30
May 10

North Andros via Chris Santella

Chris Santella put together that book “50 Places  to Fly Fish Before You Kick the Bucket

Every once in a while he puts out some bonefishy goodness and I spotted this post about North Andros.

The rich lore of bonefishing on North Andros pulls almost as powerfully as the present possibilities of the island’s endless flats.  North Andros served as an incubator for nascent grey ghost fly fishing efforts half a century ago, and was home to the Bang Bang Club and the Lighthouse Club – two of the earliest bonefish lodges.  Wall Street Brahmin sailed south on their yachts to hire Bahamians to help them hunt elusive bones, and the angling literati of the day – Lee Wulff, Joe Brooks and the like – followed closely on their heels.  The fishery has stood the test of time.

Yeah, that is a pretty picture... Brian O'Keefe snapped it.

Wanna go?

Me too.


29
May 10

Tagged Bonefish Vid

For your viewing pleasure, a guy from TCO Fly Shop casting to and catching a bonefish in Abaco.  You can see in the video that the bone is tagged, turns out they did the tagging. More people helping out the Bonefish & Tarpon Trust… I like it.  Good job TCO Fly Shop!


27
May 10

Anatomy of Cheap Bonefishing

OK… since I’m not currently bonefishing, don’t see any on the calendar and the flats are fading from my memory like a homecoming banner left out in the sun for a month, I figured I’d rev up my fantasy life by putting together the details of trips that I simply won’t be taking.

I like cheap… cheap and I are friends… cheap would be like the brother I never had if I didn’t have a brother.  I could never be mad at you, cheap.

Cheap and bonefish are not so chummy… but I think it is all misunderstandings, maybe a cross-cultural communications issue.

It is possible to have a bonefish experience that is not too hard on the wallet.  Here is what that might look like.

Our fictional trip will happen September 9 to September 15.  The departure city is San Francisco and the destination will be Deadman’s Cay airport on Long Island, Bahamas.

Flight to Nassau = $401 (About $100 less if you fly from NYC)

Flight to Long Island = $200

Cheap, as it turns out, likes company.  If you like company and have a crew to go with, you can rent this SWEET pad at Salt Pond on Long Island for  $400 a night.  If the company splits the cost, that’s $50 a night for the 8 people that could bunk there.  That’s a pretty sweet deal… about as much as I spent for my one star motel in Grand Bahama last January.

Yes... I would like to stay here.

Sure, you’ll need a rental car, but you can get one. From what I hear, it is about $65-75 a day for a small car.  Maybe you’ll need two for your group of 8 and might need to ferry back and forth from the airport, but it is doable… put that at about $20 a day divided between everyone.

The vacation rental  above puts you about 15 minutes from the nearest fishable flat and it comes with a couple of kayaks for angling, which opens up even more water. (See below for a trip report from the owner of the rental, and yes, he said I could run this).

Sure, you have to buy food, but it is a widely known fact that a man can live on Kalik, crackers and gummi bears for at LEAST a week.

The best way to get bonefish and cheap to really cozy up, maybe even have a love-child, is to get the flight cost down.  That’s why you should take a page out of Ryan Bingham’s playbook and use any opportunity to get those frequent flier miles.

You play the miles right and your $1,000 budget, self-guided trip just became you $600 budget, self-guided trip.

The trip report from the vacation rental owner:

I just return from a week of fishing on Long Island. As many of you know I have a severe bonefishing addiction and after visiting most of the island in the Bahamas (including Acklins/Crooked) I fell in love with Long Island. I have recently completed a home in Salt Pond, which is about halfway between Deadman’s Cay and the North end, the primary flats areas. I traveled with 3 close friends with similar addictive personalities. We fished 3 days up north with Docky Smith and his brother “Big Dog”, and 2 days in Deadman’s with Colin Cartwright. The weather was clear, but the wind blew 20-25 mph out of the northeast for the entire visit, keeping the flats exceptional dry, and challenging our casting technique. Despite less than ideal conditions we caught alot of fish ranging from 3 to 10 lbs. On a day in Deadman’s, Carlos caught 18 bones.

While fishing the outer flat up north the “Big Dog” pointed out a 30 lb permit tailing in 2 feet of water about 200 feet from the area we we wading for bones tailing in 6-8 inches of water. Having never landed a permit on the flats I began my stalk of the permit. The outer portion of the flat had channels running into the turtle grass covered area, and the permit was working the edges of the channels, periodically present its huge forked tail, causing burst of tachycardia and hyperventilation. As I approached to a distance of 70-80 feet, it would slip back into the channel, but consistently worked into the tide which flowed across the shallows. Taking a course further up tide, I set up on the edge of the channel. As I watched the permit, it return to the channel and then vanished. I was crest fallen, and after 5 minutes was about to move on when a large green shadow appeared in the depth of the creek. “Must be a ‘cuda”, I thought, but as I watched the ‘cuda went to the opposite bank and tailed in a foot and a half of water. I quick cast of a large Mantis Shrimp, to short strips, game on. 25 minutes later the biggest personal bonefish for me was at hand. Sweeet!


