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May 30, 2004

"Ocean Fish"

When I arrived at the ramp yesterday George Anderson already had the boat in the water. There was no place to park -- a harbinger of the situation on the water -- and we had to shuttle the trailer back to a campground a mile distant. We spent the morning on the fast circuit, chasing rolling tarpon up the beach, then south across the boats tangling the passes and down the islands and back into some laid up tarpon spots in nondescript corners of the basins.

By noon we were throwing at spooky redfish and snook many miles from the Gulf.

At 1:30 we tied up behind Tom McGuane's house and took a hot walk into the center of the island, where George proceeded to offer the local fly outfitter various types of advice, including how large his discount on flies should be (we were low on Enrico Puglisis).

Tom walked in and saved us by offering a ride back to his air-conditioned bungalow, and while George took a nap Tom and I talked about great fly fishers, great fly fishing books, and how the great Bill Schaadt used to sometimes attached his leaders to his butt section: with square knots. "Bill used to put only an egg sinker on his leader," Tom said, "and after making a long cast out over the water, he felt every steelhead as the leader bumped along downstream."

After rousing George with cappuccino (normally excessive, but George had a sinus infection), we loaded Tom's gear onto the skiff and roared back to attack the "ocean fish" ("These are 'gulf' fish, George -- you've been fishing in the Keys too long.")

The tarpon were pooling out of the pass onto the beaches, trying despite the Memorial Day weekend boaters to maintain their composure. The several pro guides in the area were already there, as were several open fishermen and cadres of bait fishermen with live bait glistening in the air like spear heads.

"What did we do to deserve this?" Tom asked.

We were in them immediately, George on his knees with the trolling motor, Tom standing behind him and I on the back casting platform, dropping large flies into daisy-chaining schools of 50 and more fish. The fish were mostly happy and rolling high and easy. Dark blotches of fish inked the water around the other boats, then melted and reformed. After a couple of follows, Tom had an eat and the fish ran off 75 yards before popping his tippet. Gear malfunction. "I fish only with gear given to me by friends," Tom noted, "so this is not my fault!" Perhaps this is why Tom offered to give me back a reel I had given him a few years ago. "There's a very specific reason I gave you that reel," I replied. "Because it needed to be fished and I knew you would fish it." Plus, I was thinking, this might lead me to have to offer to return all the cool stuff Tom had given me, including the sweetest of trout rods I will ever own, a custom-wrapped 7-weight from an old Winston blank that made me sleep through night like I was dead every time I used it.

The fishing never improved. As the sun dropped, the wind did as well. The fish seemed content to spin in their circles and drift just out of range. We were all as happy as we could be.

Finally Tom was conscripted to run the electric while George fished. "I suddenly feel like I've been demoted to the low-paid worker on the lawn service team." George, who combined with Tom had hooked and jumped obscene numbers of tarpon over the past two weeks, didn't get bit.

Running back north up the beach Tom and George conferred on strategy while I contented myself to bounce off the cooler like someone plucked from the stands at rodeo and tied to a horse. George kicked the throttle over and made a large looping reconnaisance of the beach. "He drives this thing like he stole it," Tom yelled at me.

We shut down finally in the pass and watched the night charter boats bob like christmas trees -- all red port and white anchor lights -- filling the portion of the horizon between the islands. "It is somehow beautiful," Tom said.

When the skiff sat down in the canal in the dark, Tom and George began to muse about their successes this season and at the peculiarities of guides they had fished with. Somehow it didn't sound like a "You Should Have Been Here Yesterday" story, but more like "You Ought to Be Here Tomorrow." It occurred to me that although I hadn't fish muched this year it was enough that my friends had, as long as I got to hear the telling. Handing over Tom's gear in the dark, George said "if I'm not here by 4:45, go without me."

"What did we do to deserve this?" Tom said.

May 29, 2004

Book Review: Taylor Streit's Instinctive Fly Fishing

We've added a new book review of Taylor Streit's guide's guide to trout fishing to the main site at www.midcurrent.com.

