasta in her white blanket.

Luckily,  my daughter has grown to love fly shops.  Had to stop off at the Ted Fay Fly Shop for a few odds and ends.

An institution in Dunsmuir.

After arriving at my folks place and watching my daughter run to say hello to her grandparents I made a little scouting trip to see just how high the river was… WOW!  I’ve never seen the river with so much water at this point in the year.  That’s a LOT of water for the Upper Sac.

That there is a whole mess more water than is normally flowing in June.

Still… it wasn’t brown, just high.  When the river is high like that the amount of river you can fish is greatly reduced, but the amount of river the fish can find shelter in is also greatly reduced.  You just have to find a seam and go deep.

Could have used a couple more, really.

Hmmm… what should I throw?

Maybe a stonefly nymph?

Success.

Not big, but pretty.

Few folks would likely even try to fish the river at these flows… but it can be done.  I didn’t even put on waders, just stood on a rock and fished the same water for an hour.  Caught 2, lost 2.  On a normal day that would be a little bit of a slow strike rate, but, given the conditions, I’m pretty happy about it.

This isn’t a fishing trip, it is a family trip, so we’ll see how often I get to fish, but it was fun to see the river when it was angry and still manage to sweet talk a couple trout from her fast flowing currents.


07
Jun 10

Deneki Talks Tips in the Water

Deneki Outdoors recently had a post about putting your rod tip  in the water when you have a bonefish on the line and coming straight at you.  I hope, that my trout and steelhead background would come into play in that situation and I’d instinctively do just that.

Of course, my trout background would probably have me trout set and miss the fish in the first place.

Rod tip up is a common sight and for good reason.


07
Jun 10

Tag Ends – 6-15-10

A few things from around the web.


04
Jun 10

More on Exmouth – Yak it.

The idea of fishing Exmouth, Australia is a new one for me.  I’ve been wondering if there was a way to get to the fish without paying an arm and a leg (especially if you just paid an arm and a leg for  the flight there).

There is… you can rent a kayak for a tiny bit of scratch and I’ve been told that one can, indeed, paddle your way to the fish.

Worth a consideration.

Exmouth Boat and Kayak Hire seems a solid option.

Your Australian ride.

Still… even if you get a kayak for $40 a night, it is still $1,000 to fly from San Francisco to Perth (and you still have to get to Exmouth).


03
Jun 10

An Acklins Option

Saw a new-to-me Acklins option, Salina Point Lodge.  You’ll actually find them on VRBO and they have a very nice deal going right now.

This won’t be available forever, but they are offering $630 (double occupancy) for a week of self-guided fishing.  They will feed you, house you, drive you out to  a flat, leave you there and pick you up later… and they’ll do that for a week.

If there is a heaven and I go there, it will look something like that.

Basically, you don’t need anything else once you are there (well, except Kalik, which I don’t think is included, so, add another $100).

Go, bring a friend, fish hard, sleep easy and enjoy Acklins.

I wish I was here.

Cheap and Bonefish can get along… see?!  I told you so.


01
Jun 10

Interview with Dick Brown

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.

Author, Dick Brown, with a nice looking bone.

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.

Get this book.

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.

I don't have this book... but I will... soon.

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.

Dick tied on to a bone somewhere I'd probably like to be.

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.


30
May 10

Aussie Bones – Exmouth and True Blue Bones

I saw something on a message board about True Blue Bonefish and the fishery in Western Australia.  I went to the site and… well… holy bonefish batman, there are some PIGS out in Western Australia!

A Foster's Size Bonefish

OMG… that thing is huge… and Australian… I had no idea.  The website is worth looking at… not only are there some epic bonefish, but GT’s, some biggish Permit, Golden Trevally, Queenfish, Milkfish, Gulf Tarpon and Giant Herring… which I think is just a big Ladyfish.

I don’t know if they put a picture up of every big fish they ever caught, of if there are a lot of fish that big out there (turns out there are a lot of big fish there).

There certainly aren’t a lot of outfitters working those waters (I found two in my quick search) and there isn’t a whole lot of information readily available about the fishery.

There are a few factors that really strain on the uneasy relationship between Cheap and Bonefish when it comes to Exmouth bonefish.  The cost of living and the cost of fuel combine to make it a real budget buster.

A single angler is $810 and if you bring a buddy, it is $445 a piece… so, $890 ($810 AU is $690 US). This is one of the most expensive days of guiding you’ll run across anywhere.  They have a deal where if you book 7 days, you only  have to pay for five.  That would be $4,050 for a single angler, just for the guiding, not including lodging.

Maybe you have a checklist of species you want to check off… this might be a place to do that.  There are a LOT of different species worth a shot at there.

There are cheaper places… much cheaper places, but Exmouth seems to be a pretty unique place with a wider variety of top-notch game fish than a lot of the go-to locations.

I didn’t find much in my cursory search for DIY or self-guided opportunities along the Western Coast.  I’ll be looking into more of that in the months to come, but the airfare alone means that if you live in the States, there will be no coming together of Cheap and Bonefish Down Under.