26
May 10

Thoughts on FIBFest

Thanks go to Deneki Outdoors for putting on FIBFest 2010. There was a lovely flow of bonefishy goodness riding the tide from Andros South.

Michael Gracie took pity on me for my inability to escape the gravitational pull of domestic bliss (really a move, house sale and all that goes with it) and sent me an Andros South hat.

My life in a picture... fantasy and reality all there together.

Between all the great writing emanating from Andros South, Michael’s hat charity and my flies keeping Fishing Jones company, FIBFest was a blast, even from the stands.

Thanks Deneki!


24
May 10

FIBFest Closes

It has been fun to watch what’s come out of FIBFest 2010 down at Andros South.  The week has come to an end, sadly, and now it is all  but memories.  Looks like some pretty good ones were made.

Here’s a stellar wrap up by Michael Gracie akin to an Oscar acceptance speech.

Fishing Jones had a rather literary take on things.

This whole thing was put together by Andrew from Deneki Outdoors.  The idea, of course, was to stir up interest in bonefishing and in Andros South.  I think that has been accomplished.

The hunting grounds of Andros South.


22
May 10

Bonefish Flat goes Bonefishing

There’s a blog called The Bonefish Flat.  He and I have a couple things in common… one, we really like bonefish and two, we don’t get fishing as much as we’d like.

He recently made a trip to Grand Bahama with his dad to do some bonefishing.  Fish were caught, memories made.

Check it out.  The trip report is in three parts.  You can start at part 1 and go on from there.

Bonefish Flat gets a bonefish


20
May 10

Interview with Coach Duff

If you have been paying attention to the Bonefishing News the past few years, you’ve probably heard something about bonefish in Hawaii and you’ve probably seen Coach Duff referenced a few dozen times.  The Coach agreed to do an interview and it is worth reading.

Coach, how did you end up in Hawaii as a bonefishing guide?

I had heard rumors of big bones for years in the Pacific Northwest, where I was more or less a steelhead bum.  I came here to coach for June Jones at the University of Hawaii and was lucky enough to join the program as it was coming into its record breaking 2007 Sugar Bowl Season.  I went out on the North Shore my second day in Hawaii with my wife and kids to barbecue.  My wife is a local girl and liked this certain beach.  Well about 30 blind full line casts into deeper water with a big Clouser I hooked and landed a 9 pound Hawaiian Bonefish (Abula Glossodanta) that ran like it had a rocket shoved up it’s ass.

That was it for me, and I soon was pouring over charts, maps, Google Earth and anything else I could find to locate flats and get to the real business of sightfishing for these pigs.

Nice Aloha Bone

Do you have a fish that stands out, one you remember more than others?

Mark Hopkins landed a 13 plus and a 10 in less than one hour one day.

He is a great angler and a great guy to fish with out of New Mexico.  I was with Blake McHenry one day and he hooked a pig on the North Shore which took us 150 yards into coral heads.  He  free spooled the fish and it took us 20 minutes to pole after it painstakingly getting line back that was tangled in a complete cluster#$%^ all over the reef.  We finally got back to the 20 pound leader and damn it that monster wasn’t still on the hook!  It was pretty defeated but in 8-10 feet of water so I jumped in headfirst and swam down following the leader underwater and netted it under the surface.  Then I swam up and handed it to Blake who was dancing on the casting deck of my Andros 18 footer and in his complete fired up state, kicked his feet out and landed flat on his back laughing his ass off.  We looked like little kids dancing around and screaming and whooping.  You know, these are the moments I like the best.  There are alot of great bonefish guides out there Bjorn, hell I can’t hold a candle to some of the great ones but when you can be a kid again, when you can scream and jump and let flyfishing really take over, take you to that place we all search for every day, it makes this stuff special.

The Hawaiian mentality when it comes to fish, as I understand it, is “Catch it, Kill it, Eat it.”  How do the locals react when they hear you are practicing catch and release?

I want to make it clear once and for all, that there are some great conservationists in Hawaii, gear fisherman who DO practice catch and release.  Sure there are plenty of the “kill everything mentality” they are by far the majority and we are trying to reach each one of those guys and gals one by one.  It will take time.  I’ll never surrender, you can bet on that.  Overall the reception may be a bit guarded and suspicious but as I said earlier there are some great catch and release anglers here.  Being Hawaiian isn’t a blood line thing, it’s an overall love of everything Hawaiian, including it’s wildlife.  When  locals realize you are putting “THEIR” fish back, they love you for it and respect it even if it seems crazy to them.  Notice I said “THEIR” fish.