Fran Betters

Fran Betters, the legendary Adirondack guide who showed Taylor Streit a thing or two, owns the Adirondack Sport Shop in Wilmington, New York, near the Ausable River, still spends his days tying flies and dispensing advice. Mr. Betters's reputation rests at least in part on his invention -- 40 years ago -- of the Ausable Wulff, an Adams-like pattern but with white, calf-hair wings to give the fly more buoyancy and visibility. Rick Brockway tells the story in the New York Daily Star Online.

May 28, 2004

Trout Fishing in Korea

Odd as it may sound to Americans, Korea contains more than row after row of manufacturing plants efficiently churning out fly fishing gear for margin-minded U.S. companies. It also contains some gorgeous water and great fly fishing opportunities, as demonstrated on CherryTrout.com.

Czech Nymphing

Down at the bottom of Peter Jessup's column in The New Zealand Herald he describes the practice of Czech nymphing, which he says the New Zealand team is practicing in advance of the world championships in Slovakia in August and the Commonwealth championships on Loch Fiti in Scotland.

Czech nymphing is "where a heavy nymph is used basically as a sinker to pull a lighter one, attached further up the leader, into the water column. Very little line is used and the nymphs are worked upstream rather than floated downstream. The broken, tumbly water is worked to conceal the movements of the angler."

May 27, 2004

"Languid Boozing Along the Rapidan"

Alex Beam, a Boston Globe columnist, once aroused the ire of Howell Raines with his mocking characterizations of fly fishing books with spiritual aspirations. Then in 2001 fly fishing author Michael Checchio mocked Mr. Beam by adopting his title for the prototypical fly fishing self-discovery book. Mr. Beam has now issued his mini-review of the book, whose complete title is Being, Nothingness, and Fly Fishing: How One Man Gave Up Everything to Fish the Fabled Waters of the West (The Lyons Press, November 2001), noting that the "portions I've read look very nicely turned."

Which all goes to prove that writers can run in very tight circles, even when drunk.

May 25, 2004

Rules Shmules

I once asked a new client from France how many permit he had caught on fly. His response, there in the middle of the Marquesas, was "23." He proceeded to pull a small, label-less tube from his fishing bag and soak my permit fly with the contents. When I asked what he was doing, he informed me in a conversation-ending tone that "you can't catch permit without scent."

John Merwin takes a more enterprising (American?) look at the practice of breaking the rules in fly fishing in this month's Field & Stream.

May 24, 2004

Steve Rajeff on Evaluating Your Casting

Reader Dave Dalu had a chance to spend some time with Steve Rajeff on Saturday and noted that Mr. Rajeff's casting presentation exhibited "No wild hauls, no arcing rod movements -- just steady words and small hand movements."

"I got off work late yesterday, so I had to hurry over to the local fly shop to catch the last of the casting demonstrations, and maybe a free lesson of sorts. My local shop, Fly South, was having a "casting clinic" (aka thinly veiled rod sale). But the headliner here wasn't a local yokel, but none other than Steve Rajeff himself.
Figured I could learn a thing or two ;)

As I drove up (4pm), I could see some weary faces (the shop opened at 9. The crowd was gathered around a short, stocky fellow. The long sleeves hid wrists as wide as a 2x4 and forearms Olive Oil would find familiar. I was in luck, there was one more demo.

Stripping off the 5 wt line from the reel, he went through a few principles, talking and working out 40 feet over a makeshift parking lot pond. I didn't see anything overly impressive save for a nice, tight loop and scant little hand movement. But he kept talking, looking at us, and the line seemed to lengthen magically. Effortlessly, smoothly, he finished his sentence and the line was out plus 20 feet of backing. No wild hauls, no arcing rod movements-just steady words and small hand movements. Intently I listened, and watched both the line and his hands, the loop seeming to get tighter as the line got longer...until it was all out. And then some, just like that.

He did it several times, talking all the while, with hauling and without. Holding all that line in the air without hauling. I'm not sure my freshwater neighbors noticed that, but I sure did. Astonishing. I wasn't nearly as impressed with the 8 wt shooting head that went 150 feet with one sling.

