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December 31, 2006

Choosing "Prime Times" for California Beaches

Mentioned yesterday by Tom Chandler at TroutUnderground, a new article by Ken Hanley on "Prime Time Beaches" on FlyFishNorCal.org has some great info on chosing tidal phases and beach locations for fly fishing west coast U.S. shorelines. As Hanley points out, there are two key "Interpretive decisions" you need to make when considering where and when to fly fish on California beaches: "profile (angle of slope) and aspect (north or south facing). Both of these concerns contribute to creating 'prime time' conditions for individual locations. They combine to have an impact on tidal affects, swell presence, food distribution and so forth."

Fly Fishing DVDs: "Landing the Trout of Your Life"

"A newly minted DVD by Colorado Springs angler Landon Mayer performs swimmingly on both counts. Titled 'Landing the Trout of Your Life,' the 70-minute production features Mayer and noted Boulder fly designer John Barr in spectacular fish-catching sequences." From the Denver Post.

Fly Fishing Products: Woolrich Stillwater Shirt

Eric Sharp gives the thumbs up to the ripstop cotton version of the Woolrich Stillwater shirt, which has "one breast pocket that is closed by Velcro and another with a vertical zipper, which is a great place to keep things such as sunglasses, small line spools or a fly box, and both pockets have drain holes." In the Detroit Free Press.

December 30, 2006

John Steinbeck on Outsmarting Fish

Quote of the day, by author John Steinbeck (1902-1968): 'It has always been my private conviction that any man who pits his intelligence against a fish and loses has it coming.'"

Don Hawley and the Birth of Release Tarpon Tournaments

George Hommel recalls a classic moment when guiding Don Hawley: "Bonefish! Don would take his time and empty his pipe by tapping it on the side of the boat. That did it! The bonefish were history. My following comments were not positive and Hawley responded by saying, ‘Well, I can’t put a hot pipe in my pocket!’" This from an biography of Hawley on the Don Hawley Foundation Web site. Written by Capt. Bob Johnson for the Free Press in June 1995, the piece summarizes Hawley's adventures in World War I and subsequent involvement in professional life and finally his retirement to the Keys, where he fished with many of the early guides and with Ted Williams and Lynette Simon started the Gold Cup Tournament in 1964 -- the first tarpon tournament to recognize the importance of releasing fish. The Hawley Foundation, as most Keys anglers know, has provided financial support to sick guides and their families for many years. (Thanks to reader David Dalu for this link.)

December 29, 2006

Fly Fishing Magazines: Way Back in 1980

"The Pflueger reel company had a full page ad featuring the Medalist reel. In 1980 if you were not fishing with a Fenwick rod and a Medalist reel you were out of the loop." In preparation for the future mother-in-law, Bill Thompson peruses the pages of thousands of old fly fishing magazines and discovers how very different the product offerings were in 1980. This is quite an interesting picture, reminding us that not so long ago there was no such thing as breathable waders and that overseas manufacturing is not a new idea -- Marryat was already outsourcing reel production to East Asia. In the Conway Daily Sun.

Don't Forget the Midge Nymphs

A visit to Wyoming's blue-ribbon Sand Creek leaves Wally Zimmer discerning the difference between "smart" and "wary" and beginning his New Year's Resolution list: Find more stupid fish. "You spot a fish feeding, or see a mess of them on the finder. You know they're there, but the scaly *%#@!& just won't bite what you're offering. And you forgot the freaking midge nymphs." In the Jackson Hole Star-Tribune.

December 28, 2006

Jeff Courier Gets Off the Couch

World Fly Fishing Championships medalist and Jack Dennis Sports flyshop manager Jeff Courier says he got a wake-up call while hiking for steelhead in Oregon recently. "'Last month, for the first time in my life, I was the guy falling behind on a long hike on a fishing trip,' he said. 'I was being treated to a prime steelhead location in Oregon with two friends. We had to hike about 3 miles. ... I was hot in minutes and slow as a carp milling in the weeds. Worst of all, it definitely cost me time on the water and being the first through some of the best runs." Wally Zimmer in the Jackson Hole Star Tribune.

Montana Fisheries Supervisor Goes to Work for Power Company

In something that might have seemed ironic if not downright odd 20 years ago, the head of Montana's FWP fisheries will move to a job at PPL, the power company in charge of flows on the Missouri River. It is perhaps a statement about how resources managers must work closely with utility companies who manage major river flows if our best fisheries are to survive. In this case, PPL's more careful timing of power creation helped the upper Missouri grow into such popular fishery in the late 20th century. "'With stabilized flow, the trout population began growing,' [Steve] Leathe said. 'And the fishing became great.' Leathe recalls fishing the Missouri near Craig on a summer evening in the early 1980s before he moved to Great Falls. He had the river to himself." Michael Babcock in the Great Falls Tribune.