Far too often we take the “missionary approach” in all forms of conservation.  That is we blast in and beat our chests and tell locals with thousands of years of certain practices how fucked up they are and start ramming legislation up their asses.  Good or bad, right or wrong (and it’s often right with science backed data) that never works for anyone.  I am asked that alot in my boat guiding and usually I ask the angler where his home river is.  He’ll answer “The Skagit” or “The Gunpowder” or whatever it may be.  I then ask him/her “Do you have any poaching problems on that river and the answer is always 110 percent “Hell yes!”  Well then let’s remember this is an issue world wide in every culture, every body of water, every type of fishing.  We may have a little bit higher mountain to climb here in Hawaii but also remember that we live in a special culture here and to jam our views learned on catch and release Western Rivers is not only insulting but will be met with hostility, deservedly so.  I grew up on the Skagit/Sauk rivers and I saw more illegal netting on those rivers than I do here on our flats.

So yes the inshore fishery has been hit pretty hard due to lack of regulations but the bonefish has prospered in the wake of the destruction.  It ain’t over and we will continue to do our part to educate each angler, each netter, one by one and maybe we can turn it around.  These are beautiful people and they do care about their islands, we just have to reach them by walking the walk every day in front of them.

A Coach client with a nice bone.

Talk a little bit about gear considerations for the unique aspects of Hawaiian bonefishing.

I like a top notch 9 weight saltwater flyrod with a 10 weight Monic clear floater and a 10-12 foot 12-20 pound tapered leader (depending on how much coral is around for abrasion resistance) and always tie on my flies with a small Lefty’s Loop.  If it’s good enough for Lefty, it sure the hell is good enough for my hack ass!!!!  LOL I like tan, brown, Olive, Orange, Pink and Yellow flies in sizes 8 through 2-0 depending on the area fished and the fish I am hunting.  I like crabs on soft bottom flats with some mantis shrimp imitations and on heavy inner reef areas or coral rock areas I go to mantis imitations matching the color of the bottom.  I like one long slow strip with a mantis, (sometimes we’ll pop or jump it if they are really active) and one strip (smooth) with a crab and then with the crab we leave it alone!  With smaller fish and smaller flies we will go to a shrimp type retrieve, “POP POP POP POP pause……  POP POP POP POPpause…. but those smaller fish (2-5 pounds) are very forgiving and will often take the fly out of your hand like a Westslope Cutthroat.  The big boys and girls, the 8 pounders and up give you no feeling, no line movement, no “take” you have to witness their stopping on the fly, and then you look for the lifting of the tail, the “backshake” or the “fin dance” and hit em with a good long strip strike.  Far too often our anglers have Mexico and Belize as their bonefishing experience and they keep waiting for the “strike” which never comes here on our big fish.  I call it the “Jedi mind strike” You have to see it, believe it and “hit em”!  LOL  And then of course there are those times when Mr. Hotshit guide yours truly blows it,  reads the whole shooting match wrong, yells “Hit em!” and they are not there on the other end, but we don’t talk about about that………..LOL

PS Practice your casting before you come to Hawaii boys and girls.

15-20 mile an hour trade winds are the norm, not the exception and if you can’t double haul your asses off, it makes it tough.  Find a good instructor, get some brews and hit your favorite park.  You get better casting in the park, and better and hooking fish on the water.  A little something from the Coach because I care.  This is a tough fishery and casting is everything.

For the size of the fishery, Hawaii has received an amazing amount of publicity as of late.  There are a number of places around the range of the bonefish that have been really adversely impacted by too much pressure. Is there too much pressure on the flats now?  Is that a concern?

No, there is not too much pressure.  You have to remember there is no real flyfishing culture here.  It is slowly growing but it will be some time before there is too much pressure here.  I have a custom flats boat and that triples or quadruples how much flats areas you can fish.

Someday there will be pressure here, but it’s not here yet.

Hawaii is known for big, monster, unreasonably large bonefish.  How likely do you think it is that Hawaii will break the magic 20 pound mark?

It’s here, I’ve seen it.  Dave McCoy and Doug Cambell just saw a fish two months ago that was 20 easy.  But it’s gonna be really hard to land one those pigs.  Lots of coral, rock and other obstacles make it pretty unlikely to happen on a flyrod.  It’s possible in a couple areas but………… pretty unlikely due to terrain issues.  Plus when I got here a few folks who constantly claimed they were seeing all of these 20 pound fish were flat out full of shit.  I now know that alot of those “20 pounders” they claimed to see where big milkfish.  I’ve landed fish up to 14 pounds now and let me tell you that is a damn monster of a bonefish.  Plus these guys were only wading and I am floating the flats in a quiet flats boat most of the day.  I see fish pretty commonly in the 12-16 pound range, but a 20 pound bonefish is a damn freak.  In 3 hard years of fishing here, I’ve seen maybe 3 fish I think were over 20.  One with Florida Keys legend Jim Bokor, one with Tom Brokaw’s ranch manager Doug Cambell and my good buddy flyfishing photographer and guiding pro Dave McCoy and one while out with former Keys ace guide and IGFA world inshore guiding champion Captain Chris Asaro whom now lives here and guides with me.  All of these fish were well over 38 inches in length (one close to 42-44) and big shouldered.  Remember this species Abula Glossodanta is 28 to the fork uniformly to be 10 pounds and you can add a pound for each inch.  So a 20 pound fish has to be 38 inches long with this species which is completely different than the Florida species.