A few observations:

As with most expert athletes, conservation of movement, fluidity and smooth application of power were the hallmarks of his casting style. It allowed for smooth, tight loops without rod shock. On the back cast, he stopped his rod hand at about 2 o'clock, and the line went *straight* back. (When I asked about that later, he allowed that in holding a long line one could drift back slightly more to allow everything to tighten up before power is applied on the forward stroke) The forward cast was "made" in the last bit when all the power is applied and stopped abruptly, then brought forward slightly more to allow proper loop formation.

I regret that I was unable to have him evaluate my cast due to the late hour. But after seeing a man that has spend my lifetime throwing the line around, I wasn't sure I was ready for what he was going to show me. I suspect that my hand movements don't follow my brain commands nearly as closely as I think.

We talked about a few other things relating to the 5 wt casting competitions and his thoughts on other rods (the TCR is "too stiff" and "inconsistent") and that shooting heads (especially weighted) are under utilized in fishing. He encouraged me to try them for "bridge tarpon."

It was an hour well spent."

Dave

May 21, 2004

Mustad Fly Tying Videos

Mustad has several very decent fly tying videos (Windows Media files) on their site. They've got the quality vs. bandwidth issues just about right, and the longish clips contain lots of interesting techniques; definitely worth a visit if you're using a Windows-based browser.

May 20, 2004

Fly Fishing Magazine Poll

As a somewhat indiscriminate consumer of all things fly fishing, I rarely pay attention to polls, especially on bulletin boards. But a recent one on the Flyfisherman board caught my eye. It asked visitors to rank fly fishing magazines. Given the location of the poll and reputation (deserved) of Flyfisherman, I figured the results to be predictable. Not so.

Obituaries and Fish

Obituaries, both historical and current, turn up primal, sometimes curious, connections between people and fish.

I'm not surprised as I read the news every day that fly fishing ranks right up there with Masonic allegiance, layperson service and barbecuing (America's #1 recreation) in the list of things that are prominent in the remembrance of people's lives. Its noting adds a flavor of simplicity.

The daily news also causes me to think about the re-birth of the sport of fly fishing just before and after World War II. Perhaps there's an urge hidden in those times that we've yet to uncover, whatever led folks to go poke around a nearby spring creek or take a bus down the Florida Keys. Maybe it was as simple as the recent invention of plastics. Or there may have been desperation in it, an acceptance that things might not turn out as well as we had hoped. Or some clairvoyance about what's important. Whatever the source, for a generation, fishing was the best alternative, and some place remote was the best place to do it.

A surprising number of the obituaries of Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans carry the same thread: they loved to fly fish (especially those in the special forces) and they longed to return to it.

Many anglers have heard of the USS Swordfish, probably because it was one of the first nuclear-powered submarines. When I ran across mention of the first USS Bonefish, a Gato class submarine sunk by the Japanese on the 18th of June, 1945, it led to a list of WW II U.S. Naval vessels named after anglers' quarries: the USS Bass, the USS Trout, sunk with all hands on the 17th of April, 1944, the first USS Snook, lost with all hands on the 8th of April, 1945, the USS Shad, the USS Pike, the USS Tarpon. There are others I'm sure I haven't yet found. The curiousity is that only submarines received the names of fish, and only -- apparently -- somewhat glamorous, somewhat wild fish. No doubt engraved in their commmissioning was a desire to go home.

Carp: "Brilliant Gamefish"

Some things are an acquired taste. Dave Hurteau finds that dissappointing circumstances -- a failed spinner fall, mutant mosquitoes, and an overnight washout -- turn "overgrown minnows" into "brilliant gamefish" quite quickly. His tale of conversion to fly fishing for carp appears in the current Field & Stream.

May 17, 2004

Captain Hook, Florida Fly Fisher

Well they aren't exactly crocodiles, but Florida's big alligators get more and more aggressive every year, leading Jeff Klinkenberg to offer this sage advice on keeping your eyes open angling around large reptiles. In the St. Petersburg Times.

May 15, 2004

How to Make a Leaf Bucket Stripping Basket

George Anderson contributes an exclusive article to MidCurrent on making an effective, inexpensive stripping basket out of a lawn and leaf bucket.

May 13, 2004

Brian O'Keefe Web Photography Web Site

When I want to see just how bad my photography truly is, I go to Brian O'Keefe's site and look at what is possible with outdoor and fishing photography. Granted, it's taken Mr. O'Keefe a lifetime to perfect his craft, but the reward (for us) is color, lighting and perspective that define an upper limit for angling photography.