December 27, 2006

Vanilla, Cinnamon Spice Puget Sound After Thanksgiving

Since there is a spike in detectable vanilla in Puget Sound water right after the holidays, scientists wonder whether the amounts of food flavorings, spices and other substances like caffeine that get flushed (literally) into the Sound are detectable by fish. We bet they are. "Using benchmarks from a published scientific study, they were able to estimate that people in Seattle and a few outlying areas served by the sewage plant scarfed down the daily equivalent of about 160,000 butter- or chocolate-chip-type cookies and about 80,000 cookies containing cinnamon during the Thanksgiving weekend." Of course the more worrisome reality is that antibiotics, contraceptives, perfumes, painkillers, antidepressants also find their way into not just coastal waters, but rivers and streams. Article by the Associated Press.

December 26, 2006

Fly Tying: Doing the Math

Though a slightly specious argument, most of us need all the logical underpinnings we can find for our habit of tying flies. John McCoy takes on the math in the Charleston, West Virginia Gazette-Times. "Let’s say a Woolly Bugger -- a simple, universal wet fly/streamer that catches trout, bass and other gamefish with equal success -- costs $1.50 at a store. I can tie that fly for 18 cents." Now how many flies could John have tied while he was figuring all that out?

December 25, 2006

The Promise of the Solstice

Becoming a fly fisher almost always means becoming a nature worshiper, no matter what spiritual bent we 've assumed. Even if we chose not to engage with anything beyond a fly rod and fish, we become bound to the cycles of nature. So fly fishers have something more to celebrate this time of year. In the northern hemisphere, it is the lengthening of days. In New Zealand and Patagonia right now, it is the mellowing of summer. Either way, it's about a return: an about-face of the sun. The shift to the south is over and migrations reverse. Along the ridges of Central and North America, birds begin their 12-mile-a-day progress north. Tarpon note the subtle lengthening of days and start sniffing out the possibilities in distant inshore basins, having lost their fear of sudden freezes. In streambeds and river bottoms around the world, insects start listening for a different set of clues. Errant steelhead think twice about home. If we lived every day out-of-doors, we'd be clued in to it all. Our holidays, instead, are as close to a reminder as most of us get.

So we have a very short list of wishes in mind for MidCurrent readers as this year rolls to an end and a new one begins. The first is that you enjoy the celebration of new beginnings that binds us all together. The second is that you'll begin making room for more fishing in your schedule this year. There's no better time to be fishing than right now. At MidCurrent, we believe that the preservation of things that make fly fishing possible depends on folks going out and fishing. Respect begins with awareness, and awareness comes with practice. We appreciate your reading MidCurrent while you're waiting for your waders to dry out or for the sun to rise, but most of all we want you to go out and fly fish. There's nothing quite like being there.

Happy holidays from MidCurrent.

New Tributary for Oklahoma's Lower Mountain Fork River

The Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation reclaimed an old overflow channel and with the help of bulldozers and plenty of fill created a brand new tributary for the Lower Mountain Fork River, Oklahoma's most popular trout stream. "Lost Creek was excavated, adding 1,200 feet of trout stream. The old drainage channel primarily used by squirrels will now hopefully become a major trout route between Cold Hole and Evening Hole." Ed Godfrey on NewsOK.com.

December 24, 2006

Orvis Tours in "Best Factory Tours" Guide

Tours of the Orvis rod-building facility in Manchester, Vermont are included in the latest edition of Watch It Made in the U.S.A.: A Visitor's Guide to the Best Factory Tours and Company Museums, by Karen Axelrod and Bruce Brumberg. "Along with updates, the fourth edition has added 60 more tours, including the Ford Rouge plant in Dearborn, Mich., CNN's studios in New York, NASA sites in Florida and California, the National Corvette Museum in Bowling Green, Ky., Orvis (fly-fishing rods) in Manchester, Vt."

Denver College Offers Course in Guiding

But wait a minute, won't a summer course interfere with fishing? Get used to it, if you want to be a fly fishing guide. "The Timberline Campus of Colorado Mountain College in Leadville will begin a summer 2007 course of study that will deliver a certificate of proficiency in the the fine art of guiding." Charlie Meyers in the Denver Post.

December 23, 2006

Outhouse Reading

That's how Howard Meyerson describes Buck Peterson's Complete Guide to Fishing (Ten Speed Press, September 2006, 191 pages), which pokes fun at just about every fishing technique, and especially at cultures of bass fishing and fly fishing: "When comparing fly fishing to bait casting, Peterson's pluck is at its peak. He writes: 'If you are a died-in-the-wool catch-and-release activist, remote lodge owners and equally remote masters of the art form will welcome you into a world filled with warmed Cognac and hand-rolled cigars. Fly fishing marine biologists are discussing such issues as whether bait casting is a birth defect and whether women who bear tournament fisherman should be sterilized ...'" In the Grand Rapids Press. On Amazon.