Some tail.

When you are out on the water a lot you tend to see some interesting things… funny, strange, weird or frightening things.  Is there something unique that you’ve seen out there on the waters of Hawaii that really stands out?

I saw a 15-17 foot tiger shark swim right up to my boat last Labor Day as I was standing on my platform coming off of a flat into deeper water and just about pissed myself.  Man, my boat felt SMALL that day!  I know, there’s no way he could have gotten us, but the mass and power of that big boy sure put my piss ant place in nature in perspective.  We really are sharing THEIR water with them out there.  It’s too bad we can’t see it that way some times.  What an awesome, awesome creature.

I know you developed a fly called the Lunch Plate Special, a crab patterns specifically for the big bones of Oahu.  Was there something specific you wanted to capture in the fly?

A big calorie filled swimming crab imitation that had some “mojo” some life, some “Ha” as it’s called in Hawaii.  I wanted big bones to see it and know they needed it now, with little or no stripping, little or no angler induced movement.  So far it’s working pretty damn good.  But for every monster that eats it, another one turns the other way, so as with any other trophy flyfishing, I do not believe in “magic patters” or “flies that work all the time”.  Bullshit I say to that.  Presentation is everything with big bones and if the fly looks right, the picky bastards will reward you……………..  Sometimes!  LOL

By all accounts the least bonefishy island is Maui.  Are there bones on Maui for all those poor souls that don’t head to a more bonefish friendly island?

You could find some kayaking in deeper water but overall Maui is pretty tough inshore.  You best bet is to get on a plane and come fish with the Coach, Captain Chris Asaro or Captain Hennessey (a good friend and a great guide in his own right.)

Anything else to add?

Mahalo Bjorn and keep on hunting those bones.  No matter how good we get at this sport, how many big fish we land, how far we can cast, we are just grown up versions of  little boys and girls sitting on a grassy knoll watching a bobber in a pond or in a small creek our daddy sat us down on and said “Right here son, this is the spot I told you about”.

We may use a flyrod as adults but in essence that’s all we really are.

I try to remember that every day, that special feeling of wondering what that pond might hold, and why it catapulted me as a little tiny guy on Sumas creek with my dad and uncle chasing 6 inch cutthroat to a life of beautiful places, incredible cultures and the best people in the world.

(Flyrodders)  We take ourselves far too seriously in this sport and it hurts us far more than it helps us.  Aloha!!!!

Thanks Coach.  Hope to see you out there one of these days.


17
May 10

Insult to Injury

So, I’m sick… just a nasty cold that came on yesterday.  This is the insult part.  The injury part is that I had to miss out on FIBFest due to selling our foothills home, moving, child care cover issues.

You can follow the action on the FIBFest twitter feed here.

You can check out Michael Gracie’s blog to see the line-up of folks.  You’ll notice gold medalist Johnny Spillane there.  Nice.

Nice.


15
May 10

Stu Apte at Black Fly Bonefish Club

A nice little write up on Stu Apte (and Captain Vaughn Cochran) fishing at Black Fly Bonefish Club in Abaco can be found on the  Black Fly blog.

There’s a plug for Airgate Aviation which flies from Daytona to Abaco… direct.  The pricing is a little… um… steep… but maybe there is some magic in there that brings the cost down.

How’s the fishing?

We rig up, get our boots on, pick our fly and hit the water. We walk about 50 feet and here comes the first fish, then another, and another…the fish are leaving the flat on the outgoing tide and they’re feeding along the way.

Doesn’t sound like it sucks.

Yes, seems like a place I'd like to be.


13
May 10

DIY Acklins

Acklins is on my list.  It is a place that lots of folks have been heading to for a DIY experience and, at heart, I’m kind of a DIY guy (my budget is CERTAINLY DIY).

I found this little vid of a DIY trip from March 2010.  The sound track has been disabled, so rock your own tunes.

If you’d like to do a DIY trip with a little bit of help… you can check out the DIY package put together by Cattaraugus Creek Outfitters… if you can get 4 guys together, they have a package for $850 a person for SEVEN days (basically, it’s the lodging, a rental truck and information so you get to start beyond square one, you pay for meals, flights and anything else).