May 11, 2004

Salmon and Hatchery Maps

The InfoRain Web site (part of Ecotrust.org) hosts several highly informative maps of salmon and steelhead historical ranges, hatcheries and patterns of -- unfortunately -- extinction. There's a ton of stuff here, including individual maps of specific species statuses, a map of "anchor habitats" where snorkel counts have been done in the Tillamook and Clatsop State Forests, and a partial list of extinct species.

From the Inforain homepage you can also go to the StateofTheSalmon.org Web site with even more detailed info and more maps, including this one of hatcheries on the Pacific rim.

Tom Brokaw's Yellowstone

Tom Brokaw gives his short take on the Yellowstone River area near his ranch north of Yellowstone National Park. Besides sending George Anderson the picture of himself rowing, Tom also made a poster of the saying that I coined several years ago addressing the subject of Mr. Anderson's streamside manner: "A Rhino Runs Through It." All in good fun. Monte Burke in Field & Stream.

May 10, 2004

Both Predator and St. Francis

Falconry is not directly related to fly fishing, except perhaps in its ancient history and embrace of all things natural -- or perhaps as a sport in which the participants are spectators in the process of natural selection. This article by Thomas Curwen in the Seattle Times explores the "taint" of blood sports and offers a carefully written perspective on the sport.

May 8, 2004

Craig Barrett

A current biography of fly fisher and Intel CEO Craig Barrett appears in the May 17 issue of Newsweek. "I'd rather spend my off-hours with a fly-fishing rod in my hand or riding a horse than being on a talk show," author Brad Stone quotes Barrett as saying.

Fly Fishing Books: The Iconic American Trout Pool

Daniel Lewis reviews George Black's "The Trout Pool Paradox" in the New York Times. Mr. Black, who customarily writes on international relations, uncovers an irony in the origins of manufacturing and pollution in the early years of the United States: that it required the same sources of water that give us trout. Fortunately the book also gives a history of the remedies that have sometimes worked in recovering the tainted waters.

May 7, 2004

Fly Fishing Authors: Paul Schullery

If you're not familiar with Paul Schullery, you're missing out on some of the finest outdoors literature produced by a North American writer. He has written everything from seminal works on fly fishing history (American Fly Fishing, 1987), to a profiles of great bear hunters (The Bear Hunter's Century), to several works showcasing his extraordinary knowledge of the history and culture of Yellowstone National Park.

In the April issue of American Angler, Mr. Schullery's "History" column is on "Skaters, Skippers and Dappers" and reaches back more than 150 years for the source of some peculiar actions imparted to dry flies.

What makes Schullery's writing different in this age of internet-suffused knowledge? He does real research the old fashioned way. In the process he uncovers hidden connections and shows how fly fishers -- ingenious as they are -- often reinvent old ideas and put them in new, more fashionable clothes. It's all fascinating stuff, and I wish there were more writers with the talent for it.

May 6, 2004

Fathers, Sons, and Mothers: Fly Fishing Stitches Them Together

Brett French finds that the Mother's Day hatch does something for fathers and sons as well. In the Billings (Montana) Gazette.

May 4, 2004

Jim Harrison's 50 Days of Trout

Jim Harrison escapes legal hell and looks for an antidote to confusion in non-stop trout fishing in Montana. As always, wonderful, possessed prose. In this month's Field & Stream.

May 3, 2004

Gary Loomis and Lewis River Salmon

This fine piece about Gary Loomis's Fish First organization -- which since 1995 has been trying to improve the salmon population in Washington state's Lewis River -- includes a biography of the rod-making pioneer that describes his start as a machinist ("Everybody has something they're gifted at," he said. "When it comes to machinery, I could envision it.") and his progression toward environmental organizer: understanding the properties of graphit in tubular structures, getting fired by Lamiglas, and selling his very popular rod line to Shimano. Erik Robinson in The Columbian.



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MidCurrent is an independent provider of fly fishing news, literature and advice. We are experienced anglers and guides who enjoy helping others learn. Want more information? You can send us an email here: info@midcurrent.com

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