December 22, 2006

Accidental Angler Book Review

For those who missed the initial airing of Charles Rangeley-Wilson's "The Accidental Angler" on British television over the past few weeks, it turns out that the show's narrative is available in book form. Theo Pike reviews the book on the U.K.'s FishandFly.com Web site: "Here in 'The Accidental Angler,' at the confluence of the writer’s craft and the film-maker’s art, it’s gripping to discover so many details that the camera didn’t catch -- the ones that only the author saw. In chapter 4, 'The Curse of Shiva',' he blesses us with a much-expanded account of the crew’s brain-boiling, bum-numbing circumventions of the mahseer on the Kaveri River in India." You can buy the book via FishandFly or on Amazon.

Russians Claim Damage to Salmon Streams in Buyout of Oil Field

The times are indeed changing when Russian environmentalists, blaming a major international oil company for damage to salmon streams, can successfully prompt the nationalization of the world’s largest combined oil and natural gas development. Andrew Kramer writes about it in today's New York Times.

An article in the U.K.'s Guardian gives a bit more background to the story, noting that the massive project, based on Sakhalin Island north of Japan, has been under scrutiny from western environmental groups for some time, due to it's potential impact on salmon and grey whale populations.

December 21, 2006

Fly Fishing Books: 49 Trout Streams of New Mexico

Perhaps whether a book makes you get up and go fishing is indeed the best measure of its quality. Richard Stevens reviews 49 Trout Streams of New Mexico by William Frangos and Raymond Shewnack (University of New Mexico Press, September 2006, 128 pages). "The book is a tease, a call to waters. It is a siren who tugs on a fisherman's soul with 49 reasons to fish. It reminds you of the beauty and serenity of flowing waters to be found somewhere other than the couch." In the Albuquerque Tribune. (On Amazon.)

The Gift of Female Frenzy

Alex Heard has discovered that women behave like mad fish in a swarm of insects when he begins distributing his custom-made Christmas wreaths. "The trout gets yanked out of the water, patted on the belly, and released. I get hugged until my eyes bulge, patted on the head, and released. Though, sometimes, the woman chases me down and hugs me all over again." Funny stuff. On Slate.

Fly Fishing Books: Amato's Northern California River Maps & Fishing Guide

Sacramento Bee writer Allen Pierleoni suggests that if you fish northern California, you owe it to yourself to read Amato's Northern California River Maps & Fishing Guide (November 2006, 48 pages, 35 maps). "It offers straightforward, detailed information on trout fishing on 35 rivers -- 18 coastal rivers, six northern inland and 11 in the Valley. Plus: color drawings of 13 freshwater sportfish, the months of various insect hatches, techniques for gear fishing and fly fishing, how-to guides for knots, and other handy advice."

December 20, 2006

Angling Exploration Group Podcast Interview

Zach Matthews delivers another excellent extended interview via podcast, this time with Chris Owens and Ryan Davey of AEG (Angling Exploration Group). As Matthews says, "Whether they're pummeling rented Jeeps in Patagonia or trout bumming their way across Reykjavik, these young documentarians and explorers make desk-bound anglers everywhere jealous, though as you'll hear, it's not all tall blondes and warm campsites."

Idaho's Silver Creek Nets 7300 Visitors Over Summer

Though the peak number of fly fishing visitors occurred during the 1990s, the Nature Conservancy's Silver Creek Preserve has consistently drawn the attention of thousands of anglers eager to fish its storied waters. "The 2006 fishing season got off to either a hot or cold start -- depending on who you talk with. Massive spring flooding altered the face of the creek, stirring up and depositing silt in new areas and skewing hatches. But by mid-summer the fishing was as good as ever." Steve Benson in the Idaho Mountain Express.

FFF's Van Gytenbeek Speaks Out Against Alaska Mine

"'Any person or company that takes an action which would diminish this fishery commits a crime against each of us, and against the people and natural resources of Alaska,' thundered R.P. Van Gytenbeek, president of the Federation of Fly Fishers." As the controversy over the proposed Pebble Mine, which threatens the watershed containing Lake Iliamna and the Nushagak and Kvichak Rivers, heats up, so do the voices in opposition -- among them the president of the Federation of Fly Fishers. Charlie Meyers in the Denver Post.

December 19, 2006

Big Sur Residents Take Steelhead Seriously

Awareness of the impact of sediment from poorly drained roadways has residents of California's Big Sur combining their efforts to improve drainage near Garrapata Creek. "About 40 to 50 families make their home within the confines of the 10-square-mile watershed. And many have agreed to participate in the steelhead habitat project, which is voluntary." Larry Parson in the Monterey Herald.

Major Resources to be Diverted from Canada's Rupert River, Colorado's Poudre

The native Crees of Northern Quebec anguish over their decision to allow the Canadian government to divert water enormous amounts of water from one of north America's last untouched rivers. They capitulated, despite years of protest over similar projects, because of the promise of jobs. "Nonetheless, environmental groups mounted a last-ditch effort to stop the project, saying the diversion endangers the Rupert River trout species, among the biggest in the world." Rheal Seguin in the Toronto Globe and Mail.

Meanwhile, in Colorado, residents of Fort Collins are wondering whether a deal to create additional water resources will threaten the Poudre River.

December 18, 2006

Books, Books, and More Books

Fly fishing publishers are in high gear in December and January. We were just at a book signing by Norm Zeigler, who's new book Snook on a Fly (Stackpole Books, 109 pages) is one of the first efforts anyone has made to address snook as a fly fishing quarry. Nick Lyons said the book is "the best introduction I know to a great saltwater gamefish and how best to fly-fish for it." (On Amazon.)

Meanwhile we received notice that Tom Rosenbauer's revision of the classic Orvis Fly-Fishing Guide (The Lyons Press, 288 pages) is still on track for a January 1 release. Tom's books are sleepers -- incredibly detailed and well-considered, they are essential to complete any reading list. The new edition has over 400 new color photographs and illustrations. (On Amazon.)

And the Sun-Sentinel reviews Pat Ford's The Best Fly-Fishing Trips Money Can Buy (Stackpole Books, 148 pages), which came out this July: "Ford either wrote or edited all of the chapters -- Andy Mill did the chapter on tarpon, Billy Pate wrote about billfish and Capt. Rick Murphy wrote about baby tarpon, snook and redfish -- which also cover bonefish, permit, sharks, tuna and peacock bass in South Florida, trout in Montana and Arizona, salmon in Alaska, golden dorado in Argentina and Bolivia and tigerfish in Africa." (On Amazon.)

"Dianas Of Our Day"

Lest you think that Amanda Switzer or Lori Ann Murphy had no inspiration, women in Maine around the turn of the 20th century didn't think twice about donning bearskin stoles and grabbing canoe paddles, if this article in the Bangor Daily News is any indication. One of those early outdoors icons was Cornelia Crosby. "Fly Rod, as she signed her newspaper columns, was a crack shot, a skilled woodswoman and a great promoter of hunting and fishing in the Pine Tree State. She was even a friend of Annie Oakley, the most famous shot in the world."

December 17, 2006

Fly Fishing Books: John Betts's Making Strip-Built Fly Rods from Various Woods on a Lathe

John Betts will be signing copies of his interesting new book at the Denver Fly Fishing Show January 5 thru 7. The book covers sounds truly unique in both topic and production effort: "The format of the book perhaps is as remarkable as the keen instructional detail. An accomplished artist, Betts produced the ring-bound work in flowing hand-written script. Along with his own illustrations, this is reproduced on manuscript paper to form a collector's item rarely seen in publishing." From the Denver Post.

Louisiana Redfishing Never Better

Imagine catching 11 redfish averaging more than 20 pounds each. That's what Doug Beherman of Tallahassee, Florida did on December 11 while likely setting two world records -- 34 pounds, 8 ounces for 8-pound test tippet and 28 pounds for 4-pound test tippet -- on board guide Gregg Arnold's boat.

The Things We Do For Tarpon

"A short time later I got another chance. A trio of tarpon were following the exact same path as the earlier group. I was determined not to blow this chance. I made the same false casts and dropped the rabbit fur fly in front of the oncoming fish. I could see the lead fish swish its tail harder and accelerate to the fly." Casey Allen tells a simple but resonant story about breaking his casting arm just weeks before his next tarpon trip in the Eureka, California Times-Standard.

December 16, 2006

Angling Exploration Group Back with New Film Tour

The talented bunch who produced "Trout Bum Diaries: Vol. 1" are highlighting the presentation of their next film, "The Trout Bum Diaries, Kiwi Camo," with a U.S. winter tour that includes screenings of new films from most of the top fly fishing filmmakers. The Fly Fishing Film Tour will happen in 30 U.S. cities, beginning at the Patagonia world headquarters in Ventura, California on January 12 and ending in Anchorage, Alaska at the Performing Arts Center on March 23rd, 2007. They're giving away a ton of stuff to folks who appear at the screenings. You can read more about the tour at the tour Web site. (Read our review of "Trout Bum Diaries: Vol. 1" here.)

Tyler Befus's "A Kid's Guide to Fly Fishing" Reviewed

Paul Goetz reviews nine-year-old Tyler Befus's new book in the Salida, Colorado Mountain Mail. "A Kid's Guide to Fly-fishing is a great reference and a fun read for young and old. Illustrations, including drawings of different trout species and photos are beautifully presented in full color. Befus arranged the book with introductions into fly-fishing, fish, fish habitat, gear, methods, fish food and his personal experiences in fly-fishing circles."

December 15, 2006

MidCurrent's Holiday Gift List

Haven't quite finished your holiday shopping yet? Take a few minutes to see what's in our first annual Gift Bag of suggested fly fishing gifts.

We cover everything from fly rods to fly fishing art to inflatable PFDs. Plenty of stuff here, including seven gifts for less than $25 and one or two investment-grade suggestions. We even have an idea for a gift that may jump-start your favorite fly shop staff.

Bruce Richards Named Fly Rod & Reel's Angler of the Year

Here's a brief profile of Bruce Richards, the "most influential fly fisher you've never heard of" according to Fly Rod & Reel, who've chosen Bruce as their 2007 Angler of the Year. Bruce also happens to be one of MidCurrent's editorial board members, and we're glad that Fly Rod & Reel broke their tradition of not naming industry people as Anglers of the Year. It's hard to say enough about what Bruce has done for fly fishing and for fly fishers, from novices to professionals. He hardly ever appears in the spotlight because of his unassuming approach to the sport. And few would guess that he is one of the top fly casters in the world. Congratulations, Bruce.

Getting Down Into Colorado Lakes

Ed Dentry noticed a new Web site that uses mashup technology to map conditions on Colorado lakes, created by Matt Snider at FishExplorer.com. "The Web site includes lake conditions, fishing reports from correspondents, a fishing forum, maps, articles, links and tips on camping and access at lakes from the plains west to Vallecito Reservoir." In the Rocky Mountain News.

December 14, 2006

Fly Fishing People: Frank Amato

Polly Campbell profiles Frank and Nick Amato via a look at the 40-year-old magazine Salmon Trout Steelheader, which Frank started in his parents' basement while working in a Portland, Oregon grocery store. "The company releases 15 to 20 new books a year -- more than 500 over the company's 40-year history -- and sells about 200,000 copies a year of the new releases and previously published volumes, several of which are considered definitive guides for specific fishing techniques." In The Oregonian.

Favorite 2006 Outdoors Titles

Chicago Tribune reviewer Lew Freedman lists his favorite outdoors books of 2006, among them Howell Raines's The One That Got Away, Russell Annabel's Adventure Is In My Blood, The Last Expedition by Daniel Liebowitz and Charles Pearson, and Eric Newby's memoir of traveling in Afghanistan: "A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush, by Eric Newby, is regarded as a classic of adventure travel literature. In 1956, Newby quit his career in fashion, and joined a British Foreign Service friend for a harsh trek and climb in Afghanistan. Newby is an understated, droll writer, with a thorough sense of self-deprecation."

December 13, 2006

Fly Fishing Books: Dave Whitlock Updates Fly-Fishing Handbook

We just got our hands on the newly released second edition of Dave Whitlock's L.L. Bean Fly-Fishing Handbook, which was first published ten years ago, and it improves on one of the best introductions to fly fishing ever produced. If you're not familiar with the first edition, it covered the gamut: tackle, casting, tactics, biology, foods and fly tying. The new edition adds more on saltwater fly fishing, ethics, and fishing from boats and float-tubes. Whitlock is a surprisingly good illustrator and of course an excellent teacher, and there is an enormous amount of insight and guidance packed into 192 pages. Our only quibbles with the book are minor: the knots chapter seems somewhat incomplete without the inclusion of some newer knots, and the appendix listing publications is missing some important new titles. L.L. Bean Fly-Fishing Handbook, Second Edition on Amazon.

December 12, 2006

Tie-A-Fly Kits

Bob Henley, who owns Tie-A-Fly in Sacramento, California, sent us one of his neat products the other day and after looking at the contents we wondered why we hadn't heard of Tie-A-Fly before. Henley offers these kits as "instructional" packages, but with enough material to tie a dozen of the chosen pattern (or six of his two saltwater flies), they're also a good value. Like all of the kits, the Elk Hair Caddis kit -- his most popular -- includes size 12, 14 and 16 hooks, so novice tiers can graduate to the smaller hooks as their skills improve. The materials come in individual Ziplock bags and the illustrated instructions are well-written and easy to follow. Not a bad deal for $19.95 plus $4.05 for USPS Priority Mail shipping. If you know someone who is learning to tie and wants to expand their repertoire, this is a great way for them to learn to tie PMDs, Black Winged Ants or even the Parachute Adams.

Bristol Bay Fight Heats Up

Both conservationists and mining industry officials claimed victory after decision Monday by the Alaska State Fisheries Board to postpone recommending a fisheries refuge in Bristol Bay. "The board was besieged with impassioned testimony from people who flew in from all over Alaska and as far away as Washington, D.C. Among those weighing in: commercial fishermen, attorneys, biologists and Native villagers in the region." The massive Pebble gold, copper and molybdenum deposit underneath the Bristol Bay drainages has raised alarms among anglers and resource conservationists who fear it will have an adverse impact on salmon fisheries. Elizabeth Bluemink in the Anchorage Daily News.

2007 Denver Fly Fishing Show

The Denver Fly Fishing Show runs January 5-7 at the Denver Merchandise Mart. The Denver Show, one of ten put on around the U.S., will be attended by a long list of "fly fishing celebrities," including A.K. Best, Simon Gawesworth, Bob Jacklin and Barry Reynolds. If you plan on going, be sure to make time to see Denver Trout Unlimited's second fly fishing film festival and fundraiser to benefit youth fishing programs on January 4 at the Mile High Station.

December 11, 2006

10 Tying Tips of the Pros

Unless you are lucky enough to be chasing trout in New Zealand or Argentina or shuffling across sand ripples in Belize right now, you might be doing what we're doing: thinking about how many flies need to be tied before the weather turns the corner.

You might even be digging out the vise for the first time in a while. If so, do yourself a favor and read Al and Gretchen Beatty's "10 Tying Tips of the Pros." These good folks -- self-confessed "stream people" -- share some very helpful advice about tying smooth dry fly bodies, rough-and-tumble one-feather hackles, and finishing flies with aplomb. New on MidCurrent.

Putting a Dollar Value on Bighorn Flows

As arguments over whether Bighorn River water should stay in Bighorn Lake intensify, Brett French digs up some interesting data surrounding how much money -- $14.25 million -- anglers bring to the local economy. "Figures compiled by FWP put use in 2005 at 43,322 nonresident anglers and 25,142 resident anglers just on the upper section of the river, the most popular portion, which sees about three-quarters of total angler use when compared with the rest of the stream." In the Billings Gazette.

December 10, 2006

Bob I, Bob II and Bob III: Kids Learn By Raising, Releasing Salmon

"When the fish arrived at the drop site at North Santiam State Park, the eager youngsters got one of their last remaining life lessons about salmon biology from Cliff Butler of Salem. 'Believe it or not, they are already carsick,' he said about the salmon in three water-filled picnic coolers." Learning math, biology and conservation in process, students in the 6th-grade class at Robert Frost Elementary School in Silverton, Oregon release thousands of chinook salmon fry every year. Henry Miller in the Oregon Statesman-Journal.

Ohio's Conneaut Creek Steelhead

Conneaut Creek in northeasternmost Ohio receives plenty of attention from fly fishers this time of year, as well it should. Water levels allow steelhead to reach the uppermost portions of the river, and the peak fishing on the river lasts from November through March. Deborah Weisberg writes about current conditions on Conneaut and talks with steelhead guide and author John Nagy, who describes some of the river's idiosyncrasies: "Although Pennsylvania steelhead are a mix of strains, including domesticated rainbows, Ohio's Little Manistees are a wild steelhead from naturally reproducing fish in Michigan's Little Manistee River. They run in late winter and early spring, although some trickle in during the fall." In the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

December 9, 2006

Fly Shop Owner Rescues Man From Burning Boat

Paul Koopmann, owner of Salty Flies in Rowayton, Connecticut and a western Long Island Sound guide, was recently honored for pulling alongside a burning boat and rescuing the owner. The best part of the story is that he had four boys on board and acted while many other boats simply ignored the burning vessel, teaching an indelible lesson in boating responsibility.

The Magic Desolation of Patagonia

"Among fly-fishers, Patagonia is a sort of El Dorado. On rivers such as the Cisnes, Simpson, Baker -- and plenty that are less well-known -- you can find brightly stippled and highly aggressive trout, which swallow grasshoppers the size of small birds." Jeremy Paxman writes about a recent journey to Patagonia and the Bahia Mala, by way of the Rio Limay and lots of wind, in the UK Times Online.

December 8, 2006

Fly Fisherman, Other Magazines Sold to Intermedia Partners

Flyfisherman magazine and its Web site will be sold to private equity investment firm Intermedia Partners LP, along with 17 publications and related Web sites, including Guns & Ammo, Game & Fish, Florida Sportsman and In-Fisherman for $170 million in cash, according to Businessweek magazine. Intermedia is led in part by Leo Hindery Jr., the former president and CEO of AT&T Broadband and cable television distributor TCI. In June, Intermedia also acquired Thomas Nelson, a leading publisher of Bibles and Christian inspirational products.

Hindery and Intermedia were also recently reported to be in the hunt for Time Inc.'s outdoor titles, which include Field & Stream and Outdoor Life.

"A Kid's Guide to Fly Fishing" Written by Nine-Year-Old

Tyler Befus's new book, A Kid's Guide to Fly Fishing (Johnson Books, 95 pages, illustrated by the author), is just one of many fly fishing projects the precocious young fly fisher is involved in these days. Besides being the youngest member of Whiting Farms, Rio Products, and Ross Reels pro staff teams, he's creating DVDs and contributing to television series. "'I really like fly-fishing and I think others should too,' he said. “'t’s a lot cooler than watching TV. And kids that do that, I want them to get off the couch and go outdoors and learn about bugs, nature and spend time with their family.'” Kati O'Hare in the Montrose [Colorado] Daily Press.

Tyler Befus comes from good stock, as they say. HIs dad, Brad Befus, sales manager for Ross Reels, is also co-author of Basic Techniques for Successful Fly Tying and Carp on the Fly.

Maine Considering Spring Atlantic Salmon Season

"Buoyed by an overwhelmingly positive response to last fall’s month-long season, commission members asked staff biologists to study the risks of holding a two- to four-week fishing season for sea-run Atlantic salmon in the spring of 2007." Kevin Miller in the Bangor Daily News.

December 7, 2006

Fly Fishing Florida's Big Bend

Susan Cocking profiles guide Rick Bouley, who moved from the lower Florida Keys to Taylor County, Florida, last year after watching the Keys get "less funky." "This past summer, Bouley discovered that no matter how hot the weather, fishing in the spartina marsh creeks (where few but crabbers venture) could be spectacular. He caught and released redfish, trout and the occasional flounder and tarpon. In August, he stumbled on some large black drum in the 30-40-pound class." In the Miami Herald.

Crazy Cold Fly Fishing

"It's been my experience that the more emphatically you deny being crazy, the crazier you seem. It is just the opposite, however. I don't go fishing in the winter because I am crazy, I do it to maintain what little sanity I have left." Mark Littleton describes the rationale heading out for trout in winter in the Seattle Times.

Northeast Stripers Survey Not Encouraging

StripersForever.org, a group dedicated to achieving gamefish status for striped bass, recently released the results of their 2006 survey, which included 445 responses from guides and anglers. In short, most striped bass fisherman are reporting smaller numbers and smaller sizes in their catches. You can read the details on the Web site, or in the extended entry.

Stripers Forever 2006 Annual Fishing Survey Results

Total Surveys
In 2006 we compiled 445 surveys, comparable to those responding in 2005. We had double digit returns from most states from NC to ME, and approximately 100 each from MA and NJ. We feel that this year’s survey has again produced a good representative sample of sentiments from fishers all along the stripers migratory range. We will be sending this information to the press and to fishery policy makers everywhere. We hope that you personally will use it, and offer it to your local club or fishing organization to help us advocate for the goal of coast wide striped bass game fish.

The complete Excel spreadsheet of survey responses is posted to our website. Here is the link http://www.stripersforever.org/Home/I008F3494. This year we have added another shorter and more graphic sheet entitled Comparative Summaries and Graphs. It can be found on the same web page as the spread sheet of survey responses.

Here is a summary of the answers by question #.
2, 3. About 70% fish predominately from boats, and about 30% fish mostly from shore. About 75% of those who responded have more than 10 years of experience fishing for striped bass.

4. The “quality” of fishing question, #4, remains quite subjective. In 2006 43% of the anglers indicated that the quality of fishing for stripers was worse or much worse, while only 36% felt that it was improved - note that not all anglers perceive a change either positive or negative, so positive and negative sentiment will not equal 100%. This was the same percentage as in 2005. It is a reversal from 2003, the year of our first survey when the numbers were reversed and 44% felt the fishery was still improving. 2006 is also the third straight year of negative sentiment.

5. 58% of respondents in 2006 felt the average size of the stripers they caught was declining compared to only 21% who felt it was increasing. This is by far the most negative comment we have had on size of fish. We had several of the best known Massachusetts guides send in very negative comments about the effect that the commercial striped bass fishing season has on their local fishing areas, and on the trend in quantities of large bass in general.

6. In 2005 47% of respondents said they caught fewer or many fewer fish while only 22% reported catching more fish. This is a margin of more than 2 to 1 and is even more startling when you consider the giant 2003 year class that has provided a lot of small fish.
7. Last year we wrote that “the interest in guided trips has – thankfully – remained constant in all three years that we have done the survey, ranging from 58 to 60% of respondents being the same or more likely to book a guided trip”. This was again the case in 2006.

8, 9, 10. The percentage of anglers who felt that a small fish should be allowed for food was 73%, roughly comparable to 2005. When put together with our question on slot limits it is clear that many of our members understand that the brunt of the harvest on long-lived stripers should not be born by older, breeding-age fish. While we do not have an exact calculation, we know that many of the 27% who opposed the taking of a small bass are so concerned about the deterioration of the striped bass resource that they want to sharply curtail the harvest of stripers of all sizes until the numbers recover.

11, 12. Support for a slot limit to take the pressure off large breeders was at 74%, in line with last year’s 75%. Votes were quite evenly split, though, on what the slot should be, with 20-26 being the most popular at 123 votes, though the two other slots each received 99. A slot limit to take the pressure off large breeders was supported by 76 to 31 in MA , 71 to 16 in NJ, and was favored in every state in our survey. Survey after survey from anglers and guides cried out to remove the pressure from large stripers.

13. The mission of Stripers Forever – to achieve game fish status for the striped bass -- is frequently challenged by those who claim that all we want is to take for ourselves all the fish presently caught by the commercial fishery. The results from all four of our annual member surveys show just how erroneous that interpretation is. For the fourth year in a row about 85% of those surveyed want at least half of the commercial catch reserved for conservation, and not to be assigned to increased recreational bag limits. In 2006 33%, up sharply from 28% in 2005, want 100% - all – of the commercial quota to be set aside for conservation and none added to the recreational catch.
14, 15. The popularity of using a stamp to buy out the commercial fishery increased again to include 80% of the respondents. We had several comments like “a slot limit and stamp sale to buyout the commercial fishery, it’s about time”. We just have to get the benefits of this idea across to the fishery managers and the politicians who make these policy decisions.
Guides Section
In 2006 we received surveys from 47 guides. The number of guides who felt that their business had slipped somewhat was double the number that said it had improved. A number of guides felt that they had lost some of their more serious regular customers because they were unable to find large fish as consistently as in the past. This is a terrible injustice. We are convinced that if there were no commercial fishery for striped bass, that the quality of fishing would be better now than at any time in the past, and that there wouldn’t be enough guides to fill the demand.
Other Comments
We received a variety of comments that can be read on the second tab of the spreadsheet . Comments that were seen repeatedly included: put an end to the commercial fishery, use more “fish-friendly” tackle like circle hooks; and adopt management measures to take the pressure off larger striped bass.

December 6, 2006

Saving Mokelumne River Salmon

When the U.S. Department of Commerce banned coastal salmon fishing because of the poor Klamath River runs this year, it opened eyes to the fact that salmon loss has a huge cost for the California economy. Accompanying this article about the multi-million-dollar restoration efforts on California's Mokelumne River, a tributary of the San Joaquin and a key part of the San Joaquin-Sacramento River Delta, is a decent primer on the lifecycle of anadromous salmon. "The Mokelumne now has between 5,000 and 16,000 returning salmon each year, with an out-migration of nearly 8 million. Since 1992, more local salmon have been returning since the drought reduced their numbers to about 150." Rebecca Adler on LodiNews.com.

Australian National Fly Fishing Championships

Australian fly fishers competed in their National Fly Fishing Championship on Bundaleer Reservoir last week, and the top finisher -- who will go to New Zealand long with the rest of the top ten to compete in the World Championships -- was Vern Barby from Victoria.

December 5, 2006

New Thomas McGuane in The New Yorker

"I now understand that I was a weirdly underdeveloped human being for my age, ripe for just the sort of encounter that I had with Tessa Larionov. Even my mother noticed my immaturity; she was always telling me, 'Stop staring at people!'” A naive young medical student reflects on growing up near Livingston, Montana and the events surrounding his involvement with a rare-prints assistant. If you haven't yet read Gallatin County, this story may help convince you that McGuane is one of the finest short story writers going.

Trout Don't Drink Bottled Water

At least not yet. Local watershed conservationists are concerned about Nestle's plan to pump 70 million gallons of water from springs serving as headwaters for the Muskegon, White and Pere Marquette rivers in Michigan. "'It's not an issue about the amount of water they want to pump -- it's a question of saying yes or no,' said Dick Schwikert, a member of the Pere Marquette Watershed Council board of directors. 'We don't want any water taken from the watershed.'" In the South Bend Tribune.

December 4, 2006

Field & Stream Ranks Fishing Lodges

Among their picks for the top 25 lodges in North America are Anglers Inn at El Salto Lake, Mexico (No. 5) and Casa Blanca Lodge in Yucatan, Mexico (No. 5). Top spot went to Plummer's Arctic Lodges in the Northwest Territories. Henry Miller pays special attention to 6th-ranked Steamboat Inn on the North Umpqua River in the Salem, Oregon Statesman Journal.

December 3, 2006

Fly Fishing Books: Dec Hogan's "A Passion for Steelhead"

We're just beginning to read Dec Hogan's new steelhead book, the first title to be published by Tom Pero's Wild River Press, and admit to being in a mild rapture about it. We'll be excerpting the book on MidCurrent in the near future, but meanwhile you can read Mark Yuasa's short intro, as well as his mention of River Girls: Flyfishing for Young Women ($20, Johnson Books) by author Cecilia Kleinkauf on his outdoor gift list in the Seattle Times.

Survey Says Missouri Tailwater Trout Fairing Well

Scientist surveying trout numbers in the Missouri River below Holter Dam expected a dramatic drop in the numbers of large and small fish. But it appears the fish are maintaining their pre-Whirling-disease numbers, and while the peak years of the late 1990s may not be seen again, samples show there are still around 1500 fish per mile. "'The fishing is more challenging than it was,' [Montana River Outfitters owner Craig Madsen] added. 'And it depends on the time of year. The fishing is getting good earlier than it has in the past. People are keying in a little earlier when fish